7 resultados para Hepsin


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This study investigated interactions of protein-cleaving enzymes (or proteases) that promote prostate cancer progression. It provides the first evidence of a novel regulatory network of protease activity at the surface of cells. The proteases kallikrein-related peptidases 4 and 14, and matrix metalloproteinases 3 and 9 are cleaved at the cell surface by the cell surface proteases hepsin and TMPRSS2. These cleavage events potentially regulate activation of downstream targets of kallikrein 4 and 14 such as cell surface signalling via the protease-activated receptors (PARs) and cell growth-promoting factors such as hepatocyte-growth factor.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Microarray technology has recently accelerated the study of the molecular events involved in prostate cancer, offering the prospect of more precise prognosis and new therapeutic strategies. This review summarises current knowledge of the molecular pathology of prostate cancer. The expression and function of numerous genes have been shown to be altered in prostate cancer. Many of these genes are involved in cell cycle regulation, steroid hormone metabolism or regulation of gene expression. The mechanisms by which androgen independence arises are discussed, including cross-activation, gene amplification and point mutations of the androgen receptor. Analysis of changes in the levels of expression of large numbers of genes during prostate cancer progression have provided a better understanding of the basis of the disease, yielding new molecular markers, such as hepsin, with potential use in diagnosis and prognosis.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Diese Arbeit legt, im Rahmen eines interdisziplinären BMBF Projekts, die Grundlage für eine neue, potentielle Früherkennungsmethode für Prostatakrebs. Ausgehend von der Idee, einen sensitiv detektierbaren Farbstoff in selektiv, Hepsin-spaltbare Kapseln einzubringen, wurde ein Modellsystem erarbeitet. Als Zielsubstrat für das Enzym Hepsin wurde die Sequenz RQLRVVGG identifiziert. Basierend auf dem hier entwickelten Modell, könnte in Zukunft eine Detektion von Hepsin und damit von Prostatakrebs im Frühstadium in vivo erfolgen. rnUm das Konzept der Enzymspaltbarkeit zu zeigen,wurden, basierend auf einem Modell,enzymatisch-spaltbare, polymere Nanopartikeldargestellt. In dieser Arbeit konnte die Synthese von vier Generationen spezifisch Protease-spaltbarer, hydrophober Nanopartikel gezeigt werden. Die Enzyme Pepsin und Trypsin, die selektiv die Peptidsequenz GFF spalten, wurden als Modellenzyme für das im Prostatakarzinom überexprimierte Hepsin eingesetzt. rnrnAls Ausgangspolymer diente Poly(styrol-co-acrylsäure), das in freier, radikalischer Polymerisation hergestellt und mit Molekulargewichten zwischen 8500 und 49400 g/mol erhalten wurde. Der Funktionalisierungsgrad wurde zwischen 5 und 16%-Gew. variiert. Die Charakterisierung erfolgte mittels GPC und NMR-Spektroskopie. In einer polymeranalogen Reaktion wurden die Säurefunktionen zu Aminogruppen umgesetzt. Die resultierendenPolymere wurden unter Einsatz der über Jahrzehnte entwickelten, effektiven Peptidkupplungschemie mit enzymspaltbarenPeptiden gekuppelt, um dadurch definierte Peptid-Polymer-Konjugate zu erhalten.Als enzymatisch spaltbarer Teil des Konjugats, wurden mithilfe der Festphasenpeptidsynthese (SPPS),FRET(Fluoreszenz-Resonanz-Energie-Transfer)-markiertePeptide synthetisiert, die auf der Trypsin-spaltbaren Sequenz GFF basierten. Zum Nachweis der Vernetzung der späteren Nanopartikel, wurde zusätzlich einern15N-markierte Aminosäure (Fmoc-(15N)-Glycin) am N-Terminus der Peptide eingebaut, um die Reaktion des Amins zu einem Amid verfolgen zu können.Die Charakterisierung der Peptide erfolgte mittels1H-, 13C-NMR-Spektroskopie, MALDI TOF-MS und HPLC. Aus den Polymeren und dem Peptid wurden Peptid-Polymer-Konjugate hergestellt und die erfolgreiche Anbindung mittels DOSY-NMR-Spektroskopie und HPLC nachgewiesen. Aus den Konjugaten konnten im nächsten Schritt, durch Anwendung des inversen Miniemulsionsprozesses, Nanopartikel formuliertund diese in wässriges Milieu überführt werden. Die Dispersionen konnten mittels PCCS, REM und Zetapotentialmessungen charakterisiert werden, wobei Partikeldurchmesser um 230 nm resultierten. Der Nachweis der Vernetzung des Polymers in den Partikeln konnte durch die Reaktion desrn15N-Amins zu einem 15N-Amid mittels 15N-Festkörper-NMR-Spektroskopie nachverfolgt werden. Abschließend konnten die Partikel durch Trypsin gespalten werden, was durch das eingebaute FRET-Paar über eine in situ Detektion der relativen Fluoreszenz erfolgte. rnIn dieser Arbeit konnten Peptid-vernetzte, Polystyrol basierte Nanopartikel hergestellt und in Heterophase von Trypsin gespalten werden.rn

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Within this thesis, new approaches for the concepts of peptide-polymer conjugates and peptide-based hybrid nanomaterials are investigated. In the first part, the synthesis of a triblock polymer-peptide-polymer is carried out following a typical peptide coupling reaction, both in solution and on solid-phase. The peptide sequence is chosen, so that it is cleaved by an enzyme preparation of trypsin. End-functionalized polystyrene is used as a model hydrophobic polymer and coupled to the peptide sequence. The results show successful coupling reactions in both methods, while the solid phase method produced a more defined product. Suspensions, consisting of peptide-polymer conjugates particles, are prepared in water by ultrasonication. In contact with the enzyme, the peptide constituting the conjugated particles is cleaved. This demonstrates the enzymatic cleavage in heterophase of enzymatic sequence bond to hydrophobic polymers, and is of great interest for the encapsulation and delivery of hydrophobic molecules.rnA second approach is the preparation of peptide-based hybrid nanocapsules. This is achieved by interfacial polyaddition in inverse miniemulsion with the peptide sequence functionalized with additional amino acids. A method suitable to the use of a peptide sequence for interfacial polyaddition was developed. It is shown that, the polarity of the dispersed phase influences the structures prepared, from particle-like to polymeric shell with a liquid core.rnThe peptide sequence is equipped with a FRET pair (more exactly, an internally-quenched fluorescent system) which allows the real-time monitoring of the enzymatic cleavage of the recognition site. This system shows the successful cleavage of the peptide-based nanocapsules when trypsin preparation is added to the suspensions. A water-soluble fluorescent polymer is efficiently entrapped and its possible use as marker for the capsules is highlighted. Furthermore, a small water-soluble fluorescent dye (SR-101) is successfully encapsulated and the encapsulation efficiency as a function of the functionality of the peptide and the amount of comonomer equivalent (toluene diisocyanate) is studied. The dye is encapsulated at such a high concentration, that self-quenching occurs. Thus, the release of the encapsulated dye triggered by the enzymatic cleavage of the peptide results in a fluorescence recovery of the dye. The fluorescence recovery of the FRET pair in the peptide and of the encapsulated dye correlate well.rnFinally, nanocapsules based on a hepsin-cleavable peptide sequence are prepared. Hepsin is an enzyme, which is highly upregulated in prostate cancer cells. The cleavage of the nanocapsules is investigated with healthy and “cancerous” (hepsin-expressing) cell cultures. The degradation, followed via fluorescence recovery of the FRET system, is faster for the suspensions introduced in the hepsin expressing cell cultures.rnIn summary, this work tackles the domain of responsive nanomaterials for drug delivery from a new perspective. It presents the adaptation of the miniemulsion process for hybrid peptide-based materials, and their successful use in preparing specific enzyme-responsive nanoparticles, with hydrophilic payload release properties.rn

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Many serine proteases play important regulatory roles in complex biological systems, but only a few have been linked directly with capillary morphogenesis and angiogenesis. Here we provide evidence that serine protease activities, independent of the plasminogen activation cascade, are required for microvascular endothelial cell reorganization and capillary morphogenesis in vitro. A homology cloning approach targeting conserved motifs present in all serine proteases, was used to identify candidate serine proteases involved in these processes, and revealed 5 genes (acrosin, testisin, neurosin, PSP and neurotrypsin), none of which had been associated previously with expression in endothelial cells. A subsequent gene-specific RT-PCR screen for 22 serine proteases confirmed expression of these 5 genes and identified 7 additional serine protease genes expressed by human endothelial cells, urokinase-type plasminogen activator, protein C,TMPRSS2, hepsin, matriptase/ MT-SPI, dipepticlylpepticlase IV, and seprase. Differences in serine protease gene expression between microvascular and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were identified and several serine protease genes were found to be regulated by the nature of the substratum, ie. artificial basement membrane or fibrillar type I collagen. mRNA transcripts of several serine protease genes were associated with blood vessels in vivo by in situ hybridization of human tissue specimens. These data suggest a potential role for serine proteases, not previously associated with endothelium, in vascular function and angiogenesis.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The identification of biomarkers capable of providing a reliable molecular diagnostic test for prostate cancer (PCa) is highly desirabie clinically. We describe here 4 biomarkers, UDP-N-Acetyl-alpha-D-galactosamine transferase (GalNAc-T3; not previously associated with PCa), PSMA, Hepsin and DD3/PCA3, which, in combination, distinguish prostate cancer from benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH). GalNAc-T3 was identified as overexpressed in PCa tissues by microarray analysis, confirmed by quantitative real-time PCR and shown immunohistochemically to be localised to prostate epithelial cells with higher expression in malignant cells. Real-time quantitative PCR analysis across 21 PCa and 34 BPH tissues showed 4.6-fold overexpression of GalNAc-T3 (p = 0.005). The noncoding mRNA (DD3/PCA3) was overexpressed 140-fold (p = 0.007) in the cancer samples compared to BPH tissues. Hepsin was overexpressed 21-fold (p = 0.049, whereas the overexpression for PSMA was 66-fold (p = 0.047). When the gene expression data for these 4 biomarkers was combined in a logistic regression model, a predictive index was obtained that distinguished 100% of the PCa samples from all of the BPH samples. Therefore, combining these genes in a real-time PCR assay represents a powerful new approach to diagnosing PCa by molecular profiling. (c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Résumé: Chaque année, les épidémies saisonnières d’influenza causent de 3 à 5 millions de cas sévères de maladie, entraînant entre 250 000 et 500 000 décès mondialement. Seulement deux classes d’antiviraux sont actuellement commercialisées pour traiter cette infection respiratoire : les inhibiteurs de la neuraminidase, tels que l’oseltamivir (Tamiflu) et les inhibiteurs du canal ionique M2 (adamantanes). Toutefois, leur utilisation est limitée par l’apparition rapide de résistance virale. Il est donc d’un grand intérêt de développer de nouvelles stratégies thérapeutiques pour le traitement de l’influenza. Le virus influenza dépend de l’activation de sa protéine de surface hémagglutinine (HA) pour être infectieux. L’activation a lieu par clivage protéolytique au sein d’une séquence d’acides aminés conservée. Ce clivage doit être effectué par une enzyme de l’hôte, étant donné que le génome du virus ne code pour aucune protéase. Pour les virus infectant l’humain, plusieurs études ont montré le potentiel de protéases à sérine transmembranaires de type II (TTSP) à promouvoir la réplication virale : TMPRSS2, TMPRSS4, HAT, MSPL, Desc1 et matriptase, identifiée récemment par notre équipe (Beaulieu, Gravel et al., 2013), activent l’HA des virus influenza A (principalement H1N1 et H3N2). Toutefois, il existe peu d’information sur le clivage de l’HA des virus influenza B, et seulement TMPRSS2 et HAT ont été identifiées comme étant capables d’activer ce type de virus. Les travaux de ce projet de maîtrise visaient à identifier d’autres TTSP pouvant activer l’HA de l’influenza B. L’efficacité de clivage par la matriptase, hepsine, HAT et Desc1 a été étudiée et comparée entre ces TTSP. Ces quatre protéases s’avèrent capables de cliver l’HA de l’influenza B in vitro. Cependant, seul le clivage par matriptase, hepsine et HAT promeut la réplication virale. De plus, ces TTSP peuvent aussi supporter la réplication de virus influenza A. Ainsi, l’utilisation d’un inhibiteur de TTSP, développé en collaboration avec notre laboratoire, permet de bloquer significativement la réplication virale dans les cellules épithéliales bronchiques humaines Calu-3. Cet inhibiteur se lie de façon covalente et lentement réversible au site actif de la TTSP par un mécanisme slow tight-binding. Puisque cet inhibiteur cible une composante de la cellule hôte, et non une protéine virale, il n’entraîne pas le développement de résistance après 15 passages des virus en présence de l’inhibiteur dans les cellules Calu-3. L’inhibition des TTSP activatrices d’HA dans le système respiratoire humain représente donc une nouvelle stratégie thérapeutique pouvant mener au développement d’antiviraux efficaces contre l’influenza.