Search results for "proteinas"

showing 10 items of 416 documents

A membrane associated metalloprotease cleaves Cry3Aa Bacillus thuringiensis toxin reducing pore formation in Colorado potato beetle brush border memb…

2007

AbstractInsect proteases are implicated in Bacillus thuringiensis insecticidal proteins mode of action determining toxin specificity and sensitivity. Few data are available on the involvement of proteases in the later steps of toxicity such as protease interaction with toxin–receptor complexes and the pore formation process. In this study, a Colorado potato beetle (CPB) midgut membrane metalloprotease was found to be involved in the proteolytic processing of Cry3Aa. Interaction of Cry3Aa with BBMV membrane proteases resulted in a distinct pattern of proteolysis. Cleavage was demonstrated to occur in protease accessible regions of domain III and was specifically inhibited by the metalloprote…

ProteasesCell Membrane PermeabilityPore formationProteolysismedicine.medical_treatmentBacterial ToxinsBacillus thuringiensisBiophysicsInsecticidal toxinBiochemistryCry3Aa proteolysisHemolysin ProteinsBacterial ProteinsBacillus thuringiensismedicineColorado potato beetleAnimalsMetalloprotease inhibitorMetalloproteinaseBinding SitesProteaseBacillus thuringiensis ToxinsMicrovillibiologymedicine.diagnostic_testSecretory VesiclesAcetohydroxamic acidColorado potato beetleCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationProteaseColeopteraEndotoxinsModels ChemicalBiochemistryPorosityProtein Bindingmedicine.drugBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes
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Diverse cell surface protein ectodomains are shed by a system sensitive to metalloprotease inhibitors.

1996

The extracellular domains of a diverse group of membrane proteins are shed in response to protein kinase C activators such as phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). The lack of sequence similarity in the cleavage sites suggests the involvement of many proteases of diverse specificity in this process. However, a mutant Chinese hamster ovary cell line recently isolated for being defective in PMA-activated shedding of the membrane-anchored growth factor transforming growth factor alpha precursor (proTGF-alpha) is concomitantly defective in the shedding of many other unrelated membrane proteins. Here we show that independent mutagenesis and selection experiments yield shedding mutants having th…

ProteasesCellCHO CellsBiologyHydroxamic AcidsTransfectionBiochemistryAmyloid beta-Protein PrecursorAntigens CDCricetinaemedicineAnimalsProtease InhibitorsL-SelectinProtein PrecursorsCell adhesionMolecular BiologyProtein kinase CMetalloproteinaseChinese hamster ovary cellCell MembraneGenetic Complementation TestMembrane ProteinsMetalloendopeptidasesCell BiologyReceptors InterleukinTransforming Growth Factor alphaReceptors Interleukin-6Cell biologyKineticsmedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypeEctodomainMembrane proteinMutagenesisTetradecanoylphorbol AcetatePhenanthrolinesThe Journal of biological chemistry
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A cellular metalloproteinase activates Vibrio cholerae pro-cytolysin.

2004

Many strains of Vibrio cholerae produce a cytolysin (VCC) that forms oligomeric transmembrane pores in animal cells. The molecule is secreted as a procytolysin (pro-VCC) of 79 kDa that must be cleaved at the N terminus to generate the active 65-kDa toxin. Processing can occur in solution, and previous studies have described the action of mature VCC thus generated. However, little is known about the properties of pro-VCC itself. In this study, it is shown that pro-VCC exist as a monomer in solution and binds as a monomer to eukaryotic cells. Bound pro-VCC can then be activated either by exogenous, extracellular, or by endogenous, cell-bound proteases. In both cases, cleavage generates the 65…

ProteasesCholera Toxingenetic structuresCHO CellsBiologyADAM17 Proteinmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryMiceCricetinaemedicineADAM17 ProteinAnimalsHumansProtein PrecursorsMolecular BiologyFurinMetalloproteinaseCytotoxinsCell MembraneMetalloendopeptidasesCell BiologyADAM Proteinseye diseasesTransmembrane proteinADAM ProteinsBiochemistryVibrio choleraebiology.proteinsense organsCytolysinRabbitsThe Journal of biological chemistry
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Meprins process matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9)/gelatinase B and enhance the activation kinetics by MMP-3

2012

Abstract Meprin α and β, members of the astacin family of zinc metalloproteinases, are unique plasma membrane and secreted proteases known to cleave a wide range of biological substrates involved in inflammation, cancer and fibrosis. In this study, we identified proMMP-9 as a novel substrate and show that aminoterminal meprin-mediated clipping improves the activation kinetics of proMMP-9 by MMP-3, an efficient activator of proMMP-9. Interestingly, the NH2-terminus LVLFPGDL, generated by incubation with meprin α, is identical to the form produced in conditioned media from human neutrophils and monocytes. Hence, this meprin-mediated processing and enhancement of MMP-9 activation kinetics may …

ProteasesNeutrophilsMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsMatrix metalloproteinaseBiochemistryMonocytesProtein–protein interactionAminoterminal cleavageStructural BiologyGeneticsHumansProMMP-9ZymographyAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyCells Culturedchemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryActivator (genetics)TioproninMeprinCell BiologyTissue inhibitor of metalloproteinaseEnzymeMatrix Metalloproteinase 9BiochemistryCulture Media ConditionedMatrix Metalloproteinase 3AstacinFEBS Letters
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The interaction of recombinant subdomains of the procollagen C-proteinase with procollagen I provides a quantitative explanation for functional diffe…

2006

The procollagen C-proteinase (PCP) is a zinc peptidase of the astacin family and the metzincin superfamily. The enzyme removes the C-terminal propeptides of fibrillar procollagens and activates other matrix proteins. Besides its catalytic protease domain, the procollagen C-proteinase contains several C-terminal CUB modules (named after complement factors C1r and C1s, the sea urchin UEGF protein, and BMP-1) and EGF-like domains. The two major splice forms of the C-proteinase differ in their overall domain composition. The longer variant, termed mammalian tolloid (mTld, i.e., PCP-2), has the protease- CUB1-CUB2-EGF1-CUB3-EGF2-CUB4-CUB5 composition, whereas the shorter form termed bone morphog…

ProteasesProtein FoldingTolloid-Like Metalloproteinasesmedicine.medical_treatmentRNA SplicingBiologyAntiparallel (biochemistry)BiochemistryBone morphogenetic protein 1law.inventionBone Morphogenetic Protein 1lawmedicineAnimalsProtein precursorDNA PrimersProteaseBase SequenceCircular DichroismMetalloendopeptidasesSurface Plasmon ResonanceRecombinant ProteinsProcollagen peptidaseSpectrometry FluorescenceBiochemistryBone Morphogenetic ProteinsRecombinant DNAMetalloproteasesElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelAstacinProcollagenBiochemistry
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Development of rhodesain inhibitors with a 3-bromoisoxazoline warhead

2013

Novel rhodesain inhibitors were obtained by combining an enantiomerically pure 3-bromoisoxazoline warhead with a specific peptidomimetic recognition moiety. All derivatives behaved as inhibitors of rhodesain, with low micromolar Ki values. Their activity against the enzyme was found to be paralleled by an in vitro antitrypanosomal activity, with IC50 values in the mid-micromolar range. Notably, a preference for parasitic over human proteases, specifically cathepsins B and L, was observed.

ProteasesStereochemistryPeptidomimeticCathepsin LMolecular ConformationStereoisomerismCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsBiologyCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsCathepsin BCathepsin LinhibitorsDrug DiscoveryHumansMoietyGeneral Pharmacology Toxicology and PharmaceuticstrypanosomarhodesainPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationOrganic ChemistryStereoisomerismIsoxazolesisoxazolinesCombinatorial chemistryIn vitroCysteine EndopeptidasesEnzymechemistrypeptidomimeticsbiology.proteinMolecular Medicineinhibitors; isoxazolines; peptidomimetics; rhodesain; trypanosomaProtein Binding
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Features of TAP-independent MHC class I ligands revealed by quantitative mass spectrometry.

2008

TAP is responsible for transferring cytosolic peptides into the ER, where they can be loaded onto MHC molecules. Deletion of TAP results in a drastic reduction of MHC class I surface expression and alters the presented peptide pattern. This key molecule in antigen processing is tackled by several viruses and lost in some tumors, rendering the altered cells less vulnerable to T cell-based immune surveillance. Using the TAP-deficient cell line LCL721.174 and its TAP-expressing progenitor cell line LCL721.45, we identified and quantified more than 160 HLA ligands, 50 of which were presented TAP-independently. Peptides which were predominantly presented on the TAP-deficient LCL721.174 cell line…

Proteasome Endopeptidase ComplexImmunologyAntigen presentationEpitopes T-LymphocyteGene ExpressionHuman leukocyte antigenCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsProtein Sorting SignalsMajor histocompatibility complexCell LineAntigenATP Binding Cassette Transporter Subfamily B Member 3HLA AntigensTandem Mass SpectrometryMHC class IHLA-A2 AntigenImmunology and AllergyHumansAmino Acid SequenceATP Binding Cassette Transporter Subfamily B Member 2Antigen PresentationbiologyHLA-A AntigensAntigen processingHistocompatibility Antigens Class IProteinsTransporter associated with antigen processingMHC restrictionMolecular biologyPeptide FragmentsCell biologyHLA-B AntigensIsotope Labelingbiology.proteinATP-Binding Cassette TransportersProteasome InhibitorsGene DeletionProtein BindingEuropean journal of immunology
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The Cleavage Product of Amyloid-β Protein Precursor sAβPPα Modulates BAG3-Dependent Aggresome Formation and Enhances Cellular Proteasomal Activity

2015

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the major age-associated form of dementia characterized by gradual cognitive decline. Aberrant cleavage of the amyloid-β protein precursor (AβPP) is thought to play an important role in the pathology of this disease. Two principal AβPP processing pathways exist: amyloidogenic cleavage of AβPP resulting in production of the soluble N-terminal fragment sAβPPβ, amyloid-β (Aβ), which accumulates in AD brain, and the AβPP intracellular domain (AICD) sAβPPα, p3 and AICD are generated in the non-amyloidogenic pathway. Prevalence of amyloidogenic versus non-amyloidogenic processing leads to depletion of sAβPPα and an increase in Aβ. Although sAβPPα is a well-accepted neu…

Proteasome Endopeptidase ComplexTime FactorsCell SurvivalLeupeptinsGreen Fluorescent ProteinsCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsProtein degradationProtein aggregationBiologyTransfectionBAG3Rats Sprague-DawleyAmyloid beta-Protein PrecursorAnimalsHumansRNA MessengerRNA Small InterferingProtein precursorCells CulturedAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingNeuronsAmyloid beta-PeptidesDose-Response Relationship DrugGeneral NeuroscienceHEK 293 cellsBrainGeneral MedicineFibroblastsEmbryo MammalianRatsCell biologyPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyHEK293 CellsProteostasisAggresomeGene Expression RegulationBiochemistryProteasomeProteolysisAmyloid Precursor Protein SecretasesGeriatrics and GerontologyApoptosis Regulatory ProteinsJournal of Alzheimer's Disease
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The apoptotic effects and synergistic interaction of sodium butyrate and MG132 in human retinoblastoma Y79 cells

1999

This study deals with the apoptotic effect exerted on human retinoblastoma Y79 cells by both sodium butyrate and an inhibitor of 26S proteasome [z-Leu-Leu-Leu-CHO (MG132)] and their synergistic effect. Exposure to sodium butyrate (1-4 mM) induced an accumulation of cells in the G2-M phase that was already visible after 24 h of treatment, when morphological and biochemical signs of apoptosis appeared only in a small number of cells (5-10%). Thereafter, the apoptotic effects increased progressively with slow kinetics, reaching a maximum after 72 h of exposure, when they concerned a large fraction of cells (>75% with 4 mM sodium butyrate). Sodium butyrate stimulated the conversion of procaspas…

Proteasome Endopeptidase ComplexTime FactorsLeupeptinsApoptosisCytochrome c GroupCysteine Proteinase InhibitorsProto-Oncogene Proteins c-mycTumor Cells CulturedHumanssodium butyrateLamin Type BCaspase 3Cell CycleNF-kappa BRetinoblastomaNuclear ProteinsFlow CytometryLaminsMitochondriaButyratesKineticsCaspasesI-kappa B ProteinsPoly(ADP-ribose) PolymerasesTumor Suppressor Protein p53Peptide Hydrolases
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Complex formation between the NS3 serine-type proteinase of the hepatitis C virus and NS4A and its importance for polyprotein maturation

1995

Processing of the hepatitis C virus polyprotein is mediated by host cell signalases and at least two virally encoded proteinases. Of these, the serine-type proteinase encompassing the amino-terminal one-third of NS3 is responsible for cleavage at the four sites carboxy terminal of NS3. The activity of this proteinase is modulated by NS4A, a 54-amino-acid polyprotein cleavage product essential for processing at the NS3/4A, NS4A/4B, and NS4B/5A sites and enhancing cleavage efficiency between NS5A and NS5B. Using the vaccinia virus-T7 hybrid system to express hepatitis C virus polypeptides in BHK-21 cells, we studied the role of NS4A in proteinase activation. We found that the NS3 proteinase a…

Protein ConformationRecombinant Fusion ProteinsvirusesGenetic VectorsMolecular Sequence DataImmunologyVaccinia virusHepacivirusProtein Sorting SignalsViral Nonstructural ProteinsBiologyKidneyTransfectionCleavage (embryo)MicrobiologyAntibodiesCell LineSerineEpitopesViral Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundProtein structureProteinase 3CricetinaeVirologyAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceProtein PrecursorsNS5BPeptide sequenceNS3Sequence Homology Amino AcidSerine Endopeptidasesvirus diseasesbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritiondigestive system diseasesNS2-3 proteaseBiochemistrychemistryInsect ScienceProtein Processing Post-TranslationalAlgorithmsRNA HelicasesResearch ArticleJournal of Virology
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