The HMC-1 mast cell line has both adenosine A(3) and A(2b) receptors on its surface, but only agonists of the A(2b) receptor are effective at releasing interleukin 8. Object of this study was to look for co-factors for adenosine A(2b) receptor activation. There was a powerful and statistically significant synergy for release of IL-8, both at the mRNA level (measured after 4 hr) and protein level (measured after 24 hr), between adenosine A(2b) receptor agonists and stem cell factor (SCF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol
January 2001
Mucus hypersecretion from hyperplastic airway goblet cells is a hallmark of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Although cigarette smoking is thought to be involved in mucus hypersecretion in COPD, the mechanism by which cigarette smoke induces mucus overproduction is unknown. Here we show that activation of epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFR) is responsible for mucin production after inhalation of cigarette smoke in airways in vitro and in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell adhesion molecules are considered to be pivotal elements required for proper embryo development. The transmembrane glycoprotein CD44, which is expressed in numerous splice variants on the surface of many different cell types and tissues, has been suggested to be involved in several physiological processes such as cell-cell interactions, signal transduction, and lymphocyte homing and trafficking during embryogenesis and in the adult organism. Some splice variants are thought to play an important role in tumor progression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe complete nucleotide sequence of a 39,090 bp segment from the left arm of yeast chromosome IV was determined. Twenty-one open reading frames (ORFs) longer than 100 amino acids and a Gly-tRNA gene were discovered. Nine of the 21 ORFs (D0892, D1022, D1037, D1045, D1057, D1204, D1209, D1214, D1219) correspond to the previously sequenced Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes for the NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), the secretory component (SHR3), the GABA transport protein (UGA4), the high mobility group-like protein (NHP2), the hydroxymethylbilane synthase (HEM3), the methylated DNA protein-cysteine S-methyltransferase (MGT1), a putative sugar transport protein, the Shm1 protein (SHM1) and the anti-silencing protein (ASF2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOf the 28 presently known Drosophila tumor suppressor genes we present the status of the functional analysis of the following three genes: (a) lethal (3) malignant brain tumor [1(3)mbt], which by homology belongs to the Pc-G gene family and may be involved in the stable silencing of specific developmental genes by changing the chromatin structure, and thus establishing and maintaining the differentiated state; (b) lethal (3) malignant blood neoplasm-1 [1(3)mbn-1], for whose function only vague predictions can be made; 4) benign (2) gonial cell neoplasm [b(2)gcn], which may function as a splice factor. Each Drosophila tumor suppressor gene transforms in the homozygously mutated state either one or two specific cell-types in a single step, and is thus the primary cause for tumorigenesis. For one of the genes a putative human homologue has been found.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF