17 resultados para Pm, poultry by-product meal
Resumo:
Invariant chain (Ii) is an intracellular type II transmembrane glycoprotein that is associated with major histocompatibility complex class II molecules during biosynthesis. Ii exists in two alternatively spliced forms, p31 and p41. Both p31 and p41 facilitate folding of class II molecules, promote egress from the endoplasmic reticulum, prevent premature peptide binding, and enhance localization to proteolytic endosomal compartments that are thought to be the sites for Ii degradation, antigen processing, and class II-peptide association. In spite of the dramatic and apparently equivalent effects that p31 and p41 have on class II biosynthesis, the ability of invariant chain to enhance antigen presentation to T cells is mostly restricted to p41. Here we show that degradation of Ii leads to the generation of a 12-kDa amino-terminal fragment that in p41-positive, but not in p31-positive, cells remains associated with class II molecules for an extended time. Interestingly, we find that coexpression of the two isoforms results in a change in the pattern of p31 degradation such that endosomal processing of p31 also leads to extended association of a similar 12-kDa fragment with class II molecules. These data raise the possibility that p41 may have the ability to impart its pattern of proteolytic processing on p31 molecules expressed in the same cells. This would enable a small number of p41 molecules to modify the post-translational transport and/or processing of an entire cohort of class II-Ii complexes in a manner that could account for the unique ability of p41 to enhance antigen presentation.
Resumo:
Of the microsomal P450 cytochromes, the ethanol-inducible isoform, P450 2E1, is believed to be predominant in leading to oxidative damage, including the generation of radical species that contribute to lipid peroxidation, and in the reductive beta-scission of lipid hydroperoxides to give hydrocarbons and aldehydes. In the present study, the sensitivity of a series of P450s to trans-4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE), a known toxic product of membrane lipid peroxidation, was determined. After incubation of a purified cytochrome with HNE, the other components of the reconstituted system (NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase, phosphatidylcholine, and NADPH) were added, and the rate of oxygenation of 1-phenylethanol to yield acetophenone was assayed. Inactivation occurs in a time-dependent and HNE concentration-dependent manner, with P450s 2E1 and 1A1 being the most sensitive, followed by isoforms 1A2, 3A6, and 2B4. At an HNE concentration of 0.24 microM, which was close to the micromolar concentration of the enzyme, four of the isoforms were significantly inhibited, but not P450 2B4. In other experiments, the reductase was shown to be only relatively weakly inactivated by HNE. P450s 2E1 and 2B4 in microsomal membranes from animals induced with acetone or phenobarbital, respectively, are as readily inhibited as the purified forms. Evidence was obtained that the P450 heme is apparently not altered and the sulfur ligand is not displaced, that substrate protects against HNE, and that the inactivation is reversed upon dialysis. Higher levels of reductase or substrate do not restore the activity of inhibited P450 in the catalytic assay. Our results suggest that the observed inhibition of the various P450s is of sufficient magnitude to cause significant changes in the metabolism of foreign compounds such as drugs and chemical carcinogens by the P450 oxygenase system at HNE concentrations that occur in biological membranes. In view of the known activities of P450 2E1 in generating lipid hydroperoxides and in their beta-scission, its inhibition by this product of membrane peroxidation may provide a negative regulatory function.