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51.
IL-10 is a potent immunoregulatory cytokine attenuating a wide range of immune effector and inflammatory responses. In the present study, we assess whether endogenous levels of IL-10 function to regulate the incidence and severity of collagen-induced arthritis. DBA/1 wildtype (WT), heterozygous (IL-10+/-) and homozygous (IL-10-/-) IL-10-deficient mice were immunized with type II collagen. Development of arthritis was monitored over time, and collagen-specific cytokine production and anticollagen antibodies were assessed. Arthritis developed progressively in mice immunized with collagen, and 100% of the WT, IL-10+/-, and IL-10-/- mice were arthritic at 35 days. However, the severity of arthritis in the IL-10-/- mice was significantly greater than that in WT or IL-1+/- animals. Disease severity was associated with reduced IFN-γ levels and a dramatic increase in CD11b-positive macrophages. Paradoxically, both the IgG1 and IgG2a anticollagen antibody responses were also significantly reduced. These data demonstrate that IL-10 is capable of controlling disease severity through a mechanism that involves IFN-γ. Since IL-10 levels are elevated in rheumatoid arthritis synovial fluid, these findings may have relevance to rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   
52.
Upon toxic metal stress numerous defence mechanisms have been induced, including the synthesis of metal-binding ligands and plant hormones or plant growth regulators in plants. As several elements in the promoter region of the heavy metal-responsive genes can be activated by plant hormones and growth regulators, understanding and revealing possible and special relationships between these regulator compounds and the metal chelator phytochelatins, which are in the first line of heavy metal defence mechanism is of great important. Phytochelatins are synthetized from glutathione and have a structure of [(γ-Glu-Cys)n]-Gly, where n is the number of repetition of the (γ-Glu-Cys) units. Evidences for the role of PCs in heavy metal tolerance are very strong; however, little information is available on how plant growth regulators influence the phytochelatin synthesis at molecular or even gene expression level. In the present review we provide an overview of the role and synthesis of phytochelatins in metal-tolerance mechanism from a new point of view, i.e. their relation to the plant growth regulator molecules, with special regard also on those cases, when close direct relationship exists because of the partly overlapped synthesis pathways of plant growth regulators and glutathione/phytochelatins.  相似文献   
53.
The role of glucocorticoids in the modulation of central alpha 2-receptor mechanisms was investigated by in vitro receptor binding studies. [3H]Clonidine and [3H]idazoxan were used as radioligands. The alpha 2-receptor subtypes and guanine nucleotide sensitivity were studied in homologue and heterologue displacement experiments following hydrocortisone treatment (25 mg/kg s.c.) for 10 days. High and low agonist affinity states of the alpha 2-receptor could be identified in 3H-antagonist-agonist and 3H-agonist-antagonist displacement experiments, which may correspond to different regulatory protein-nucleotide associated forms of the receptor. In the presence of 10 microM GTP, the high-affinity binding was depressed. Following hydrocortisone treatment, there was no detectable change either in the affinity or the binding site concentration of clonidine in homologue displacement ("cold saturation") experiments. The affinity of idazoxan, however, was depressed. The effect of GTP was similar to the controls in this experimental arrangement. In contrast, in heterologue binding studies the high-affinity binding site was not demonstrable and the amount of low-affinity binding increased following the hydrocortisone treatment. The high-affinity site reappeared in the presence of GTP. The change in GTP sensitivity suggests that the nucleotide regulatory system may be involved in the action of adrenal steroids on central alpha 2-receptoral mechanisms.  相似文献   
54.
Taurine Levels in Discrete Brain Nuclei of Rats   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:6  
Concentrations of taurine have been measured in 44 microdissected rat brain nuclei or areas. Taurine is ubiquitously present and distributed unevenly in the rat brain: the ratio of the highest (pyriform cortex) to lowest (midbrain reticular formation) concentrations is 4.7:1. High taurine levels were found in cerebral cortical areas, caudate-putamen, cerebellum, median eminence, and supraoptic nucleus. Acute pain stress reduced taurine levels in the hypothalamus and the lower brainstem nuclei but not in cortical areas. Increased locomotor and behavioral activities following a high dose of amphetamine elevated taurine concentrations significantly in the substantia nigra and locus ceruleus.  相似文献   
55.
56.
The covalent transfer of heavy chains (HCs) from inter-α-inhibitor (IαI) to hyaluronan (HA) via the protein product of tumor necrosis factor-stimulated gene-6 (TSG-6) forms the HC-HA complex, a pathological form of HA that promotes the adhesion of leukocytes to HA matrices. The transfer of HCs to high molecular weight (HMW) HA is a reversible event whereby TSG-6 can shuffle HCs from one HA molecule to another. Therefore, HMW HA can serve as both an HC acceptor and an HC donor. In the present study, we show that transfer of HCs to low molecular weight HA oligosaccharides is an irreversible event where subsequent shuffling does not occur, i.e. HA oligosaccharides from 8 to 21 monosaccharide units in length can serve as HC acceptors, but are unable to function as HC donors. We show that the HC-HA complex is present in the synovial fluid of mice subjected to systemic and monoarticular mouse models of rheumatoid arthritis. Furthermore, we demonstrate that HA oligosaccharides can be used, with TSG-6, to irreversibly shuffle HCs from pathological, HMW HC-HA to HA oligosaccharides, thereby restoring HC-HA matrices from the inflamed joint to their normal state, unmodified with HCs. This process was also effective for HC-HA in the synovial fluid of human rheumatoid arthritis patients (in vitro).  相似文献   
57.
The assembly of retroviruses is driven by oligomerization of the Gag polyprotein. We have used cryo-electron tomography together with subtomogram averaging to describe the three-dimensional structure of in vitro-assembled Gag particles from human immunodeficiency virus, Mason-Pfizer monkey virus, and Rous sarcoma virus. These represent three different retroviral genera: the lentiviruses, betaretroviruses and alpharetroviruses. Comparison of the three structures reveals the features of the supramolecular organization of Gag that are conserved between genera and therefore reflect general principles of Gag-Gag interactions and the features that are specific to certain genera. All three Gag proteins assemble to form approximately spherical hexameric lattices with irregular defects. In all three genera, the N-terminal domain of CA is arranged in hexameric rings around large holes. Where the rings meet, 2-fold densities, assigned to the C-terminal domain of CA, extend between adjacent rings, and link together at the 6-fold symmetry axis with a density, which extends toward the center of the particle into the nucleic acid layer. Although this general arrangement is conserved, differences can be seen throughout the CA and spacer peptide regions. These differences can be related to sequence differences among the genera. We conclude that the arrangement of the structural domains of CA is well conserved across genera, whereas the relationship between CA, the spacer peptide region, and the nucleic acid is more specific to each genus.Retrovirus assembly is driven by the oligomerization of Gag, a multidomain protein, including an N-terminal membrane binding domain (MA), a two-domain structural component (CA), and an RNA binding domain (NC). The Gag proteins of all orthoretroviruses, including the alpha-, beta-, and lentiretroviruses discussed here, share this conserved modular architecture (Fig. (Fig.1).1). Despite very weak sequence conservation, the tertiary structures of MA, CA, and NC are conserved among retroviruses. Outside these conserved domains the Gag proteins of different retroviruses exhibit substantial variability. Other domains may be present or absent, and the length and sequence of linker peptides may also vary (12) (Fig. (Fig.11).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Modular architecture of the full-length Gag proteins of HIV, M-PMV, and RSV. White rectangles illustrate Gag polyprotein cleavage products. The extent of the constructs used in the electron microscopic analysis is specified under each protein as a black rectangle. Gray triangles specify cleavage sites. Residue numbers are counted from the beginning of Gag.Oligomerization of Gag in an infected cell leads to the formation of roughly spherical immature virus particles, where Gag is arranged in a radial fashion with the N-terminal MA domain associated with a surrounding lipid bilayer, and the more C-terminal NC pointing toward the center of the particle (15, 44, 46). Subsequent multiple cleavages of Gag by the viral protease lead to a rearrangement of the virus. NC and the RNA condense in the center of the particle, CA assembles into a capsid or shell around the nucleoprotein, and MA remains associated with the viral membrane. This proteolytic maturation is required to generate an infectious virion (2). In contrast to the mature CA lattice, which has been extensively studied (11, 16, 36), the Gag lattice in immature particles is incompletely understood.Gag itself contains all of the necessary determinants for particle assembly. For example, the expression of Gag alone in an insect cell expression system is sufficient to generate viruslike particles (3, 17, 22, 38). Retroviral Gag proteins also can be assembled in vitro in the presence of nucleic acids to form spherical particles (9, 19, 39, 43, 47). The arrangement of Gag within these in vitro-assembled Gag particles is indistinguishable from that found in immature virus particles (6), and the in vitro assembly systems have proved valuable for unraveling the principles of virus assembly (18, 28, 29, 39). Multiple layers of interaction promote the assembly of Gag in vivo, including MA-membrane-MA interactions, CA-CA interactions, and NC-RNA-NC interactions. An extensive body of literature has explored which regions of Gag are required for assembly and which can be replaced or deleted without compromising assembly. MA-membrane-MA interactions contribute but are not essential. NC-RNA-NC interactions appear to function to nonspecifically link Gag molecules together and can be replaced both in vivo and in vitro by other interaction domains such as leucine zippers (4, 13, 20, 32, 48). The C-terminal domain of CA (referred to here as C-CA) and the stretch of amino acids immediately following this domain (termed the spacer peptide [SP] region) are critical for assembly and sensitive to mutation (1, 22, 27, 30).We set out to understand how the substantial sequence variation among Gag proteins in different retroviruses is manifested in structural differences in the immature Gag lattice. To do this, we studied three retroviruses from different genera: the lentivirus human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), the betaretrovirus Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV), and the alpharetrovirus Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). These retroviruses are those for which in vitro assembly was first established and has been most extensively studied (6, 19, 24, 28, 29, 35, 43, 47).The domain structures of the three retroviruses differ most substantially upstream of CA. Both M-PMV and RSV have domains located between MA and CA that are absent in HIV (Fig. (Fig.1).1). In M-PMV there are 198 residues forming the pp24 and p12 domains; in RSV there are 84 residues forming the p2a, p2b, and p10 domains. The three retroviruses have different requirements for regions upstream of CA during assembly. The C-terminal 25 residues of p10 are essential for proper immature RSV assembly, both in vitro and in vivo, and these residues are inferred to interact directly with N-CA to stabilize the hexamer by forming contacts between adjacent N-CA domains (35). An equivalent assembly domain has not been described for other retroviruses. Within M-PMV p12 is the so-called internal scaffolding domain that is not essential for assembly in vitro (43) but is required for particle assembly when the precursor is expressed under the control of the M-PMV promoter (41). It is a key domain for the membrane-independent assembly of immature capsids (40).In HIV, five residues upstream of CA must be present for assembly of immature virus-like spherical particles in vitro, although larger upstream extensions, including part of MA, are required for efficient assembly of regular particles, both for HIV and RSV. For HIV, if the entire MA domain is included, in vitro assembly requires the presence of inositol penta- or hexakis phosphate (8). If no sequences upstream of CA are present, the in vitro particles in both of these viruses adopt a mature-type tubular morphology (10, 18). It has been hypothesized that cleavage at the N terminus of N-CA during maturation leads to the N-terminal residues of CA folding back into the N-CA structure to form a β-hairpin. The β-hairpin is important for assembly of the mature CA lattice, whereas its absence is important for immature assembly (23, 42). These requirements explain why, in HIV and RSV, immature Gag lattice-like structures are formed only if regions upstream of CA are present (18). In M-PMV, an immature Gag lattice can be produced when the regions upstream of CA are deleted if this is combined with mutations (such as deleting the initial proline of CA), which prevent β-hairpin formation (43).During maturation, HIV and RSV Gag proteins are cleaved twice between CA and NC to release a small peptide called SP1 or SP. In RSV the most N-terminal of these two cleavages can occur at one of two possible positions such that the released peptide is either 9 or 12 amino acids long (33). In M-PMV only one cleavage occurs between CA and NC, and no short peptide is produced. The region between the final helix of CA and the Zn fingers has been proposed to adopt a helical bundle architecture in HIV and RSV based on bioinformatic prediction, on mutational analysis, and on structural studies (1, 22, 27, 45). In all three viruses, C-CA and the residues immediately downstream are critical for assembly and are sensitive to mutation. C-CA contains the major homology region, a group of residues that are highly conserved across the retroviruses.Cryo-electron tomography (cET) studies of immature virus particles (6, 45) have resolved the electron density of the HIV Gag lattice in three dimensions at low resolution. Using these methods, we have also described the three-dimensional architecture of in vitro-assembled HIV Gag particles (6). In immature viruses and in vitro-assembled particles, Gag is seen to adopt an 8 nm hexameric lattice, as was predicted from previous Fourier analysis of two-dimensional images (7, 46). The hexameric lattice is interrupted by irregularly shaped holes and cracks in the lattice (6, 45). A similar observation has been made using AFM of in vitro-assembled particles of M-PMV Gag (26). These holes and cracks allow an otherwise planar hexameric lattice to form the surface of an approximately spherical particle.The radial positions of the MA, CA, and NC domains had been assigned previously from cryo-electron micrographs (44, 46). Based on these assignments and the shape of the density, the position and relative orientations of CA domains can be modeled into the low-resolution structure of the HIV lattice (6, 45). Density ascribed to the N-terminal domain of CA (N-CA) forms rings around large holes at the 6-fold symmetry positions in the lattice. Below this layer, at the expected radius of the C-CA, are 2-fold densities, interpreted as corresponding to dimers of C-CA. These densities are linked by rodlike densities, which descend into the NC-nucleic acid layer.HIV is the only retrovirus for which the arrangement of Gag in the immature particle has been described in three dimensions. Prior to this work, important open questions were therefore: which features of the arrangement of Gag are conserved between genera and therefore reflect general principles of Gag-Gag interactions, and which features are specific to certain genera? We have applied subtomogram averaging of cryo-electron tomograms to generate reconstructions of in vitro-assembled Gag particles from HIV, M-PMV, and RSV. These allow identification of the general and variable features of the arrangement of Gag and the architecture of immature retroviruses.  相似文献   
58.
RNA silencing plays an important role in plants in defence against viruses. To overcome this defence, plant viruses encode suppressors of RNA silencing. The most common mode of silencing suppression is sequestration of double‐stranded RNAs involved in the antiviral silencing pathways. Viral suppressors can also overcome silencing responses through protein–protein interaction. The poleroviral P0 silencing suppressor protein targets ARGONAUTE (AGO) proteins for degradation. AGO proteins are the core component of the RNA‐induced silencing complex (RISC). We found that P0 does not interfere with the slicer activity of pre‐programmed siRNA/miRNA containing AGO1, but prevents de novo formation of siRNA/miRNA containing AGO1. We show that the AGO1 protein is part of a high‐molecular‐weight complex, suggesting the existence of a multi‐protein RISC in plants. We propose that P0 prevents RISC assembly by interacting with one of its protein components, thus inhibiting formation of siRNA/miRNA–RISC, and ultimately leading to AGO1 degradation. Our findings also suggest that siRNAs enhance the stability of co‐expressed AGO1 in both the presence and absence of P0.  相似文献   
59.
The aims of this study were to test the influence of grazing intensity, effects of local and landscape parameters, and regional effects on orthopteran assemblages. We made our investigations on extensively and intensively grazed cattle pastures in three regions of the Hungarian Great Plain. The regions differed in landscape complexity; one region was situated in a structurally simple landscape with large landscape units, one in a structurally complex landscape with marshy patches and trees in the grasslands and one in a landscape with intermediate structural complexity. In each region we had seven pairs of differently managed grasslands, which differed in grazing intensity. Grasshoppers were recorded once in July 2003 using sweepnet catches and visual and acoustic observations in two 95 m long transects at each site (84 transects in total). Botanical surveys and measurements of other local factors were also made for each transect. After samplings, we digitised the most important land-use types using aerial photographs to produce landscape scale parameters within 100 and 500 m circles around every site. Analysing the management, regional, landscape and local effects on species richness with linear mixed models, we showed only strong significant regional differences. Linear mixed models for Orthoptera abundance yielded significant regional effects and marginal management effects. However, after including local and landscape parameters in a separate model a marginal local effect was found instead of a management effect in addition to the significant regional effect. Logistic regression models of 15 species also revealed the importance of local factors, particularly the importance of grass height, which is highly dependent on grazing intensity. We conclude that management intensity has indirect effects on Orthoptera species richness and abundance. Landscape scale parameters are also important, at least for some species.  相似文献   
60.
Endocannabinoid signaling has been implicated in modulating insulin release from β cells of the endocrine pancreas. β Cells express CB1 cannabinoid receptors (CB1Rs), and the enzymatic machinery regulating anandamide and 2-arachidonoylglycerol bioavailability. However, the molecular cascade coupling agonist-induced cannabinoid receptor activation to insulin release remains unknown. By combining molecular pharmacology and genetic tools in INS-1E cells and in vivo, we show that CB1R activation by endocannabinoids (anandamide and 2-arachidonoylglycerol) or synthetic agonists acutely or after prolonged exposure induces insulin hypersecretion. In doing so, CB1Rs recruit Akt/PKB and extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2 to phosphorylate focal adhesion kinase (FAK). FAK activation induces the formation of focal adhesion plaques, multimolecular platforms for second-phase insulin release. Inhibition of endocannabinoid synthesis or FAK activity precluded insulin release. We conclude that FAK downstream from CB1Rs mediates endocannabinoid-induced insulin release by allowing cytoskeletal reorganization that is required for the exocytosis of secretory vesicles. These findings suggest a mechanistic link between increased circulating and tissue endocannabinoid levels and hyperinsulinemia in type 2 diabetes.  相似文献   
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