The interaction between pancreatic proteases and a serine protease inhibitor purified from potato tubers was investigated by chromatography-coupled light scattering measurements. The molar mass distribution in the chromatogram was compared to theoretical values calculated for the different possible combinations of complexes and free components by three different approaches, namely section analyses of the chromatograms, full mass average determination and mass distribution analysis. This revealed that the inhibitor was able to bind trypsin in a 2:1 complex, whereas the data for chymotrypsin clearly showed a limitation to 1:1 complex regardless of the molar ratio in the injected samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCold Spring Harb Perspect Med
January 2018
More than 30 proteins form amyloid in humans, most of them outside of the brain. Deposition of amyloid in extracerebral tissues is very common and seems inevitable for an aging person. Most deposits are localized, small, and probably without consequence, but in some instances, they are associated with diseases such as type 2 diabetes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMalignant melanoma might develop from melanocytic nevi in which the growth-arrested state has been broken. We analyzed the gene expression of young and senescent human melanocytes in culture and compared the gene expression data with a dataset from nevi and melanomas. A concordant altered gene expression was identified in 84 genes when comparing the growth-arrested samples with proliferating samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAA amyloidosis is a systemic disease that develops secondary to chronic inflammatory diseases Macrophages are often found in the vicinity of amyloid deposits and considered to play a role in both formation and degradation of amyloid fibrils. In spleen reside at least three types of macrophages, red pulp macrophages (RPM), marginal zone macrophages (MZM), metallophilic marginal zone macrophages (MMZM). MMZM and MZM are located in the marginal zone and express a unique collection of scavenger receptors that are involved in the uptake of blood-born particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 2-year-old girl presented with an intensely itching subcutaneous nodule on the front of a thigh. The nodule persisted for 10 months until it was excised. Subsequent investigation for malignancy and systemic disease showed no pathological findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Mouse AA-amyloidosis is a transmissible disease by a prion-like mechanism where amyloid fibrils act by seeding. Synthetic peptides with no amyloid relationship can assemble into amyloid-like fibrils and these may have seeding capacity for amyloid proteins.
Principal Findings: Several synthetic peptides, designed for nanotechnology, have been examined for their ability to produce fibrils with Congo red affinity and concomitant green birefringence, affinity for thioflavin S and to accelerate AA-amyloidosis in mice.
Secondary, or amyloid protein A (AA), amyloidosis is a complication of chronic inflammatory diseases, both infectious and noninfectious. AA constitutes the insoluble fibrils, which are deposited in different organs, and is a major N-terminal part of the acute phase protein serum AA. It is not known why only some patients with chronic inflammation develop AA amyloidosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol
April 2005
Objective: Inflammatory responses of large vein endothelium are of importance in pathological processes such as venous thrombosis, chronic venous congestion, and vein graft atherosclerosis. However, the inflammatory properties of large vein endothelium are unclear.
Methods And Results: In this study, we used several microscopy techniques to investigate the inflammatory properties of large vein endothelium in vivo.
Heparin is a well established growth inhibitor of arterial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) both in animal models and in vitro. Even though the cellular mechanisms involved in the anti-proliferative properties of heparin are being resolved, the structural requirements for the biological effects of heparin are not known in detail. Here, we have studied the effect of chemically modified heparins of different molecular weights and anticoagulant activities on proliferation and adhesion of rat aortic SMCs in vitro.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
May 2002
The generation of amyloid fibrils from an amyloidogenic polypeptide occurs by a nucleation-dependent process initiated in vitro by seeding the protein solution with preformed fibrils. This phenomenon is evidenced in vivo by the fact that amyloid protein A (AA) amyloidosis in mice is markedly accelerated when the animals are given, in addition to an inflammatory stimulus, an i.v.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmooth muscle cell proliferation after arterial injury is regulated by growth factors and components of the extracellular matrix. We have previously demonstrated that fibronectin promotes a phenotypic modulation of freshly isolated rat smooth muscle cells from a contractile to a synthetic phenotype in primary culture and supports the ability of the cells to respond to growth factors. Here, we analyzed if fibronectin promotes cell cycle entry in freshly isolated rat aortic smooth muscle cells during primary culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmooth muscle cell migration, proliferation, and deposition of extracellular matrix are key events in atherogenesis and restenosis development. To explore the mechanisms that regulate smooth muscle cell function, we have investigated whether perlecan, a basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan, modulates interaction between smooth muscle cells and other matrix components. A combined substrate of fibronectin and perlecan showed a reduced adhesion of rat aortic smooth muscle cells by 70-90% in comparison to fibronectin alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of neurotrophic factors on neuropeptide Y (NPY) expression was studied in adult rat dispersed dorsal root ganglion (DRG) cultures. Nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) or basic FGF was included in the culture medium during incubation for 72 h. In untreated cultures, around 18% of all neurones (visualized by antibodies to PGP 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThromb Haemost
September 1999
In atherogenesis and in response to vessel injury, arterial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) are activated from a quiescent, differentiated state into an actively proliferating and synthetic phenotype which migrate into the intima where the cells participate in the formation of a fibrous plaque or intimal hyperplasia. The mechanisms involved in the control of SMC function are not clear and no preventive therapy against SMC activation is available. Interactions between SMCs and the extracellular matrix have been shown to influence SMC structure and function through integrin-mediated signaling processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this investigation was to compare the response of small arteries of the human tubo-ovarian vasculature to certain vasoactive agents. Ring preparations of the arteries were isolated and mounted in tissue chambers for isometric recording of wall tension. The arteries were exposed to the vasoactive agents adrenalin, prostaglandin F2 alpha and two vasopressin analogues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cellular response to axonal injury in the superior cervical ganglion was examined by immunofluorescence at intervals from 6 h to 14 days after transection of the internal and external carotid nerves. GAP-43-immunoreactivity (IR) appeared in some neurons in the ganglia 1 day after axotomy, while neurons in control ganglia were GAP-43 negative. In 3 days axotomized ganglia GAP-43-IR structures were increased in number and intensity in nerve fiber bundles, while GAP-43-positive perikarya were restricted to the middle and caudal parts of the ganglia and showed an intensity that was stronger than at 1 day after axotomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe behaviour of synaptosome associated protein of mol. wt 25 kDa (SNAP25) in decentralized rat superior cervical ganglia (SCG) was investigated in order to observe its possible involvement in adrenergic postganglionic neuronal plasticity. Immunofluorescence and immunoblot results showed that the protein was increased in the nerve terminals in irides 8 days after operation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDelta sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP)-like immunoreactive (LI) material has been detected in nine different human pheochromocytoma tumors by immunocytochemistry. In primary tumors subjected to indirect immunofluorescence a variable number of tumor cells (25-75%) showed positive cytoplasmic labeling after incubation with DSIP antiserum. Tumor cells grown in culture were strongly labeled by the DSIP antiserum with DSIP-LI concentrated to cell bodies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA co-culture system was established between human midgut carcinoid tumour cells and rat fetal cholinergic neurons. In monocultures in serum-free media, only tumour cells survived, while neurons deteriorated. In serum-free co-cultures, neurons displayed outgrowth of neuritic processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn immunocytochemical studies, the CSF from Parkinson disease (PD) patients and from Alzheimer disease (AD) patients were investigated for the presence of neuron specific antibodies using dopaminergic and cholinergic neuronal cultures from embryonic rat brain, respectively. Dopamine containing cell bodies were labelled by Parkinsonian CSF-IgG, while cholinergic neurons, identified with a-NGF-receptor antibodies, were recognized by CSF from AD-patients. The CSF from PD-patients was investigated after autologous adrenal transplantation.
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