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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28735627

ABSTRACT

Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase-1 (IDO-1) catalyses the first and rate-limiting step in the metabolism of L-tryptophan. Degradation of L-Trp leads to the production of several immunosuppressive metabolites, including N-formyl kynurenine and kynurenine (Kyn). Apart from a normal physiological role, IDO-1 has also been identified to play a crucial role in immune suppression and tumour induced tolerance. Indeed, many primary tumours express high levels of IDO-1 compared to normal cells of the same stroma. IDO-1 is accepted as being an inducible negative regulator of T cell viability, proliferation and activation. As such, IDO-1 has become a target of intense interest for pharmacological inhibition, for the treatment of cancer. We have previously demonstrated that AA and the prostaglandin metabolite, PGD2, repressed the IFNγ mediated activity of IDO-1 in THP-1 cells and human monocytes. In this study, we characterise the structure-function relationship of fatty acids and eicosanoids towards inhibition of IDO-1 activity in THP-1 cells and human monocytes. Using a commercial library of fatty acids, 55% of fatty acids inhibited IDO-1 activity. The activity of individual FAs was affected by chain length, number of double bonds and bond configuration. Interrogation of an AA derived eicosanoid library identified 13 PGs with significant inhibitory activity. A structure-function analysis revealed that the γ position of the cyclopentenone ring, double bond in the α-ß position of the cyclopentenone ring, the presence of multiple OH groups in the side arm and the addition of an ethanolamide group, significantly increased the inhibitory activity of the PGs. Based on this data we have identified the structure of two possible compounds that may be even more potent pharmacological repressors of IDO-1.


Subject(s)
Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Fatty Acids/pharmacology , Indoleamine-Pyrrole 2,3,-Dioxygenase/antagonists & inhibitors , Monocytes/enzymology , Prostaglandin D2/pharmacology , Humans , Indoleamine-Pyrrole 2,3,-Dioxygenase/metabolism , Interferon-gamma/pharmacology , Monocytes/cytology , Structure-Activity Relationship , THP-1 Cells
2.
Accid Anal Prev ; 90: 13-28, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26890077

ABSTRACT

Road safety strategies (generally called Strategic Highway Safety Plans in the USA) provide essential guidance for actions to improve road safety, but often lack a conceptual framework that is comprehensive, systems theory based, and underpinned by evidence from research and practice. This paper aims to incorporate all components, policy tools by which they are changed, and the general interactions between them. A framework of nine mutually interacting components that contribute to crashes and ten generic policy tools which can be applied to reduce the outcomes of these crashes was developed and used to assess 58 road safety strategies from 22 countries across 15 years. The work identifies the policy tools that are most and least widely applied to components, highlighting the potential for improvements to any individual road safety strategy, and the potential strengths and weaknesses of road safety strategies in general. The framework also provides guidance for the development of new road safety strategies, identifying potential consequences of policy tool based measures with regard to exposure and risk, useful for both mobility and safety objectives.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/prevention & control , Accidents, Traffic/statistics & numerical data , Safety , Systems Theory , Environment Design , Humans , Research , Risk
3.
Accid Anal Prev ; 74: 271-8, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25109432

ABSTRACT

Road safety strategies represent interventions on a complex social technical system level. An understanding of a theoretical basis and description is required for strategies to be structured and developed. Road safety strategies are described as systems, but have not been related to the theory, principles and basis by which systems have been developed and analysed. Recently, road safety strategies, which have been employed for many years in different countries, have moved to a 'vision zero', or 'safe system' style. The aim of this study was to analyse the successful Swedish, United Kingdom and Dutch road safety strategies against the older, and newer, Australian road safety strategies, with respect to their foundations in system theory and safety models. Analysis of the strategies against these foundations could indicate potential improvements. The content of four modern cases of road safety strategy was compared against each other, reviewed against scientific systems theory and reviewed against types of safety model. The strategies contained substantial similarities, but were different in terms of fundamental constructs and principles, with limited theoretical basis. The results indicate that the modern strategies do not include essential aspects of systems theory that describe relationships and interdependencies between key components. The description of these strategies as systems is therefore not well founded and deserves further development.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/prevention & control , Safety , Systems Theory , Australia , Humans , Models, Theoretical , Sweden , United Kingdom
4.
Accid Anal Prev ; 74: 250-70, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24997016

ABSTRACT

It is estimated that more than 1.2 million people die worldwide as a result of road traffic crashes and some 50 million are injured per annum. At present some Western countries' road safety strategies and countermeasures claim to have developed into 'Safe Systems' models to address the effects of road related crashes. Well-constructed models encourage effective strategies to improve road safety. This review aimed to identify and summarise concise descriptions, or 'models' of safety. The review covers information from a wide variety of fields and contexts including transport, occupational safety, food industry, education, construction and health. The information from 2620 candidate references were selected and summarised in 121 examples of different types of model and contents. The language of safety models and systems was found to be inconsistent. Each model provided additional information regarding style, purpose, complexity and diversity. In total, seven types of models were identified. The categorisation of models was done on a high level with a variation of details in each group and without a complete, simple and rational description. The models identified in this review are likely to be adaptable to road safety and some of them have previously been used. None of systems theory, safety management systems, the risk management approach, or safety culture was commonly or thoroughly applied to road safety. It is concluded that these approaches have the potential to reduce road trauma.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/prevention & control , Models, Theoretical , Occupational Health , Safety , Humans
5.
Mol Pharmacol ; 60(1): 200-8, 2001 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11408615

ABSTRACT

Our knowledge about ClC-1 muscle chloride channel gating, previously gained from single-channel recording and noise analysis, provides a theoretical basis for further analysis of macroscopic currents. In the present study, we propose a simple method of calculation of open probabilities (P(o)) of fast and slow gates from the relative amplitudes of ClC-1 inward current components. With this method, we investigated the effects of 2-(4-chlorophenoxy) propionic acid (CPP), a drug known to produce myotonia in animals, and dominant negative myotonic mutations, F307S and A313T, on fast and slow gating of ClC-1. We have shown that these mutations affected the P(o) of the slow gate, as expected from their mode of inheritance, and that CPP predominantly affected the fast gating process. CPP's action on the fast gating of mutant channels was similar to its effect in wild-type channels. Comparison of the effects of CPP and the mutations on fast and slow gating with the effects produced by reduction of external Cl(-) concentration suggested that CPP and mutations exert their action by affecting the transition of the channel from its closed to open state after Cl(-) binding to the gating site.


Subject(s)
2-Methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic Acid/pharmacology , Chloride Channels/metabolism , 2-Methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic Acid/analogs & derivatives , Binding, Competitive , Cells, Cultured , Chloride Channels/drug effects , Chloride Channels/genetics , Chloride Channels/physiology , Electrophysiology , Humans , Kinetics , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
6.
J Biol Chem ; 273(8): 4304-7, 1998 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9468477

ABSTRACT

Although hydropathy analysis of the skeletal muscle chloride channel protein, ClC-1, initially predicted 13 potential membrane spanning domains (D1 to D13), later topological studies have suggested that domain D4 is extracellular and that D13, conserved in all eukaryotic ClC channels, is located within the extensive cytoplasmic tail that makes up the carboxyl terminus of the protein. We have examined the effect of deleting D13 (DeltaD13) and the function of the carboxyl tail by removing the final 72 (fs923X), 100 (fs895X), 125 (L869X), 398 (N596X), and 420 (Q574X) amino acids from rat ClC-1. Appropriate cDNA constructs were prepared and expressed using the baculovirus Sf9 insect cell system. Patch clamp analysis of chloride currents in Sf9 cells showed that only relatively insubstantial changes could be attributed to the expressed fs923X, fs895X, and DeltaD13 mutants compared with wild type rat ClC-1. For N596X and Q574X, however, adequate mRNA could be detected, but neither patch clamp nor polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed corresponding protein production. By contrast, expression of L869X was demonstrable by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, but no chloride conductance attributable to it could be detected. Overall, our results indicate that the domain D13 is dispensable, as are the final 100 amino acids, but not the final 125 amino acids or more, of the carboxyl tail. Some essential region of unknown significance, therefore, appears to reside in the 18 amino acids after D13, from Lys877 to Arg894.


Subject(s)
Chloride Channels/metabolism , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Baculoviridae/genetics , Chloride Channels/chemistry , Chloride Channels/genetics , Kinetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Muscle Proteins/chemistry , Muscle Proteins/genetics , Mutagenesis , Rats , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Spodoptera
7.
J Physiol ; 501 ( Pt 2): 355-62, 1997 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9192307

ABSTRACT

1. Gating of the skeletal muscle chloride channel (ClC-1) is sensitive to extracellular pH. In this study, whole-cell recording of currents from wild-type (WT) ClC-1 and a mutant, R304E, expressed in the Sf-9 insect cell line was used to investigate further the nature of the pH-sensitive residues. 2. Extracellular Cd2+ produced a concentration-dependent block of WT ClC-1 with an IC50 of 1.0 +/- 0.1 mM and a Hill coefficient of 2.0 +/- 0.3. This block was sensitive to external pH, reducing at low pH, with an apparent pKa of 6.8 +/- 0.1 and a Hill coefficient for proton binding of 3.0 +/- 0.3. Anthracene-9-carboxylate (A-9-C) block of WT ClC-1 was also pH sensitive, increasing at low pH, with an apparent pKa of 6.4 +/- 0.1 and a Hill coefficient for proton binding of 1.0 +/- 0.2. 3. Compared with WT ClC-1, R304E had a lower affinity for Cd2+ (IC50, 3.0 +/- 0.3 mM) but it had a similar Hill coefficient for transition metal ion binding. The Hill coefficient for proton binding to the Cd2+ binding site was reduced to 1.4 +/- 0.3. In contrast, the A-9-C binding site in R304E showed the same pH sensitivity and affinity for the blocker as that seen in WT ClC-1. 4. ClC-1 has at least two binding sites for Cd2+, each of which has at least three residues which can be protonated. Binding of A-9-C is influenced by protonation of a single residue. Arg 304 is not sufficiently close to the A-9-C binding site to affect its characteristics, but it does. alter Cd2+ binding, indicating that transition metal ions and aromatic carboxylates interact with distinct sites. 5. The block of ClC-1 by transition metal ions and the apparent pKa of this block, together with the apparent pKa for A-9-C block and gating are all compatible with the involvement of His residues in the pore and gate of ClC-1.


Subject(s)
Cadmium/pharmacology , Chloride Channels/metabolism , Insecta/physiology , Mutation/physiology , Animals , Cell Line , Chloride Channels/drug effects , Chloride Channels/genetics , Electrophysiology , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Ion Channel Gating/drug effects , Membrane Potentials/physiology , Metals/pharmacology , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Point Mutation/physiology , Rats
8.
Cell Calcium ; 19(5): 439-52, 1996 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8793184

ABSTRACT

The expression of hepatocyte plasma membrane receptor-activated divalent cation channels in immature (stages V and VI) Xenopus laevis oocytes and the properties which allow these channels to be distinguished from endogenous receptor-activated divalent cation channels were investigated. Divalent cation inflow to oocytes housed in a multiwell plate was measured using the fluorescent dyes Fluo-3 and Fura-2. In control oocytes, ionomycin, cholera toxin, thapsigargin, 3-fluoro-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3F) and guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP gamma S) stimulated Ca2+ and Mn2+ inflow following addition of these ions to the oocytes. Ionomycin-, cholera-toxin-, thapsigargin- and InsP3F-stimulated Ca2+ inflow was inhibited by Gd3+ (half maximal inhibition at less thari 5 microM Gd3+ for InsP3F-stimulated Ca2+ inflow). GTP gamma S-stimulated Ca2+ inflow was insensitive to 50 microM Gd3+ and to SK&F 96365. These results indicate that at least three types of endogenous receptor-activated Ca2+ channels can be detected in Xenopus oocytes using Ca(2+)-sensitive fluorescent dyes: lanthanide-sensitive divalent cation channels activated by intracellular Ca2+ store depletion, lanthanide-sensitive divalent cation channels activated by cholera toxin, and lanthanide-insensitive divalent cation channels activated by an unknown trimeric G-protein. Oocytes microinjected with rat hepatocyte poly(A)+ RNA exhibited greater rates of Ca2+ and Mn2+ inflow in the basal (no agonist) state, greater rates of Ca2+ inflow in the presence of vasopressin or InsP3F and greater rates of Ba2+ inflow in the presence of InsP3F, when compared with "mock"-injected oocytes. In poly(A)+ RNA-injected oocytes, vasopressin- and InsP3F-stimulated Ca2+ inflow, but not basal Ca2+ inflow, was inhibited by Gd3+. It is concluded that at least one type of hepatocyte plasma membrane divalent cation channel, which admits Mn2+ as well as Ca2+ and is lanthanide-insensitive, can be expressed and detected in Xenopus oocytes.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Ion Channels/biosynthesis , Liver/metabolism , Magnesium/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Animals , Ion Channels/genetics , Oocytes/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Xenopus laevis
9.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1280(2): 178-86, 1996 Apr 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8639692

ABSTRACT

Using the baculovirus system, the skeletal muscle chloride channel, CIC-1 (rat), and a point mutant replacing arginine 304 with glutamic acid were expressed at high levels in cultured Sf-9 insect cells. Whole-cell patch-clamping revealed large inwardly rectifying currents with maxima up to 15 nA inward and 2.5 nA outward. Saturation was evident at voltage steps positive to +40 mV whilst steps negative to -60 mV produced inactivating currents made up of a steady state component and two exponentially decaying components with tau 1 = 6.14+/- 0.92 ms, tau 2 = 36.5+/- 3.29 ms (S.D) n = 7 for steps to -120 mV. Currents recorded in the outside-out patch configuration were often unexpectedly large and up to 5% of whole-cell currents obtained in the same cell, suggesting an uneven channel distribution in the plasmalemma of Sf-9 cells. The pharmacology of a number of chloride channel blockers, including anthracene-9-carboxylate (A9C), niflumate, and perrhenate, was investigated and showed for the first time that perrhenate is an effective blocker of C1C-1 and that it has a complex mechanism of action. Further, the potency of A9C was found to be dependent on external chloride concentration. As in studies on muscle cells themselves, blockade was rapidly effective and easily reversible, except when applying the indanyloxyacetate derivative, IAA94/95, which took up to 10 min to act, and, consistent with an intracellular site of action, was difficult to reverse by washing. Mutation of the highly conserved arginine at position 304 to a glutamic acid did not significantly alter the behaviour of the channel.


Subject(s)
Chloride Channels/metabolism , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Point Mutation , Animals , Baculoviridae/genetics , Base Sequence , Cell Line , Chloride Channels/genetics , Chloride Channels/physiology , Cloning, Molecular , DNA, Complementary , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Membrane Potentials , Molecular Sequence Data , Muscle Proteins/genetics , Muscle Proteins/physiology , Rats , Spodoptera
10.
Biochem Mol Biol Int ; 38(2): 357-64, 1996 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8850531

ABSTRACT

We have expressed the human thiopurine methyltransferase cDNA in a baculovirus vector in Sf21 (Spodoptera frugiperda) cells. This system expresses the enzyme at levels such that the thiopurine methyltransferase enzyme may be readily visualised by Coomassie blue stained sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The expressed enzyme catalysed the methylation of 6-mercaptopurine with an apparent Km of 892 microM, similar to that observed in human liver cytosol ie. 657 microM however, the Vmax was 13,500 pmole/mg/min, which is approximately 400 times higher than the Vmax observed in human liver cytosol ie. 33 pmole/mg/min. The thiopurine methyltransferase inhibitors 6-thioxanthine, p-methoxybenzoic acid and 3,5-dimethoxy benzoic acid were found to be potent inhibitors of the expressed enzyme.


Subject(s)
Baculoviridae/genetics , Gene Expression , Genetic Vectors/genetics , Methyltransferases/genetics , Animals , Base Sequence , Cell Line , Cytosol/enzymology , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Humans , Kinetics , Liver/enzymology , Mercaptopurine/metabolism , Methylation , Methyltransferases/antagonists & inhibitors , Methyltransferases/biosynthesis , Methyltransferases/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/biosynthesis , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Spodoptera
11.
Biochem J ; 299 ( Pt 2): 399-407, 1994 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8172600

ABSTRACT

The roles of heterotrimeric GTP-binding regulatory proteins (G-proteins) and inositol polyphosphates in the mechanism by which vasopressin stimulates Ca2+ inflow in hepatocytes were investigated by using single cells loaded with fura2 by microinjection. Vasopressin-stimulated Ca2+ inflow was mimicked by microinjection of guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]) or guanosine 5'-[beta gamma-imido]triphosphate to the cells, but not adenosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (ATP[S]) or guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate (GDP[S]). Extracellular Gd3+ (5 microM) inhibited both vasopressin- and GTP[S]-stimulated Ca2+ inflow. GDP[S], but not GMP, administered to hepatocytes by microinjection, completely inhibited vasopressin-stimulated Ca2+ inflow and partially inhibited vasopressin-induced release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. The microinjection of pertussis toxin had no effect either on the release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores or on Ca2+ inflow induced by vasopressin, but completely inhibited changes in these processes induced by epidermal growth factor (EGF). Hepatocytes isolated from rats treated with pertussis toxin for 24 h exhibited no vasopressin- or GTP[S]-stimulated Ca2+ inflow, whereas the vasopressin-stimulated release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores was similar to that observed for control cells. Heparin or ATP[S] inhibited, or delayed the onset of, both vasopressin-induced release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores and vasopressin-stimulated Ca2+ inflow. Vasopressin-induced oscillations in intracellular [Ca2+] were observed in some heparin-treated cells. It is concluded that the stimulation by vasopressin of Ca2+ inflow to hepatocytes requires inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) and, by implication, the pertussis-toxin-insensitive G-protein required for the activation of phospholipase C beta [Taylor, Chae, Rhee and Exton (1991) Nature (London) 350, 516-518], and another G-protein which is slowly ADP-ribosylated by pertussis toxin and acts between InsP3 and the putative plasma-membrane Ca2+ channel. EGF-stimulated Ca2+ inflow involves at least one G-protein which is rapidly ADP-ribosylated and is most likely required for InsP3 formation.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Diphosphate Ribose/metabolism , Calcium/metabolism , GTP-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Liver/metabolism , Pertussis Toxin , Vasopressins/pharmacology , Virulence Factors, Bordetella/pharmacology , Adenosine Triphosphate/analogs & derivatives , Adenosine Triphosphate/pharmacology , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Epidermal Growth Factor/pharmacology , Fluorescent Dyes , Guanosine 5'-O-(3-Thiotriphosphate)/pharmacology , Guanosine Diphosphate/analogs & derivatives , Guanosine Diphosphate/pharmacology , Heparin/pharmacology , Kinetics , Liver/drug effects , Male , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Thionucleotides/pharmacology , Time Factors
12.
Biochem Mol Biol Int ; 31(1): 193-200, 1993 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7505152

ABSTRACT

cDNA which encodes part of the alpha 1-subunit of the rabbit skeletal muscle L-type voltage-operated Ca2+ channel (VOCC cDNA) was employed to search for the presence in whole liver and hepatocytes of poly (A+) RNA homologous to mRNA which encodes VOCCs. Such homologous mRNA would be a candidate for mRNA which encodes the putative hepatocyte receptor-activated Ca2+ inflow system (RACIS). Northern blot analysis showed that poly (A+) RNA prepared from intact liver tissue, but not hepatocytes, contained a poly (A+) RNA species comparable in size to that which encodes the alpha 1-subunit of the L-type VOCC. It is concluded (a) that hepatocytes do not possess VOCCs or that the levels of VOCC poly(A+) RNA in hepatocytes are too low to be detected by Northern analysis and (b) that another cell type present in liver tissue does possess a VOCC. In a low stringency screen of a rat liver cDNA library employing VOCC cDNA as a probe, seven positive cDNA clones were obtained. While regions of the 2.3 kb cDNA insert from one of these clones showed sequence similarities with regions of VOCC cDNA, the 2.3 kb sequence did not appear to encode a Ca2+ channel. The present results suggest that the approach of low stringency cDNA library screening is unlikely to allow isolation of RACIS cDNA.


Subject(s)
Calcium Channels/genetics , Liver/chemistry , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Animals , Base Sequence , Blotting, Northern , Calcium Channels/metabolism , Cloning, Molecular , Liver/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Poly A/genetics , Poly A/metabolism , Polymerase Chain Reaction , RNA/genetics , RNA/metabolism , Rats
13.
Biochem Pharmacol ; 45(10): 2163-5, 1993 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8512598

ABSTRACT

Experiments were conducted to characterize the thapsigargin-stimulated plasma membrane Ca2+ inflow pathway in hepatocytes. Ca2+ inflow was estimated by measurement of the initial rate of activation of glycogen phosphorylase a following the addition of Ca2+ to cells previously incubated in the absence of added Ca2+. Pretreatment of hepatocytes with thapsigargin caused a substantial stimulation of the rate of Ca2+ activation of glycogen phosphorylase a. This was interpreted to reflect a stimulation of plasma membrane Ca2+ inflow. The effect of thapsigargin on plasma membrane Ca2+ inflow was approximately 65% of the magnitude of the effect caused by vasopressin. When thapsigargin and vasopressin were combined as a stimulus, the degree of stimulation was similar to that caused by vasopressin alone. The thapsigargin-induced stimulation of the rate of Ca2+ activation of glycogen phosphorylase a was inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner by both Zn2+ and 1-(beta-[3-(4-methoxyphenyl)propoxy]-4-methoxyphenethyl)-1H-imidazole hydrochloride (SK&F 96365). The concentration of each agent required for half-maximal inhibition was approximately 20 microM. It is concluded from: (i) the apparent lack of additivity in the responses of thapsigargin and vasopressin, and (ii) the sensitivity to inhibitors, that the Ca2+ inflow pathway in hepatocytes stimulated by thapsigargin is likely to be similar to that which is activated by vasopressin.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Liver/drug effects , Liver/metabolism , Terpenes/pharmacology , Vasopressins/pharmacology , Animals , Calcium/pharmacokinetics , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Dimethyl Sulfoxide/pharmacology , Enzyme Activation , Imidazoles/pharmacology , Kinetics , Liver/cytology , Male , Phosphorylases/drug effects , Phosphorylases/metabolism , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/pharmacology , Rats , Sensitivity and Specificity , Stimulation, Chemical , Thapsigargin , Zinc/pharmacology
14.
Virology ; 193(1): 242-55, 1993 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8438569

ABSTRACT

To determine the interaction between the gag precursor and the viral protease and to confirm the role of gag precursor in formation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 particles, the gag and protease encoding regions of a proviral genome with mutations at the site between p17 and p24 or p24 and p15 were expressed by recombinant baculoviruses under the transcriptional control of the strong polyhedrin promoter. Western blot analyses of the expressed products of p17-p24 mutated viruses revealed that both 41- and 55-kDa proteins were synthesized. However, free p24, p17, and the other smaller cleavage products (p9, p6) could not be detected in infected insect cells. The second recombinant virus (p24-p15) synthesized not only a 55k-Da protein, but also a number of smaller products including a 40k-Da protein, p24, and p17. Examination of the insect cells infected by either of these two recombinant viruses by electron microscopy failed to detect any gag particle formation, although some irregular membrane protrusions and profound distortions of the cell surface were clearly visible in the cells infected with recombinant mutant p17-p24 virus, but not with recombinant p24-p15 mutants. To investigate the morphogenic capability of the gag-pol fusion protein, a mutant gag-pol gene containing an inactive protease as well as a modified gag-pol gene lacking the frameshifting activity were expressed in insect cells. While the inactive protease mutant was capable of forming immature particles that were secreted, the frameshifting mutant synthesized only an aberrant form of gag particles with a large radius of curvature in lieu of spherical particles. However, when this mutant was expressed in insect cells in the presence of a truncated gag protein with M(r) of 46 kDa (lacking only the p6 domain), normal immature particles containing both antigens were formed.


Subject(s)
Fusion Proteins, gag-pol/physiology , Gene Products, gag/physiology , HIV-1/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Fusion Proteins, gag-pol/biosynthesis , Fusion Proteins, gag-pol/genetics , Gene Products, gag/biosynthesis , Gene Products, gag/genetics , HIV-1/genetics , HIV-1/ultrastructure , Lepidoptera/cytology , Lepidoptera/microbiology , Molecular Sequence Data , Morphogenesis/physiology , Mutation , Recombinant Proteins/biosynthesis
16.
Biochem J ; 278 ( Pt 3): 849-55, 1991 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1910337

ABSTRACT

In single NIH-3T3 fibroblasts loaded with fura-2, bombesin induced one of three patterns of increase in the concentration of intracellular free Ca2+ [( Ca2+]i): a single transient increase, a sustained increase, or repetitive transient increases in [Ca2+]i. Foetal-calf serum and ATP also gave these three patterns of response, although a lower proportion of cells gave repetitive Ca2+ transients in response to ATP. An increase in the concentration of bombesin from 1 to 25 nM increased the proportion of cells which exhibited repetitive Ca2+ transients. At 25 nM-bombesin, the proportion of cells which exhibited repetitive Ca2+ transients increased as the extracellular Ca2+ (Ca2+o) concentration was increased from 1 to 5 mM. Removal of Ca2+o by addition of EGTA, or inhibition of Ca2+ inflow by treatment of cells incubated in the presence of Ca2+o with verapamil or an activator of protein kinase C, abruptly terminated repetitive Ca2+ transients, with only one transient observed after the cessation of Ca2+ inflow. Repetitive Ca2+ transients were not observed in cells incubated in the absence of Ca2+o and in the presence of EGTA. Addition of Ca2+o to cells previously incubated in the presence of EGTA caused a resumption of repetitive Ca2+ transients. Addition of thapsigargin alone induced a large transient increase in [Ca2+]i, whereas much smaller transient increases in [Ca2+]i were induced in about 30% of cells tested by caffeine or carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) plus oligomycin. Thapsigargin or the combination of CCCP plus oligomycin completely inhibited bombesin-induced repetitive Ca2+ transients, whereas caffeine had no effect. It is concluded from the studies of the role of Ca2+o that NIH-3T3 cells differ from other cell types in the anatomical or chemical links between extracellular Ca2+ and the intracellular stores involved in the generation of Ca2+ transients, whereas the results of the experiments with inhibitors indicate that the generation of repetitive Ca2+ transients in NIH-3T3 cells is unlikely to involve Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release from caffeine-sensitive stores.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Growth Substances/pharmacology , Adenosine Triphosphate/pharmacology , Animals , Bombesin/pharmacology , Caffeine/pharmacology , Carbonyl Cyanide m-Chlorophenyl Hydrazone/pharmacology , Cattle , Cell Line , Egtazic Acid/pharmacology , Fetal Blood , Fibroblasts/drug effects , Fluorescent Dyes , Fura-2 , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Oligomycins/pharmacology , Oxidative Phosphorylation/drug effects , Terpenes/pharmacology , Thapsigargin
17.
Biochem Int ; 24(3): 507-16, 1991 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1772429

ABSTRACT

A GTP-binding protein with an apparent molecular weight of 25 kDa was detected in hepatocyte extracts using SDS-PAGE and [alpha-32P]GTP. p21ras proteins could only be detected by immunological analysis. The amounts of p21ras proteins present in isolated hepatocytes and in a highly purified preparation of liver plasma membrane vesicles were 0.3 and 4 ng p21ras protein/micrograms membrane protein, respectively. In comparison with the total cell extract, the degree of enrichment of plasma membrane vesicles with p21ras was similar to that of 5'-nucleotidase. The p21ras proteins were tightly associated with the membrane. Treatment of [3H]choline-labelled plasma membranes with an excess concentration of the anti-p21ras antibody Y13-259 failed to inhibit either basal or guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S])-stimulated [3H]choline release. It is concluded that in hepatocytes (a) the majority of p21ras is bound to the plasma membrane and (b) p21ras is not directly involved in the activation by GTP[S] of phospholipase D.


Subject(s)
GTP-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Liver/enzymology , Oncogene Protein p21(ras)/chemistry , Oncogene Protein p21(ras)/immunology , Phospholipase D/metabolism , Animals , Antibodies, Monoclonal , Blotting, Western , Cell Extracts/chemistry , Cell Fractionation , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Choline/metabolism , Enzyme Activation , Guanosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Molecular Weight , Rats
19.
Cell Signal ; 3(4): 283-92, 1991.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1657095

ABSTRACT

Progress in elucidation of the properties of the hepatocyte receptor-activated Ca2+ inflow system (RACIS) has been hampered by difficulties in measuring rates of Ca2+ inflow to hepatocytes. These difficulties have led, for example, to different conclusions about the relationship between the extracellular Ca2+ concentration and the movement of Ca2+ through the RACIS. The hepatocyte RACIS admits Mn2+ and a number of other divalent cations as well as Ca2+. Many of these cations also inhibit the movement of Ca2+ through this system. While the RACIS is inhibited by high concentrations of verapamil and by some other Ca2+ antagonists, it is relatively insensitive to inhibition by organic compounds which inhibit other Ca2+ channels and Ca2+ transporters. There is circumstantial evidence which suggests that the hepatocyte RACIS is an exchange system, possibly one which catalyses Ca(2+)-H+ exchange or the co-transport of Ca2+ and OH-. Other circumstantial evidence suggests that the RACIS is a channel, with some similarities to voltage-operated Ca2+ channels in excitable cells. However, experiments using the patch-clamp technique have not yet detected agonist-stimulated Ca2+ movement across the hepatocyte plasma membrane. The molecular components of the RACIS probably differ from those which facilitate the large inflow of Ca2+ to hepatocytes which occurs in the absence of an agonist. The mechanism by which agonists activate the RACIS has not been elucidated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Liver/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Animals , Humans , Liver/cytology
20.
Biochem J ; 272(3): 749-53, 1990 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2125211

ABSTRACT

1. Guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]) stimulated by 50% the rate of release of [3H]choline and [3H]phosphorylcholine in rat liver plasma membranes labelled with [3H]choline. About 70% of the radioactivity released in the presence of GTP[S] was [3H]choline and 30% was [3H]phosphorylcholine. 2. The hydrolysis of phosphorylcholine to choline and the conversion of choline to phosphorylcholine did not contribute to the formation of [3H]choline and [3H]phosphorylcholine respectively. 3. The release of [3H]choline from membranes was inhibited by low concentrations of SDS or Triton X-100. Considerably higher concentrations of the detergents were required to inhibit the release of [3H]phosphorylcholine. 4. Guanosine 5'-[beta gamma-imido]triphosphate and guanosine 5'-[alpha beta-methylene]triphosphate, but not adenosine 5'-[gamma-thio]-triphosphate, stimulated [3H]choline release to the same extent as did GTP[S]. The GTP[S]-stimulated [3H]choline release was inhibited by guanosine 5'-[beta-thio]diphosphate, GDP and GTP but not by GMP. 5. It is concluded that, in rat liver plasma membranes, (a) GTP[S]-stimulated hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine is catalysed predominantly by phospholipase D with some contribution from phospholipase C, and (b) the stimulation of phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis by GTP[s] occurs via a GTP-binding regulatory protein.


Subject(s)
GTP-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Guanosine 5'-O-(3-Thiotriphosphate)/pharmacology , Liver/metabolism , Membrane Lipids/metabolism , Phosphatidylcholines/metabolism , Phospholipase D/metabolism , Animals , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Choline/metabolism , Guanine Nucleotides/pharmacology , Hydrolysis , Kinetics , Male , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Ribonucleotides/pharmacology
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