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21.
Aminopeptidase inhibitors strongly affect the proliferation and function of immune cells in man and animals and are promising agents for the pharmacological treatment of inflammatory or autoimmune diseases. Membrane alanyl-aminopeptidase (mAAP) has been considered as the major target of these anti-inflammatory aminopeptidase inhibitors. Recent evidence also points to a role of the cytosol alanyl-aminopeptidase (cAAP) in the immune response. In this study we used quantitative RT-PCR to determine the mRNA expression of both cAAP and mAAP in resting and activated peripheral T cells and also in CD4+, CD8+, Th1, Th2 and Treg (CD4+ CD25+) subpopulations. Both mAAP and cAAP mRNAs were expressed in all cell types investigated, and in response to activation their expression appeared to be upregulated in CD8+ cells, but downregulated in Treg cells. In CD4+ cells, mAAP and cAAP mRNAs were affected in opposite ways in response to activation. The cAAP-specific inhibitor, PAQ-22, did not affect either cAAP or mAAP expression in activated CD4+ or CD8+ cells, whereas in activated Treg cells it markedly upregulated the mRNA levels of both aminopeptidases. The non-discriminatory inhibitor, phebestin, significantly increased the amount of mAAP and cAAP mRNA in CD4+ and that of cAAP in Treg cells.  相似文献   
22.
Activity-driven delivery of AMPA receptors is proposed to mediate glutamatergic synaptic plasticity, both during development and learning. In hippocampal CA1 principal neurons, such trafficking is primarily mediated by the abundant GluR-A subunit. We now report a study of GluR-B(long), a C-terminal splice variant of the GluR-B subunit. GluR-B(long) synaptic delivery is regulated by two forms of activity. Spontaneous synaptic activity-driven GluR-B(long) transport maintains one-third of the steady-state AMPA receptor-mediated responses, while GluR-B(long) delivery following the induction of LTP is responsible for approximately 50% of the resulting potentiation at the hippocampal CA3 to CA1 synapses at the time of GluR-B(long) peak expression-the second postnatal week. Trafficking of GluR-B(long)-containing receptors thus mediates a GluR-A-independent form of glutamatergic synaptic plasticity in the juvenile hippocampus.  相似文献   
23.
The Nucleolar Localization Elements (NoLEs) of Xenopus laevis U3 small nucleolar RNA (snoRNA) have been defined. Fluorescein-labeled wild-type U3 snoRNA injected into Xenopus oocyte nuclei localized specifically to nucleoli as shown by fluorescence microscopy. Injection of mutated U3 snoRNA revealed that the 5′ region containing Boxes A and A′, known to be important for rRNA processing, is not essential for nucleolar localization. Nucleolar localization of U3 snoRNA was independent of the presence and nature of the 5′ cap and the terminal stem. In contrast, Boxes C and D, common to the Box C/D snoRNA family, are critical elements for U3 localization. Mutation of the hinge region, Box B, or Box C′ led to reduced U3 nucleolar localization. Results of competition experiments suggested that Boxes C and D act in a cooperative manner. It is proposed that Box B facilitates U3 snoRNA nucleolar localization by the primary NoLEs (Boxes C and D), with the hinge region of U3 subsequently base pairing to the external transcribed spacer of pre-rRNA, thus positioning U3 snoRNA for its roles in rRNA processing.  相似文献   
24.
High‐definition optical coherence tomography (HD‐OCT) scanners have recently been developed. We assessed micromorphological HD‐OCT correlates of benign naevi (BN) and malignant melanoma (MM). 28 BN and 20 MM were studied using HD‐OCT and histology. Epidermal honeycomb/cobblestone pattern, regular junctional cell nests, and edged papillae are more often observed in BN, whereas fusion of rete ridges, pagetoid cells and junctional and/or dermal nests with atypical cells are more frequently seen in MM. A high overlap of HD‐OCT features in BN and MM was observed and in 20% of MM we did not find evidence for malignancy in OCT images at all. Using HD‐OCT it is possible to visualize architectural and cellular alterations of melanocytic skin lesions. The overlap of HD‐OCT features seen in BN and MM and the absence of suspicious HD‐OCT features in some MM represents an important limitation of HD‐OCT affecting the sensitivity of HD‐OCT in diagnosing MM.

High‐definition optical coherence tomography and the corresponding vertically sectioned histology of a compound naevus.  相似文献   

25.
Transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) channels type 6 play an important role in the function of human podocytes. Diabetic nephropathy is characterized by altered TRPC6 expression and functions of podocytes. Thus, we hypothesized that high glucose modifies TRPC6 channels via increased oxidative stress and syndecan-4 (SDC-4) in human podocytes.  相似文献   
26.
Allicin and derivatives thereof inhibit the CAC1 cysteine proteases falcipain 2, rhodesain, cathepsin B and L in the low micromolar range. The structure–activity relationship revealed that only derivatives with primary carbon atom in vicinity to the thiosulfinate sulfur atom attacked by the active-site Cys residue are active against the target enzymes. Some compounds also show potent antiparasitic activity against Plasmodium falciparum and Trypanosoma brucei brucei.  相似文献   
27.
Microbial iron reduction is considered to be a significant subsurface process. The rate-limiting bioavailability of the insoluble iron oxyhydroxides, however, is a topic for debate. Surface area and mineral structure are recognized as crucial parameters for microbial reduction rates of bulk, macroaggregate iron minerals. However, a significant fraction of iron oxide minerals in the subsurface is supposed to be present as nanosized colloids. We therefore studied the role of colloidal iron oxides in microbial iron reduction. In batch growth experiments with Geobacter sulfurreducens, colloids of ferrihydrite (hydrodynamic diameter, 336 nm), hematite (123 nm), goethite (157 nm), and akaganeite (64 nm) were added as electron acceptors. The colloidal iron oxides were reduced up to 2 orders of magnitude more rapidly (up to 1,255 pmol h1 cell1) than bulk macroaggregates of the same iron phases (6 to 70 pmol h1 cell1). The increased reactivity was not only due to the large surface areas of the colloidal aggregates but also was due to a higher reactivity per unit surface. We hypothesize that this can be attributed to the high bioavailability of the nanosized aggregates and their colloidal suspension. Furthermore, a strong enhancement of reduction rates of bulk ferrihydrite was observed when nanosized ferrihydrite aggregates were added.Dissimilatory iron reduction is an important anaerobic respiration process in anoxic subsurface environments. However, the reactivity of ferric iron is mostly limited by the reduction kinetics of the poorly soluble, extracellular iron minerals. Electron transfer from microorganisms to iron oxides can occur via direct contact or by electron shuttling compounds (46). Transport of the electron shuttle between the redox partners is then assumed to occur via diffusion. For example, humic substances can serve as natural electron shuttles that can be reduced by microorganisms and subsequently chemically oxidized by the ferric oxide (18). Shewanella oneidensis excretes a flavin to stimulate hematite reduction, functioning in a similar manner (27). As another option, formation of conductive pili serving as nanowires was described as a possible way of transferring electrons to the oxide surface (15, 34). Nevertheless, direct attachment has been recognized as a major mode of accessing iron oxides as electron acceptors (12). Direct transfer between microbial outer membrane reductases and the ferric minerals, however, requires close contact of less than 14 Å between the terminal iron reductase on the cell surface and the iron oxide molecule at the mineral surface (19, 25), limiting the rates of electron transfer between cell and mineral.Several parameters have been discussed in this context as being decisive for the bioavailability and reactivity of iron oxides, such as, e.g., the mineral surface area (8, 41). Larger surface areas have been shown to be accompanied by higher initial reduction rates. Another parameter that might determine reactivity is the low solubility of ferric iron in water at neutral pH (20). Low solubility entails high crystallinity, which reduces reaction rates (4). Therefore, crystalline bulk iron phases such as goethite or hematite (9) are poorly reducible by microorganisms, in contrast to amorphous ferrihydrite (41). Naturally, well crystalline minerals have lower surface areas, and the effects of surface area and solubility cannot be distinguished sharply. Cell density, initial oxide and substrate concentrations, and ferrous iron adsorbed to the bulk mineral surface were also reported to control microbial reduction rates by exhibiting mutual saturation behavior in Michaelis-Menten-type kinetics (3, 22, 40).The latter studies also considered particle sizes, a parameter that has often been overlooked so far. All concepts mentioned above generally assumed a bulk state of the electron-accepting iron oxide. Indeed, iron oxides used in microbiological experiments appear mainly as coarse, flocculating macroaggregates, visible to the naked eye as sludge-like precipitates. In nature, however, nanosized iron oxides are abundant (32, 45) and play a vital role in many biogeochemical processes (2, 16, 28). Such nanoparticles may appear in stable colloidal suspension, even if aggregated as a stable cluster of multiple particles (13). Ferric oxide particles can appear in colloidal suspensions of different aggregate sizes and densities.Different particle aggregate sizes might influence the bioavailability of iron oxides in microbial reduction. Nanosized aggregates appearing in colloidal suspensions might be spatially more accessible for microorganisms than large aggregates flocculating as bulk phases. Therefore, the present study aims at assessing the reactivity and putative role of aggregate sizes of iron oxides in dissimilatory iron reduction. A set of ferrihydrite, hematite, goethite, and akaganeite colloids was compared to their respective noncolloidal bulk phases to evaluate this effect.  相似文献   
28.
Caenorhabditis elegans is a validated model to study bacterial pathogenicity. We report that Yersinia enterocolitica strains W22703 (biovar 2, serovar O:9) and WA314 (biovar 1B, serovar O:8) kill C. elegans when feeding on the pathogens for at least 15 min before transfer to the feeding strain Escherichia coli OP50. The killing by Yersinia enterocolitica requires viable bacteria and, in contrast to that by Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis strains, is biofilm independent. The deletion of tcaA encoding an insecticidal toxin resulted in an OP50-like life span of C. elegans, indicating an essential role of TcaA in the nematocidal activity of Y. enterocolitica. TcaA alone is not sufficient for nematocidal activity because E. coli DH5α overexpressing TcaA did not result in a reduced C. elegans life span. Spatial-temporal analysis of C. elegans infected with green fluorescent protein-labeled Y. enterocolitica strains showed that Y. enterocolitica colonizes the nematode intestine, leading to an extreme expansion of the intestinal lumen. By low-dose infection with W22703 or DH5α followed by transfer to E. coli OP50, proliferation of Y. enterocolitica, but not E. coli, in the intestinal lumen of the nematode was observed. The titer of W22703 cells within the worm increased to over 106 per worm 4 days after infection while a significantly lower number of a tcaA knockout mutant was recovered. A strong expression of tcaA was observed during the first 5 days of infection. Y. enterocolitica WA314 (biovar 1B, serovar O:8) mutant strains lacking the yadA, inv, yopE, and irp1 genes known to be important for virulence in mammals were not attenuated or only slightly attenuated in their toxicity toward the nematode, suggesting that these factors do not play a significant role in the colonization and persistence of this pathogen in nematodes. In summary, this study supports the hypothesis that C. elegans is a natural host and nutrient source of Y. enterocolitica.Yersinia enterocolitica belongs to the family of Enterobacteriaceae and is a psychrotolerant human pathogen that causes gastrointestinal syndromes ranging from acute enteritis to mesenteric lymphadenitis (5). It infects a number of mammals, and swine was identified as a major source for human infection (6). A multiphasic life cycle, which comprises a free-living phase and several host-associated phases, including cold-blooded and warm-blooded hosts, appears to be characteristic for biovars 1B and 2 to 5 of Y. enterocolitica (7, 24).Nonmammalian host organisms including Dictyostelium discoideum, Drosophila melanogaster, or Caenorhabditis elegans are increasingly used to study host-pathogen interactions (16, 26). Due to the obvious parallels between the mammalian and invertebrate defense mechanisms, it has been suggested that the bacteria-invertebrate interaction has shaped the evolution of microbial pathogenicity (53). Several human pathogens including Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria infect and kill the soil nematode C. elegans when they are supplied as a nutrient source (42). For example, Streptococcus pneumoniae (4), Listeria monocytogenes (50), extraintestinal Escherichia coli (15), and Staphylococcus aureus (43) but not Bacillus subtilis have been shown to kill the nematode. Upon infection of C. elegans with Enterococcus faecalis, Gram-positive virulence-related factors as well as putative antimicrobials have been identified (20, 35). The extensive conservation in virulence mechanisms directed against invertebrates as well as mammals was demonstrated using a screen with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (30). In this study, 10 of 13 genes whose knockout attenuated the nematode killing were also required for full virulence in a mouse model, confirming the suitability of the C. elegans model to study bacterial pathogenicity. C. elegans is also colonized by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium). This process requires Salmonella virulence factors and was used to study the innate immune response of the nematode (1, 2, 49).The effect of pathogenic Yersinia spp. on C. elegans has also been investigated. It could be demonstrated that both Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis block food intake by creating a biofilm around the worm''s mouth (13, 27). This biofilm formation requires the hemin storage locus (hms) and has been suggested to be responsible for the blockage of the digestive tract following uptake by fleas, thus acting as a bacterial defense against predation by invertebrates. In a study with 40 Y. pseudotuberculosis strains, one-quarter of them caused an infection of C. elegans by biofilm formation on the worm head (27). In contrast, a similar effect was not observed following nematode infection with 15 Y. enterocolitica strains. Using a Y. pestis strain lacking the hms genes, it could be demonstrated that this mutant can infect and kill the nematode by a biofilm-independent mechanism that includes the accumulation of Y. pestis in the intestine of the worm (47). This pathogenesis model was applied to show that putative virulence factors such as YapH, OmpT, or a metalloprotease, Y3857, but not the virulence plasmids pCD1 and pPCP1, are required for Y. pestis virulence in C. elegans. Six yet unknown genes required for full virulence in C. elegans were also identified, and one of them appeared to be a virulence factor in the mouse infection model.C. elegans has not been used to study the pathogenicity properties of Y. enterocolitica, mainly due to the fact that many of its virulence factors are upregulated at 37°C in comparison to growth at lower temperatures while C. elegans cannot be cultivated at temperatures above 25°C. In this study, we examined for the first time the infection of C. elegans by Y. enterocolitica strains, demonstrating that this pathogen colonizes and kills C. elegans and that the insecticidal toxin TcaA, which is expressed only at ambient temperature, is required for full nematocidal activity.  相似文献   
29.
Transgenic apple plants (Malus × domestica cv. ‘Holsteiner Cox’) overexpressing the Leaf Colour (Lc) gene from maize (Zea mays) exhibit strongly increased production of anthocyanins and flavan-3-ols (catechins, proanthocyanidins). Greenhouse plants investigated in this study exhibit altered phenotypes with regard to growth habit and resistance traits. Lc-transgenic plants show reduced size, transversal gravitropism of lateral shoots, reduced trichome development, and frequently reduced shoot diameter and abnormal leaf development with fused leaves. Such phenotypes seem to be in accordance with a direct or an indirect effect on polar-auxin-transport in the transgenic plants. Furthermore, leaves often develop necrotic lesions resembling hypersensitive response lesions. In tests, higher resistance against fire blight (caused by the bacterium Erwinia amylovora) and against scab (caused by the fungus Venturia inaequalis) is observed. These phenotypes are discussed with respect to the underlying altered physiology of the Lc-transgenic plants. The results are expected to be considered in apple breeding strategies.  相似文献   
30.
The human membrane cofactor protein (MCP, CD46) is a central component of the innate immune system. CD46 protects autologous cells from complement attack by binding to complement proteins C3b and C4b and serving as a cofactor for their cleavage. Recent data show that CD46 also plays a role in mediating acquired immune responses, and in triggering autophagy. In addition to these physiologic functions, a significant number of pathogens, including select adenoviruses, measles virus, human herpes virus 6 (HHV-6), Streptococci, and Neisseria, use CD46 as a cell attachment receptor. We have determined the crystal structure of the extracellular region of CD46 in complex with the human adenovirus type 11 fiber knob. Extracellular CD46 comprises four short consensus repeats (SCR1-SCR4) that form an elongated structure resembling a hockey stick, with a long shaft and a short blade. Domains SCR1, SCR2 and SCR3 are arranged in a nearly linear fashion. Unexpectedly, however, the structure reveals a profound bend between domains SCR3 and SCR4, which has implications for the interactions with ligands as well as the orientation of the protein at the cell surface. This bend can be attributed to an insertion of five hydrophobic residues in a SCR3 surface loop. Residues in this loop have been implicated in interactions with complement, indicating that the bend participates in binding to C3b and C4b. The structure provides an accurate framework for mapping all known ligand binding sites onto the surface of CD46, thereby advancing an understanding of how CD46 acts as a receptor for pathogens and physiologic ligands of the immune system.  相似文献   
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