9 resultados para cholinergic receptor antibody

em Aston University Research Archive


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Background: Cachexia in both mice and humans is associated with tumour production of a sulphated glycoprotein called proteolysis-inducing factor (PIF). In mice PIF binds with high affinity to a surface receptor in skeletal muscle, but little is known about the human receptor. This study compares the human PIF receptor with the murine. Methods: Human PIF was isolated from the G361 melanoma and murine PIF from the MAC16 colon adenocarcinoma. The human PIF receptor was isolated from human skeletal muscle myotubes. Protein synthesis and degradation induced by human and murine PIF was studied in human and murine skeletal muscle myotubes. Results: Both the human and murine PIF receptors showed the same immunoreactivity and Mr 40 000. Both murine and human PIF inhibited total protein synthesis and stimulated protein degradation in human and murine myotubes to about the same extent, and this was attenuated by a rabbit polyclonal antibody to the murine PIF receptor, but not by a non-specific rabbit antibody. Both murine and human PIF increased the activity of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in both human and murine myotubes, as evidenced by an increased 'chymotrypsin-like' enzyme activity, protein expression of the 20S and 19S proteasome subunits, and increased expression of the ubiquitin ligases MuRF1 and MAFbx, and this was also attenuated by the anti-mouse PIF receptor antibody. Conclusions: These results suggest that the murine and human PIF receptors are identical. © 2014 Cancer Research UK.

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Cancer cachexia encompases severe weight loss, characterised by the debilitating atrophy of adipose and skeletal muscle mass. Skeletal muscle proteolysis in cancer cachexia is mediated by a sulphated glycoprotein with a relative molecular mass of 24kDa, termed Proteolysis-Inducing Factor (PIF). PIF induced a significant increase in protein degradation, peaking at 4.2nM PIF (p<0.001), ‘chymotrypsin-like’ activity of the proteasome (p<0.001) and increased expression of components of the ATP-ubiquitin dependent proteolytic pathway. This was attenuated in vitro by pre-incubation with the PKC inhibitor calphostin C (100µM) and NF-kB the inhibitors SN50 (18µM), curcumin (50µM) and resveratrol (30µM), 2 hours prior to the addition of PIF. In vivo studies found the IKK inhibitor resveratrol (1mg/kg) to be successful in attenuating protein degradation (p<0.001) and upregulation of ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis in MAC16 tumour bearing mice. C2C12 myoblasts transfected with mutant IkBα and PKCα inserts did not elicit a PIF-induced response, suggesting the importance of the transcription factor NF-kB and PKC  involvement in PIF signal transduction. 15(S)-HETE acts as an intracellular mediator of PIF and exerts an effect through the activation of PKC and subsequently IKK, which phosphorylates IkBα and allows NF-kB to migrate to the nucleus. This effect was negated with the PKC inhibitor calphostin C (300nM). A commercially produced PIF receptor antibody was raised in rabbits immunised with a peptide containing the partial N-terminal sequence of the PIF receptor. The PIF receptor antibody was successful in attenuating the PIF-induced increase in skeletal muscle catabolism and protein degradation in vitro at 10µg/ml (p<0.001) and 3.47mg/kg in vivo (p<0.001). The data suggest great potential in the development of this antibody as a therapy against cancer cachexia.

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Quiescent rat thymocytes were stimulated to divide by a variety of agents. One such mitogen was the neurotransmitter acetylcholine which exhibited a biphasic action. Interaction with low affinity nicotinic receptors was linked with an obligatory requirement for magnesium ions whereas combination with high affinity muscarinic receptors induced mitosis only if calcium ions were present in the medium. Binding of acetylcholine to its muscarinic receptor enhanced calcium influx and increased intracellular calcium levels causing calmodulin activation, a necessary prelude to DNA synthesis and mitosis. Nicotinic receptor activation may be associated with a magnesium influx and stimulation of cells in a calmodulin-independent fashion. Parathyroid hormone and its analogues exhibited only a monophasic mitogenic action. This response was linked to calcium influx, a rise in cytosolic calcium and calmodulin activation. Parathyroid hormone did not stimulate adenylate cyclase in thymocytes and decreased cellular cyclic AMP concentrations. Picomolar amounts of interleukin-2 (IL-2) also stimulated division in thymocytes derived from 3-month old rats by binding to high affinity receptors. The response in thymocytes from newborn and foetal animals was greater reflecting the larger proportion of cells bearing receptors at this age. The mitogenic effect of IL-2 was abolished by a monoclonal antibody directed against the IL-2 receptor. Injections of IL-2 itself or the administration of IL-2 secreting activated syngeneic spleen cells also stimulated proliferation of both thymus and bone marrow cells in vivo. Likewise immunisation with pertussis toxin, which enhances endogenous IL2 production, also increased mitosis in these tissues. Calcium influx, increased cytosolic Ca2+ levels and calmodulin activation are associated features of the mitogenic action of IL-2. Interleukin-1 was also found to be mitogenic in thymic lymphocyte cultures. The responses to this mitogen and to parathyroid hormone and acetylcholine were not inhibited by the anti-IL2 receptor antibody suggesting that the thymic lymphocyte bears discrete receptors for these agents. Subtle interactions of hormones, neurotransmitters and interleukins may thus contribute to the turnover and control of lymphoid cells in the thymus and perhaps bone-marrow.

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Proteolysis-inducing factor (PIF) induces muscle loss in cancer cachexia through a high affinity membrane bound receptor. This study investigates the mechanism by which the PIF receptor communicates to intracellular signalling pathways. C2C12 murine myoblasts were used as a model using PIF purified from MAC16 tumours. Calcium imaging was determined using fura-4-acetoxymethyl ester (Fura-4-AM). PIF induced a rapid rise in Ca2 +i, which was completely attenuated by a anti-receptor antibody, or peptides representing 20 mers of the N-terminus of the PIF receptor. Other agents catabolic for skeletal muscle including angiotensin II (AngII) tumour necrosis factor-a (TNF-a) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) also induced a rise in Ca2 +i, but this was not attenuated by anti-PIF-receptor antibody. The rise in Ca2 +i induced by PIF and AngII was completely attenuated by the Zn2 + chelator D-myo-inositol-1,2,6-triphosphate, and this was reversed by administration of exogenous Zn2 +. The Ca2 +i rise induced by PIF was independent of the presence of extracellular Ca2 +, and attenuated by the Ca2 + pump inhibitor thapsigargin, suggesting that the Ca2 +i rise was due to release from intracellular stores. This rise in Ca2 +i induced by PIF was attenuated by both the phospholipase C inhibitor U73122 and 2-APB, an inhibitor of the inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor, suggesting the involvement of a G-protein. Binding of the PIF to its receptor in skeletal muscle triggers a rise in Ca2 +i, which initiates a signalling cascade leading to a depression in protein synthesis, and an increase in protein degradation.

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The activation of phosphoinositide 3-hydroxykinase (P13K) is currently believed to represent the critical regulatory event which leads to the production of a novel intracellular signal. We have examined the control of this pathway by a number of cell-surface receptors in NG115-401L-C3 neuronal cells. Insulin-like growth factor-I stimulated the accumulation of 3-phosphorylated inositol lipids in intact cells and the appearance of P13K in antiphosphotyrosine-antibody-directed immunoprecipitates prepared from lysed cells, suggesting that P13K had been activated by a mechanism involving a protein tyrosine kinase. In contrast, P13K in these cells was not regulated by a variety of G-protein-coupled receptors, nerve growth factor acting via a low affinity receptor, or receptors for transforming growth factor-beta and interleukin-1. The receptor-specificity of P13K activation in these cells places significant constraints on the possible physiological function(s) of this pathway.

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Transgenic BALB/c mice that express intrathyroidal human thyroid stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR) A-subunit, unlike wild-type (WT) littermates, develop thyroid lymphocytic infiltration and spreading to other thyroid autoantigens after T regulatory cell (Treg) depletion and immunization with human thyrotropin receptor (hTSHR) adenovirus. To determine if this process involves intramolecular epitope spreading, we studied antibody and T cell recognition of TSHR ectodomain peptides (A–Z). In transgenic and WT mice, regardless of Treg depletion, TSHR antibodies bound predominantly to N-terminal peptide A and much less to a few downstream peptides. After Treg depletion, splenocytes from WT mice responded to peptides C, D and J (all in the A-subunit), but transgenic splenocytes recognized only peptide D. Because CD4+ T cells are critical for thyroid lymphocytic infiltration, amino acid sequences of these peptides were examined for in silico binding to BALB/c major histocompatibility complex class II (IA–d). High affinity subsequences (inhibitory concentration of 50% < 50 nm) are present in peptides C and D (not J) of the hTSHR and mouse TSHR equivalents. These data probably explain why transgenic splenocytes do not recognize peptide J. Mouse TSHR mRNA levels are comparable in transgenic and WT thyroids, but only transgenics have human A-subunit mRNA. Transgenic mice can present mouse TSHR and human A-subunit-derived peptides. However, WT mice can present only mouse TSHR, and two to four amino acid species differences may preclude recognition by CD4+ T cells activated by hTSHR-adenovirus. Overall, thyroid lymphocytic infiltration in the transgenic mice is unrelated to epitopic spreading but involves human A-subunit peptides for recognition by T cells activated using the hTSHR.

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Cholecystokinin (CCK) is a gut-brain peptide has been described to be able to induce mitosis according to recent studies. Additionally, conflicting data has been published on whether tumours of the central and peripheral nervous system in general, and gliomas in particular, express CCK receptors. In the present in vitro study we employed reverse transcription followed by the polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to investigate whether mRNA for CCK-A and CCK-B receptors as well as CCK peptide itself is present in primary human gliomas and the U-87 MG GBM cell line. The data show that 14/14 (100%) of the primary gliomas exhibited mRNA expression for the CCK peptide gene and the B receptor including the U-87 MG cells, whereas, only 2/14 (14%) showed presence of the CCK-A receptor. The presence of CCK receptors together with CCK peptide expression itself suggests presence of an autocrine loop controlling glioma cell growth. In support of this conclusion, a neutralizing antibody against the CCK peptide exhibited a dose dependent inhibition of cell growth whereas, antagonists to CCK caused a dose depend inhibition of exogenous stimulated glioma cell growth in vitro, via the CCK-B receptor which is PKC activated. Assessment of apoptosis and proteasome activity were undertaken and we report that treatment with CCK antagonists decreased proteasome and increased caspase-3 activity. These data indicate that CCK peptide and CCK-B are abundant in human gliomas and they act to stimulate cell growth in an autocrine manner, primarily via the high affinity CCK-B receptor, which was blocked by antagonists to CCK, perhaps via apoptosis.

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There is growing evidence that cholecystokinin (CCK) affects growth and differentiation of anterior pituitary cells, via the CCK-B receptor. The possibility of an autocrine / paracrine role for CCK to modulate hormone secretion in human pituitary tumour cells is demonstrated here by RT-PCR and direct sequencing. In support of this conclusion, a neutralising antibody against the CCK peptide exhibited a dose dependent inhibition of hormone secretion by functionless pituitary adenomas. Total RNA was extracted from human pituitary adenomas, reverse transcribed into cDNA and subjected to PCR using primers specific for the gene for CCK, CCK-A and CCK-B receptors. PCR bands of the predicted length were observed in all tumours using human CCK gene and CCK-B receptor primers. Restriction digestion and direct sequence analysis provided further evidence that they represented both the human CCK peptide along with the CCK-A and/B receptor mRNA. CCK-33 and CCK octapeptide sulphate (CCK-8s) both powerfully stimulated phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis, providing evidence for functional activity of the CCK-A and/B receptors. A direct stimulatory effect of CCK peptides on both LH and FSH secretion is reported for the first time, whereas stimulatory effects on GH were blocked by antagonists to CCK. These results may indicate an autocrine role for CCK in the functioning and perhaps development of human pituitary tumours. © J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart.

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To determine whether non-enterobacterial endotoxins, which are likely to constitute the majority of the circulating endotoxin pool, may stimulate coronary artery endothelial cell activation. Interleukin-8 secretion, monocyte adhesion, and E-selectin expression were measured in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAECs) challenged in vitro with highly purified endotoxins of common host colonisers Escherichia coli, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Bacteroides fragilis. HCAECs but not HUVECs expressed Toll-like receptor (TLR)-2 and were responsive to non-enterobacterial endotoxins. Transfection of TLR-deficient HEK-293 cells with TLR2 or TLR4/MD2 revealed that while E. coli endotoxin utilised solely TLR4 to signal, the endotoxins, deglycosylated endotoxins (lipid-A), and whole heat-killed bacteria of the other species stimulated TLR2-but not TLR4-dependent cell-signalling. Blockade of TLR2 with neutralizing antibody prevented HCAEC activation by non-enterobacterial endotoxins. Comparison of each endotoxin with E. coli endotoxin in limulus amoebocyte lysate assay revealed that the non-enterobacterial endotoxins are greatly underestimated by this assay, which has been used in all previous studies to estimate plasma endotoxin concentrations. Circulating non-enterobacterial endotoxins may be an underestimated contributor to endothelial activation and atherosclerosis in individuals at risk of increased plasma endotoxin burden.