Search results for "Cytoplasm"

showing 10 items of 659 documents

Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Antibodies Are Higher in Lupus Nephritis and Vasculitis than Other Glomerulonephritis Patients

2022

AbstractAngiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R) antibodies are considered non-HLA (human leukocyte antigen) antibodies connected with humoral rejection after kidney transplantation. The role of AT1R antibodies in the pathogenesis of glomerular diseases and systemic vasculitis is unknown. We assessed the level of AT1R antibodies in 136 patients with different types of glomerulonephritis and systemic vasculitis and we observed kidney function and proteinuria, serum albumin and total protein levels for 2 years. The mean levels of AT1R antibodies were the following: 6.00 ± 1.31 U/ml in patients with membranous nephropathy (n = 18), 5.67 ± 1.31 U/ml with focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (n =…

VasculitisImmunologySystemic VasculitisGlomerulonephritis IGAGeneral MedicineGlomerulonephritis MembranousReceptor Angiotensin Type 1Angiotensin II type 1 receptor antibodiesAntibodies Antineutrophil CytoplasmicGlomerulonephritisLupus nephritisHLA AntigensCreatinineImmunology and AllergyHumansSerum AlbuminArchivum Immunologiae et Therapiae Experimentalis
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Anti‐laminin auto antibodies in ANCA‐associated vasculitis

2000

Background. Endothelial cell damage occurs during vasculitic processes in vivo. With the alteration of the endothelium, exposure to basement membrane components may occur with induction of humoral immunity. Methods. In the present study, we evaluated the prevalence of antibodies against the basement membrane antigen laminin (LMN) in patients with ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis (AASV), pathologic controls (systemic lupus erythematosus, mixed cryoglobulinaemia, Henoch Schonlein purpura, primary glomerulonephritis) and normal individuals. Results. By ELISA, 21.6% of AASV (16/74) and 10% of pathologic controls (3/30), but only one of the normal controls (2.8%) had these antibodies (P = 0.0…

VasculitisPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHenoch-Schonlein purpuraMyeloblastinEnzyme-Linked Immunosorbent AssayAntibodies Antineutrophil CytoplasmicEpitopesAntigenReference Valuesimmune system diseasesmedicineHumansReference Valuecardiovascular diseasesAutoantibodiesPeroxidaseAnti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodyTransplantationbusiness.industrySerine EndopeptidasesGranulomatosis with PolyangiitisGlomerulonephritismedicine.diseaseAutoantibodieSerine EndopeptidaseNephrologyImmunologyEpitopeLamininGranulomatosis with PolyangiitiGranulomatosis with polyangiitisVasculitisbusinessMicroscopic polyangiitisHumanSystemic vasculitisNephrology Dialysis Transplantation
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Detection of anti-myeloperoxidase antibodies in the serum of patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus.

1996

Anti-myeloperoxidase (anti-MPO) antibodies were detected in 34 of 88 (38%) patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus but in only 3 of 55 (5.7%) healthy subjects and in 4 of 20 patients with autoimmune disease. Specificity of anti-MPO antibodies was assessed by MPO inhibition studies. No relationship was found between the occurrence of anti-MPO and anti-thyroperoxidase antibodies. Levels of soluble intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) were found to be higher in anti-MPO antibody-positive (n = 28, 508 +/- 126 ng/ml) than in anti-MPO antibody-negative (n = 58, 438 +/- 140 ng/ml: P < 0.05) patients. A state of chronic neutrophil activation has been described in diabetes mellitus. As anti-MPO…

Vasculitismedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentmedicine.drug_classEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismDiabetic angiopathyMonoclonal antibodyIodide PeroxidaseAntibodies Antineutrophil CytoplasmicEndocrinologyDiabetes mellitusInternal medicineInternal MedicineMedicineHumansChildFluorescent Antibody Technique IndirectAutoantibodiesPeroxidaseAutoimmune diseaseType 1 diabetesbiologybusiness.industryGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseIntercellular Adhesion Molecule-1EndocrinologyDiabetes Mellitus Type 1MyeloperoxidaseChild PreschoolImmunoglobulin Gbiology.proteinAntibodybusinessSystemic vasculitisActa diabetologica
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Anti-ETAR and suPAR as markers of disease activity in renal ANCA-associated vasculitis.

2020

Purpose In anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV), there is a lack of reliable biomarkers of disease activity. The aim of the study was to evaluate soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (suPAR) and anti-endothelin-1 type A receptor (anti-ETAR) antibodies levels in active phase and remission of AAV. Patients and methods We enrolled 60 patients (median age 63.0 years) with renal AAV into this study. Plasma suPAR, urine suPAR (expressed as urine suPAR/creatinine ratio) and serum anti-ETAR antibodies were assayed by ELISA. Disease activity was assessed using Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score (BVAS) and patients were divided into 2 subgroups based o…

Vasculitismedicine.medical_specialtyBirmingham Vasculitis Activity ScoreAnti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody-Associated VasculitisUrineKidneyGastroenterologysuPARAntibodies Antineutrophil CytoplasmicReceptors Urokinase Plasminogen Activatorchemistry.chemical_compoundInternal medicineMedicineHumansReceptorCreatinineKidneybiologybusiness.industryANCAGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseReceptor Endothelin Amedicine.anatomical_structurechemistrySuPARbiology.proteinAntibodybusinessVasculitisBiomarkersAdvances in medical sciences
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Tissue expression of the vesicle protein pantophysin

1999

The cell-type restricted expression of cytoplasmic microvesicle membrane protein isoforms may be a consequence of the functional adaptation of these vesicles to the execution of specialized processes in cells of different specialization. To characterize the expression of the vesicle protein pantophysin, an isoform of the synaptic vesicle proteins synaptophysin and synaptoporin, we have prepared and characterized antibodies useful for the immunological detection of pantophysin in vitro and in situ. Using these reagents, we show by immunoblot analyses that pantophysin expression is not homogeneous but differs significantly between various bovine tissues. Furthermore, these differences are not…

Vesicle-associated membrane protein 8Membrane GlycoproteinsHistologySynaptobrevinMicrovesicleMembrane ProteinsSNAP25Cell BiologySynaptoporinBiologyCytoplasmic GranulesMolecular biologyPathology and Forensic MedicineCell biologyR-SNARE ProteinsVesicle-associated membrane proteinMembrane proteinOrgan SpecificitySynaptophysinbiology.proteinAnimalsProtein IsoformsCattleCarrier ProteinsFluorescent Antibody Technique IndirectCell and Tissue Research
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Immunoelectron Microscopy of Vesicle Transport to the Primary Cilium of Photoreceptor Cells

2009

Cilia are organelles of high structural complexity. Since the biosynthetic machinery is absent from cilia all their molecular components must be synthesized in organelles of the cytoplasm and subsequently transported to the cilium. Ciliary cargos are thought to be translocated in the membrane of transport vesicles or association with these vesicles to the base of the cilium where the vesicles fuse with the periciliary target membrane for further delivery of their cargo into the ciliary compartment by the intraflagellar transport (IFT). Here we describe a modified preembedding labeling method as an alternative technique to conventional postembedding methods eligible for analyses of ciliary c…

Vesicular transport proteinImmunolabelingCytoplasmIntraflagellar transportCiliumVesicleImmunoelectron microscopyOrganellesense organsBiologyCell biology
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Expression and cellular localization of the Nef protein from human immunodeficiency virus-1 in stably transfected B-cells.

1992

Nef protein, encoded by the regulatory nef gene of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), was expressed in the B-cell line Raji. The cells were stably transfected with plasmids containing the nef transcriptional cassette. They expressed Nef with an Mr of 27,000; the yield could be augmented by incubation with the tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. The intracellular localization of Nef was analyzed applying immunofluorescence microscopy using a confocal laser scanning microscope. The antigen was stained with a monoclonal antibody directed against the N-terminal part of Nef. The experiments revealed that in non-dividing cells Nef is present both in the cytoplasm and th…

Viral proteinvirusesGenetic VectorsFluorescent Antibody TechniqueBiologymedicine.disease_causeTransfectionVirusGene Products nefGene productAntigenVirologyGene expressionmedicineTumor Cells CulturedHumansnef Gene Products Human Immunodeficiency VirusCellular localizationB-LymphocytesMicroscopyvirus diseasesGeneral MedicineTransfectionVirologyMolecular biologyCytoplasmHIV-1Tetradecanoylphorbol AcetateArchives of virology
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Polar Localization of a Tripartite Complex of the Two-Component System DcuS/DcuR and the Transporter DctA in Escherichia coli Depends on the Sensor K…

2014

The C4-dicarboxylate responsive sensor kinase DcuS of the DcuS/DcuR two-component system of E. coli is membrane-bound and reveals a polar localization. DcuS uses the C4-dicarboxylate transporter DctA as a co-regulator forming DctA/DcuS sensor units. Here it is shown by fluorescence microscopy with fusion proteins that DcuS has a dynamic and preferential polar localization, even at very low expression levels. Single assemblies of DcuS had high mobility in fast time lapse acquisitions, and fast recovery in FRAP experiments, excluding polar accumulation due to aggregation. DctA and DcuR fused to derivatives of the YFP protein are dispersed in the membrane or in the cytosol, respectively, when …

Yellow fluorescent proteinCardiolipinslcsh:MedicineMicrobiologyMreBMicrobial PhysiologyBacterial Physiologylcsh:ScienceCytoskeletonMicrobial MetabolismDicarboxylic Acid TransportersMultidisciplinaryEscherichia coli K12biologyBacterial GrowthEscherichia coli Proteinslcsh:RMicrobial Growth and DevelopmentBiology and Life SciencesFluorescence recovery after photobleachingBacteriologyFusion proteinTwo-component regulatory systemBacterial BiochemistryTransport proteinDNA-Binding ProteinsProtein TransportBiochemistryCytoplasmMultiprotein ComplexesBiophysicsbiology.proteinlcsh:QProtein KinasesResearch ArticleDevelopmental BiologyTranscription FactorsPLoS ONE
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Computational Modeling of Protein Dynamics in Eukaryotic Cells

2012

Proteins have important functions inside the cell, traveling diffusively or being actively transported to various cellular sites where their activity is needed. Protein motion in the cellular environment is therefore an important topic to understand. However, the cell provides a very complex environment for that motion, which poses problems especially for any modeling effort designed to interpret experimentally observed features. So as to gain a realistic picture of protein dynamics inside the cell, we have recently introduced advanced numerical methods for describing that dynamics [1]. The starting point is an accurate numerical duplicate of the cell determined by LSCM, which can be used a…

Yellow fluorescent proteinbiologyChemistryProtein dynamicsNumerical analysisDynamics (mechanics)BiophysicsNanotechnologyPhotobleachingCytoplasmbiology.proteinDiffusion (business)Biological systemPorous mediumBiophysical Journal
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Polar accumulation of the metabolic sensory histidine kinases DcuS and CitA in Escherichia coli

2008

Signal transduction in prokaryotes is frequently accomplished by two-component regulatory systems in which a histidine protein kinase is the sensory component. Many of these sensory kinases control metabolic processes that do not show an obvious requirement for inhomogeneous distribution within bacterial cells. Here, the sensory kinases DcuS and CitA, two histidine kinases of Escherichia coli, were investigated. Both are membrane-integral and involved in the regulation of carboxylate metabolism. The two-component sensors were fused with yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and live images of immobilized cells were obtained by confocal laser fluorescence microscopy. The fluorescence of the fusio…

Yellow fluorescent proteinbiologyKinaseEscherichia coli ProteinsRecombinant Fusion ProteinsCell PolarityMicrobiologyFusion proteinLuminescent ProteinsProtein TransportBacterial ProteinsBiochemistryCytoplasmEscherichia colibiology.proteinSignal transductionCell fractionationProtein kinase AProtein KinasesHistidineMicrobiology
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