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1.
Acta Haematol ; 128(2): 65-8, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22678347

ABSTRACT

There is conflicting evidence in the literature on the etiology of hypogonadism in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). A cross-sectional study was done to determine whether hypogonadism in male patients with SCD is due to primary testicular failure or secondary pituitary/hypothalamic dysfunction and assess the association between hypogonadism and serum ferritin levels. Hormonal assessment for serum concentrations of testosterone, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) was done for 34 men with SCD and their charts were reviewed for relevant clinical variables. Eight men (24%) were classified hypogonadal based on their serum testosterone levels. These men have significantly lower LH (p = 0.001) and FSH (p = 0.01) levels than normogonadal men, indicating a central etiology. There was no significant difference between hypogonadal and normogonadal men with respect to ferritin levels (p = 0.71). Our study indicates a central etiology of hypogonadism in patients with SCD. In this small study ferritin level was not significantly related to hypogonadism.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell/complications , Hypogonadism/complications , Adolescent , Adult , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
2.
Ann Vasc Surg ; 24(5): 691.e1-6, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20363102

ABSTRACT

A 48-year-old woman presented with bilateral lower extremity critical limb ischemia. In addition to this, her work-up revealed multiple other thromboembolic insults including cerebral and visceral emboli. Initial laboratory findings were significant for an indeterminate platelet count, secondary to platelet clumping. After appropriate emergent surgical treatment including bilateral lower extremity embolectomy, the patient was empirically anticoagulated with a direct thrombin inhibitor. Further embolic work-up discovered bilateral renal and splenic infarctions as well as a large mobile mitral vegetation. Finally, an upper extremity duplex revealed left axillary, left subclavian, and right internal jugular acute deep vein thromboses. Mitral valve replacement was performed to remove the septic source. A series of hypercoagulability studies was done, and results were positive for lupus anticoagulants. Months after her recovery, the patient was tested and found to be positive for sticky platelet syndrome.


Subject(s)
Arterial Occlusive Diseases/etiology , Blood Platelet Disorders/complications , Endocarditis/complications , Extremities/blood supply , Ischemia/etiology , Platelet Aggregation , Thromboembolism/etiology , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Anticoagulants/therapeutic use , Arterial Occlusive Diseases/blood , Arterial Occlusive Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Arterial Occlusive Diseases/therapy , Blood Platelet Disorders/blood , Blood Platelet Disorders/diagnosis , Blood Platelet Disorders/drug therapy , Embolectomy , Endocarditis/blood , Endocarditis/microbiology , Endocarditis/therapy , Female , Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation , Humans , Ischemia/blood , Ischemia/diagnostic imaging , Ischemia/therapy , Middle Aged , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Radiography , Streptococcus/isolation & purification , Syndrome , Thrombectomy , Thromboembolism/blood , Thromboembolism/diagnostic imaging , Thromboembolism/therapy , Treatment Outcome
3.
Magn Reson Med ; 50(6): 1209-14, 2003 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14648568

ABSTRACT

The preferential accumulation of sickle blood cells in tumor vasculature is demonstrated noninvasively using MRI and sickle red blood cells loaded with Gd-DTPA and invasively by two other techniques. The distribution of red blood cells in rat brain tumors relative to normal brains were measured using three separate techniques: MRI of Gd-DTPA loaded cells, fluorescent microscopy detection of Oregon Green 488 fluorescence conjugated to a streptavidin-biotin complex that binds to red blood cell surface proteins, and autoradiography using a technetium (99m)Tc-labeling kit. Labeled red cells were infused intravenously in rats with brain tumors. Sickle cells preferentially accumulated in tumor relative to normal brain, with highest concentrations near the tumor / normal tissue boundary, whereas control normal red cells did not preferentially aggregate at the tumor periphery. This demonstrates the potential of sickle red blood cells to accumulate in the abnormal tumor vessel network, and the ability to detect their aggregation noninvasively and at high spatial resolution using MRI. The application of the noninvasive measurement of sickle cells for imaging tumor neovasculature, or as a delivery tool for therapy, requires further study.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell/blood , Brain Neoplasms/blood supply , Contrast Media , Erythrocytes , Gadolinium DTPA , Glioma/blood supply , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Animals , Autoradiography , Brain/blood supply , Brain Neoplasms/diagnosis , Carboxylic Acids , Cell Line, Tumor , Fluorescent Dyes , Humans , Male , Microscopy, Confocal , Neoplasm Transplantation , Rats , Rats, Inbred F344 , Sodium Pertechnetate Tc 99m
4.
Blood ; 92(8): 2924-33, 1998 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9763579

ABSTRACT

The mechanisms by which pharmacologic agents stimulate gamma-globin gene expression in beta-globin disorders has not been fully established at the molecular level. In studies described here, nucleated erythroblasts were isolated from patients with beta-globin disorders before and with butyrate therapy, and globin biosynthesis, mRNA, and protein-DNA interactions were examined. Expression of gamma-globin mRNA increased twofold to sixfold above baseline with butyrate therapy in 7 of 8 patients studied. A 15% to 50% increase in gamma-globin protein synthetic levels above baseline gamma globin ratios and a relative decrease in beta-globin biosynthesis were observed in responsive patients. Extensive new in vivo footprints were detected in erythroblasts of responsive patients in four regions of the gamma-globin gene promoter, designated butyrate-response elements gamma 1-4 (BRE-G1-4). Electrophoretic mobility shift assays using BRE-G1 sequences as a probe demonstrated that new binding of two erythroid-specific proteins and one ubiquitous protein, alphaCP2, occurred with treatment in the responsive patients and did not occur in the nonresponder. The BRE-G1 sequence conferred butyrate inducibility in reporter gene assays. These in vivo protein-DNA interactions in human erythroblasts in which gamma-globin gene expression is being altered strongly suggest that nuclear protein binding, including alphaCP2, to the BRE-G1 region of the gamma-globin gene promoter mediates butyrate activity on gamma-globin gene expression.


Subject(s)
Butyrates/pharmacology , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , DNA/metabolism , Fetal Hemoglobin/biosynthesis , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Globins/genetics , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Transcription Factors/metabolism , beta-Thalassemia/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Anemia, Sickle Cell/blood , Anemia, Sickle Cell/drug therapy , Anemia, Sickle Cell/genetics , Base Sequence , Butyrates/therapeutic use , Child , Child, Preschool , DNA/genetics , DNA Footprinting , Erythroblasts/metabolism , Fetal Hemoglobin/genetics , Humans , Middle Aged , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Binding , RNA, Messenger/biosynthesis , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid , Transcription, Genetic , beta-Thalassemia/blood , beta-Thalassemia/genetics
5.
J Mol Biol ; 243(2): 216-26, 1994 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7523683

ABSTRACT

One possible mechanism for the generation of deletion mutations is inaccurate repair of DNA double-strand breaks. In an attempt to detect such aberrant repair events in intact cells, confluent stationary phase cultures of chinese hamster ovary D422 cells, which are hemizygous for aprt, were treated for two days with low concentrations of bleomycin, and aprt mutant clones were selected and analyzed by polymerase chain reaction and DNA sequencing. Bleomycin was quite mutagenic in stationary phase cells, increasing the mutant frequency by five to 40-fold at 5 to 50% survival. While spontaneous mutations generated under these conditions were predominantly base substitutions, the majority of the bleomycin-induced mutations were very small deletions, with lesser numbers of large deletions/rearrangements and base substitutions. Although the small deletions tended to be clustered in several short segments of the gene, nucleosome positioning studies indicated that there was no consistent phasing of nucleosomes in aprt, suggesting that the clustering was due to sequence specificity rather than chromatin structure. About half of the bleomycin-induced mutations were single-base-pair (-1) deletions, and the majority of these involved deletion of one C in a G-Cn sequence (n > or = 2). At such sites, bleomycin is known to induce double-strand breaks by fragmentation of deoxyribose moieties at the same sequence position in both strands, resulting in a blunt-ended double-strand break with 5'-phosphate and 3'-phosphoglycolate termini. Thus, this sequence specificity is consistent with a model in which bleomycin-induced -1 deletions are generated by a double-strand break rejoining process involving removal of phosphoglycolate moieties from both 3' ends, followed by blunt-end ligation. The results support the view that repair of free radical-mediated double-strand breaks in mammalian cells in G1/G0 phase can be effected by such simple end-joining mechanisms, without the need for homologous recombination.


Subject(s)
Adenine Phosphoribosyltransferase/genetics , Bleomycin/pharmacology , DNA Repair/physiology , G1 Phase/genetics , Resting Phase, Cell Cycle/genetics , Sequence Deletion/drug effects , Animals , Base Sequence , CHO Cells , Cricetinae , Cricetulus , Models, Genetic , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Mutation , Nucleosomes/genetics
6.
Biochemistry ; 32(12): 3188-95, 1993 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7681328

ABSTRACT

The stability of oxidized abasic sites induced by bleomycin and neocarzinostatin was examined in chromatin reconstituted from a supercoiled plasmid and core histones. Most of the drug-induced abasic sites were found to undergo spontaneous cleavage in chromatin, probably by reaction with histone amine groups. However, there was considerable heterogeneity in the rate of spontaneous cleavage, with some sites being cleaved almost immediately and some remaining intact even after 7 h. Bleomycin-induced abasic sites with closely opposed strand breaks were more unstable than lone abasic sites. Neocarzinostatin-induced abasic sites, which have a different chemical structure, were cleaved somewhat more slowly than those induced by bleomycin. To assess the mutagenic potential of bleomycin-induced abasic sites, bleomycin-treated shuttle vectors were transfected into mammalian cells, and mutations in progeny plasmids were sequenced. Bleomycin treatment resulted primarily in deletions of various sizes in the shuttle vectors, including a number of one-base deletions occurring at potential bleomycin damage sites. However, under certain conditions, substitutions occurring at expected sites of bleomycin attack were also observed. The results suggest that bleomycin-induced abasic sites have only a slight potential to produce base substitutions in mammalian cells and that a substantial fraction of the double-strand breaks induced by bleomycin and most of the double-strand breaks induced by neocarzinostatin are the result of spontaneous cleavage of abasic sites with closely opposed strand breaks. Inaccurate repair of these double-strand breaks may account for the large deletions, and perhaps the one-base deletions, induced by bleomycin.


Subject(s)
Apurinic Acid/metabolism , Bleomycin/pharmacology , Chromatin/drug effects , DNA/drug effects , Genetic Vectors , Mutagenesis , Plasmids , Polynucleotides/metabolism , Base Sequence , Cell Line , DNA/metabolism , DNA Damage , DNA, Superhelical/drug effects , DNA, Superhelical/metabolism , Histones/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Transfection , Zinostatin/pharmacology
7.
Cancer Res ; 52(22): 6270-8, 1992 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1423273

ABSTRACT

We have examined the interaction between 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C) and the macrocyclic lactone protein kinase C activator bryostatin 1 in the human promyelocytic leukemia cell line HL-60. Preexposure of cells to 10 nM bryostatin 1 for 24 h, followed by an additional 24-h incubation with 10 microM ara-C, resulted in greater than additive inhibitory effects toward clonogenic HL-60 cells. In a series of alkaline elution assays, cells preincubated with bryostatin 1 and prelabeled with [3H]thymidine exhibited a significant increase in DNA fragmentation following exposure to ara-C in comparison to cells exposed to ara-C alone. This increase in DNA damage was apparent at both neutral and alkaline pH and was not protein associated. In contrast, studies using cells pulse-labeled with [3H]thymidine immediately before analysis suggested that bryostatin 1 pretreatment did not increase the ability of ara-C to interfere with DNA replicative intermediates. Additional studies demonstrated that the increase in DNA fragmentation induced by bryostatin 1 and ara-C preceded both loss of cell membrane integrity (as determined by trypan blue exclusion) as well as depletion of intracellular ATP and NAD pools. Furthermore, the enhanced inhibitory effects of bryostatin 1 and ara-C toward clonogenic HL-60 cells did not appear to result from the induction of cellular differentiation. Finally, agarose gel electrophoresis of DNA obtained from cells exposed to both bryostatin 1 and ara-C revealed a pattern of integer multiples of 180- to 200-base pair fragments commonly associated with endonucleolytic cleavage; the extent of this fragmentation was considerably greater than that observed in cells exposed to ara-C alone. Taken together, these findings suggest that exposure of HL-60 cells to bryostatin 1 renders them more susceptible to ara-C-related DNA damage and that this phenomenon contributes to the cytotoxic effects of this drug combination. They also raise the possibility that bryostatin 1, perhaps through modulation of intracellular signaling events in leukemic cells, has the capacity to potentiate ara-C-related apoptosis or programmed cell death.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/pharmacology , Cytarabine/pharmacology , DNA Damage , DNA, Neoplasm/drug effects , Lactones/pharmacology , Leukemia, Promyelocytic, Acute/drug therapy , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Antineoplastic Agents/administration & dosage , Apoptosis/drug effects , Bryostatins , Calcitriol/pharmacology , Cytarabine/administration & dosage , DNA/drug effects , DNA, Neoplasm/metabolism , Drug Synergism , Humans , Lactones/administration & dosage , Macrolides , NAD/metabolism , Protein Kinase C/antagonists & inhibitors , Thymidine/metabolism , Time Factors , Tritium , Tumor Cells, Cultured
8.
Biochem Pharmacol ; 43(2): 331-42, 1992 Jan 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1310853

ABSTRACT

A carcinogen-transformed rat hepatoma cell line (Reuber H-35) was utilized as a model system for investigation of the biochemical factors which may limit the effectiveness of chemotherapy in intrinsically resistant tumors such as hepatocellular carcinoma. Northern blotting demonstrated expression of mRNA coding for the P-170 membrane-glycoprotein associated with the multi-drug resistance phenotype, while Western blotting identified the P-170 glycoprotein in the hepatoma cell membrane. Consistent with these observations, tumor cell sensitivity to the vinca alkaloids, vincristine and vinblastine, to the anthracycline antibiotics, Adriamycin and daunorubicin, and to the demethylepipodophyllotoxin derivative, VM-26, was enhanced by continuous incubation in the presence of the calcium channel antagonist, verapamil. Verapamil produced a minimal change in cell sensitivity to the demethylepipodophyllotoxin derivative, VP-16, and to the aminoacridine, m-AMSA. Relatively high detoxification potential via the glutathione metabolic pathway was also observed in the hepatoma cell. The capacity of topoisomerase II in nuclear extracts from the hepatoma cell to mediate cleavable complex formation stimulated by VM-26, VP-16 and m-AMSA appeared to be at least comparable to, if not greater than that from drug-sensitive HL-60 cells, suggesting that drug resistance may not occur at the level of this enzyme. Consistent with findings in a number of tumor cell lines resistant to antineoplastic drugs, the antiproliferative activity of the topoisomerase II inhibitors VM-26, VP-16 and m-AMSA appeared to be dissociable from the induction of DNA strand breaks, suggesting that such lesions in DNA may fail to fully account for the antiproliferative activity of these agents in the hepatoma cell.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Drug Resistance/genetics , Liver Neoplasms, Experimental/genetics , Animals , Binding Sites/drug effects , Blotting, Northern , Blotting, Western , Cell Division/drug effects , Cell Fractionation , Cell Line/drug effects , DNA Damage , Glutathione/metabolism , Liver Neoplasms, Experimental/enzymology , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Phenotype , Rats , Topoisomerase II Inhibitors , Verapamil/pharmacology
10.
Mol Cell Biol ; 10(9): 4905-11, 1990 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2201907

ABSTRACT

Histones H2A and H2B are modified by ubiquitination of specific lysine residues in higher and lower eucaryotes. To identify functions of ubiquitinated histone H2A, we studied an organism in which genetic analysis of histones is feasible, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Surprisingly, immunoblotting experiments using both anti-ubiquitin and anti-H2A antibodies gave no evidence that S. cerevisiae contains ubiquitinated histone H2A. The immunoblot detected a variety of other ubiquitinated species. A sequence of five residues in S. cerevisiae histone H2A that is identical to the site of H2A ubiquitination in higher eucaryotes was mutated to substitute arginines for lysines. Any ubiquitination at this site would be prevented by these mutations. Yeast organisms carrying this mutation were indistinguishable from the wild type under a variety of conditions. Thus, despite the existence in S. cerevisiae of several gene products, such as RAD6 and CDC34, which are capable of ubiquitinating histone H2A in vitro, ubiquitinated histone H2A is either scarce in or absent from S. cerevisiae. Furthermore, the histone H2A sequence which serves as a ubiquitination site in higher eucaryotes is not essential for yeast growth, sporulation, or resistance to either heat stress or UV radiation.


Subject(s)
Histones/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/growth & development , Base Sequence , Eukaryotic Cells/physiology , Genotype , Histones/physiology , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Oligonucleotide Probes , Phenotype , Plasmids , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Species Specificity
11.
J Clin Lab Anal ; 4(5): 324-7, 1990.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1700090

ABSTRACT

A flow cytometric method for quantitation of glutathione (GSH) was applied to simultaneous analysis of the major leukocyte types in peripheral blood. Cellular thiols (predominantly GSH) were stained with monochlorobimane (MCIB), and thiol fluorescence was measured with a flow cytometer. The fluorescence of the thiols closely reflected the GSH content, as measured by a specific glutathione reductase assay. Fluorescence of individual cell types could be measured after delineating those cells by their light-scatter characteristics, utilizing dual-angle light scatter for discrimination. By this means, GSH contents of 12.5 +/- 2.0 nmol/10(7) neutrophils, 14.5 +/- 2.7 nmol/10(7) monocytes, and 5.0 +/- 1.0 nmol/10(7) lymphocytes were found. The results obtained for neutrophils with the flow cytometer were virtually identical with those obtained with chemical assay in purified samples of neutrophils, indicating the validity of the flow cytometric method.


Subject(s)
Flow Cytometry/methods , Glutathione/analysis , Lymphocytes/chemistry , Monocytes/chemistry , Neutrophils/chemistry , Cell Separation , Humans , Staining and Labeling
12.
J Biol Chem ; 264(27): 16261-7, 1989 Sep 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2777791

ABSTRACT

We report on membrane protein changes in an L1210 leukemia cell line with a highly specific defect in the function of the methotrexate (MTX)-tetrahydrofolate cofactor transport carrier. This clonal line, MTXrA, made 100-fold resistant to MTX, was derived in a single step and exhibited stable resistance over 120 generations in the absence of drug. The transport defect was associated with a 10-fold decrease in influx Vmax without a change in influx Km. There was no difference between the MTXrA and parent lines in the levels or affinities of specific cell surface binders for MTX nor in the labeling of the 44-kDa membrane protein upon treatment with the specific affinity label, N-hydroxysuccinimide ester of tritiated MTX. Consistent with impaired carrier function was the observation that trans-stimulation of MTX influx by intracellular 5-formyltetrahydrofolate observed in the parent line was not demonstrated in the MTXrA line. The transport defect was highly specific for the MTX-tetrahydrofolate cofactor transport carrier. Initial uptake rates for 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridine and 2-deoxyglucose were unchanged and influx and net transport of alpha-aminoisobutyric acid were, in fact, increased. There was no cross-resistance of this line to phenylalanine mustard or cytosine arabinoside, agents that utilize specific amino acid and nucleoside transport carriers, respectively. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of purified plasma membrane preparations stained with Coomassie Blue revealed several protein differences between the parental and MTXrA lines. Most prominent is a band at approximately 190 kDa which ran with slightly greater mobility than a lesser staining band in the parent line. [3H]Borohydride labeling of cells also identified a distinct protein peak in the MTXrA line at approximately 190 kDa eliminated by prior treatment of cells with neuraminidase. Absence of expression of protein or mRNA related to the multidrug resistance gene as well as lack of cross-resistance to daunorubicin or trimetrexate indicate that this mechanism of resistance to MTX is completely unrelated to the multidrug resistance phenomenon observed with high molecular weight heterocyclic compounds. These data represent the first demonstration of membrane protein differences in a highly resistant L1210 murine leukemia cell line with a marked unique defect in MTX transport which appears to be related to impaired mobility of the tetrahydrofolate-cofactor carrier. Further studies are now required to elucidate the possible role of one or more of these proteins in the transport defect.


Subject(s)
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters , Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Leukemia L1210/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Mutation , Neoplasm Proteins , ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily G, Member 2 , Animals , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Carrier Proteins/isolation & purification , Cell Division/drug effects , Drug Resistance/genetics , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins , Kinetics , Leukemia L1210/genetics , Methotrexate/pharmacology , Mice , Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase/metabolism , Thymidylate Synthase/metabolism , Tumor Cells, Cultured/cytology , Tumor Cells, Cultured/drug effects , Tumor Cells, Cultured/metabolism
13.
Cancer Commun ; 1(3): 175-80, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2561738

ABSTRACT

In the alkaline elution assay, expression of protein-associated DNA damage induced by topoisomerase II antagonists is facilitated by proteinase K digestion of the drug-stabilized topoisomerase-II-DNA complex. In the absence of this enzymatic deproteinization step, drug-induced DNA strand breaks are masked by the binding of the topoisomerase-II-DNA complex to the synthetic filter from which DNA is eluted subsequent to alkaline denaturation. In this manuscript, we report that as the number of cells lysed on the filter is increased, binding of the topoisomerase-II-DNA complex to the filter is compromised, permitting expression of DNA damage in the absence of enzymatic deproteinization.


Subject(s)
DNA Damage , DNA Replication , DNA Topoisomerases, Type II/metabolism , DNA, Neoplasm/drug effects , Etoposide/pharmacology , Mitoxantrone/pharmacology , Podophyllotoxin/analogs & derivatives , Teniposide/pharmacology , Animals , Cell Line , DNA, Neoplasm/isolation & purification , DNA, Neoplasm/radiation effects , Endopeptidase K , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Leukemia L1210 , Liver Neoplasms, Experimental , Mice , Protein Binding , Rats , Serine Endopeptidases , Tumor Cells, Cultured/drug effects
14.
Blood ; 71(4): 1153-6, 1988 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2833326

ABSTRACT

Murine erythroleukemia cells are useful for studying the regulation of erythroid differentiation since these malignant pronormoblasts differentiate to orthochromatic normoblasts when treated with a variety of inducing agents. Changes in chromatin proteins have been described following inducer exposure. The significance of these changes, which are greatest in terminally differentiated cells remains unknown. Ubiquitin is a highly conserved 8.5 kilodalton peptide that is covalently linked to up to 10% of histone H2A. We demonstrate that following exposure of MEL cells to inducers of differentiation, a transient increase in ubiquitination of H2A occurs. This change is coincident with the onset of differentiation. This result suggests that ubiquitination of H2A may have a role in the nuclear changes necessary for erythroleukemic cell differentiation.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Histones/metabolism , Leukemia, Erythroblastic, Acute/pathology , Ubiquitins/metabolism , Animals , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Cell Line , Dimethyl Sulfoxide/pharmacology , Erythropoiesis/drug effects , Leukemia, Erythroblastic, Acute/metabolism , Mice
15.
Anal Biochem ; 156(1): 147-53, 1986 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3017146

ABSTRACT

Immunoblots of either dot or Western type were exposed to heat before reaction with antibody. Dramatic increases in immunoblot sensitivity were seen for certain antigen-antibody pairs after heating of either dry or hydrated nitrocellulose filters at or above 100 degrees C. Heating of filters in the hydrated state improved the linearity of immunodetection and produced the highest signal-to-noise ratio. This treatment greatly increased immunoblot sensitivity with several peptide-generated antibodies, whereas decreased sensitivity was seen with antibodies against native proteins. Heating of hydrated filters after antigen immobilization is thus a potentially powerful way to increase the sensitivity of immunoblot analysis for antibodies that preferentially recognize epitopes in denatured proteins.


Subject(s)
Hot Temperature , Immunologic Techniques , Protein Denaturation , Collodion , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Filtration , Immunoglobulin G/immunology , Immunoglobulin M/immunology , Ubiquitins/immunology , Water
16.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 11(2): 387-401, 1983 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6298725

ABSTRACT

We have used a two-dimensional (deoxyribonucleoprotein leads to DNA) electrophoretic binding assay to study the interaction of the purified high mobility group protein HMG17 with isolated HeLa mononucleosomes as a function of their DNA fragment size and the presence of ubiquitin-H2A semihistone. No significant differences between affinities of HMG17 for ubiquitinated and non-ubiquitinated core mononucleosomes were observed. In striking contrast, the apparent affinity of HMG17 for a mononucleosome increases more than 100-fold upon an increase of the length of the mononucleosomal DNA fragment by as few as 3 to 5 bp over the core DNA length (integral of 146 bp). We suggest that the magnitude of this effect is sufficient to explain the preferential binding of HMG17 in vitro to mononucleosomes derived from actively transcribed genes.


Subject(s)
Chromosomal Proteins, Non-Histone/metabolism , DNA, Neoplasm/metabolism , Histones/metabolism , Nucleosomes/metabolism , Animals , Cattle , HeLa Cells/metabolism , High Mobility Group Proteins , Humans , Protein Binding , Thymus Gland , Ubiquitins
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 74(6): 2475-9, 1977 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-267941

ABSTRACT

Murine erythroleukemic cells accumulate cytoplasmic globin mRNA during differentiation induced in tissue culture by dimethyl sulfoxide. Cellular accumulation of globin RNA may reflect transcriptional activation of the globin genes and/or posttranscriptional stabilization of globin RNA during differentiation. To evaluate possible transcriptional controls directly; globin RNA synthesis by isolated erythroleukemic cell nuclei was studied. Conditions were established for optimal nuclear RNA synthesis in vitro in the presence of a mercurinucleotide (Hg-CTP). Mercurated RNA synthesized in vitro was purified free of endogenous RNA by affinity chromatography on sulfhydryl-Sepharose, and analyzed for the presence of newly synthesized globin RNA sequences by molecular hybridization to globin complementary [32P]DNA. The results demonstrate markedly increased synthesis of globin RNA by nuclei isolated from dimethyl sulfoxide-treated cells, even within 5 min of nuclear transcription in vitro. These findings are most consistent with transcriptional activation of the globin genes upon induction of differentiation.


Subject(s)
Globins/biosynthesis , RNA, Messenger/biosynthesis , Transcription, Genetic , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Cell Line , Cell Nucleus/drug effects , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Dimethyl Sulfoxide/pharmacology , Kinetics , Leukemia, Erythroblastic, Acute/metabolism , Protein Biosynthesis/drug effects , Sulfhydryl Compounds/pharmacology , Transcription, Genetic/drug effects
18.
Blood ; 45(1): 1-10, 1975 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-803101

ABSTRACT

Functional human globin messenger RNA was isolated from reticulocytes of two patients with homozygous beta 0-thalassemia, three patients with sickle cell beta 0-thalassemia, and one patient doubly heterozygous for beta 0-thalassemia and hemoglobin Lepore. When incubated in the Krebs type II mouse ascites tumor-cell-free system, messenger RNA from these patients actively directed the synthesis of human beta s and/or alpha- and gamma-globin chains but failed to stimulate the synthesis of any beta A-chains, even though nonthalassemic human globin mRNA preparations consistently stimulated two to four times as much beta A- or beta S-globin chain synthesis as alpha-chain synthesis when incubated in the same system under the same conditions. These results strongly suggest that functional beta A-chain-specific globin mRNA is absent in beta 0-thalassemia.


Subject(s)
Globins/genetics , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Thalassemia/genetics , Anemia/blood , Anemia/genetics , Globins/biosynthesis , Globins/deficiency , Homozygote , Humans , Macromolecular Substances , Reticulocytes/metabolism , Thalassemia/blood
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