The biochemical properties of PsbS protein, a nuclear-encoded Photosystem II subunit involved in the high energy quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, have been studied using preparations purified from chloroplasts or obtained by overexpression in bacteria. Despite the homology with chlorophyll a/b/xanthophyll-binding proteins of the Lhc family, native PsbS protein does not show any detectable ability to bind chlorophylls or carotenoids in conditions in which Lhc proteins maintain full pigment binding. The recombinant protein, when refolded in vitro in the presence of purified pigments, neither binds chlorophylls nor xanthophylls, differently from the homologous proteins LHCII, CP26, and CP29 that refold into stable pigment-binding complexes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
November 1999
Expression of the interleukin-6 (IL-6) gene is usually tightly controlled and may be induced in specific tissues only after treatment with appropriate stimuli. The molecular mechanisms responsible for IL-6 gene repression in specific tissues or cell lines remain poorly defined. In order to address this question we have studied two human breast carcinoma cell lines, MDA-MB-231, in which the IL-6 gene is expressed, and MCF-7, in which it is not.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
July 1999
We have studied the regulation of IL-6 expression in human blood monocytes and lymphocytes. LPS and IFN-gamma induced IL-6 gene expression with a similar qualitative profile in both cell types. Treatment of monocytes and lymphocytes with PMA resulted, instead, in different effects: monocytes accumulated IL-6 and its message, while lymphocytes were inhibited either in the absence or the presence of LPS and IFN-gamma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
May 1999
The expression of the IL-6 gene is usually tightly controlled and may be induced in specific tissues after treatment with appropriate stimuli. Although much is known about the inducible expression of the IL-6 gene, the molecular mechanisms responsible for its repression in specific tissues or cell types remain poorly defined. To address this question we have studied two human breast carcinoma cell lines, MDA-MB-231, in which the IL-6 gene is expressed, and, MCF-7, in which the IL-6 message is undetectable by Northern blot assay even in the presence of inducers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe teratocarcinoma-derived growth factor-1 (TDGF-1) gene codes for a 188-aminoacid glycoprotein that shares structural homology with the epidermal growth factor (EGF) family of growth factors. TDGF-1 is highly expressed in the undifferentiated embryonal carcinoma stem cell line NTERA2 clone D1 (NT2/D1) and its expression is downregulated in response to differentiating agents such as retinoic acid (RA) and hexamethylen-bisacetamide (HMBA). To assess the role of TDGF-1 in the onset and/or progression of human germ cell tumors, we analysed TDGF-1 expression by Northern blot and immunostaining in a panel of 59 human germ cell tumors of different histological origins.
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