60 research outputs found
Undersulfation of proteoglycans synthesized by chondrocytes from a patient with achondrogenesis type 1B homozygous for an L483P substitution in the diastrophic dysplasia sulfate transporter.
Achondrogenesis type 1B is an autosomal recessive, lethal chondrodysplasia caused by mutations in the gene encoding a sulfate/chloride antiporter of the cell membrane (Superti-Furga, A., Hastbacka, J., Wilcox, W. R., Cohn, D. H., van der Harten, J. J., Rossi, A., Blau, N., Rimoin, D. L., Steinmann, B., Lander, E. S., and Gitzelmann, R. (1996) Nat. Genet. 12, 100-102). To ascertain the consequences of the sulfate transport defect on proteoglycan synthesis, we studied the structure and sulfation of proteoglycans in cartilage tissue and in fibroblast and chondrocyte cultures from a fetus with achondrogenesis 1B. Proteoglycans extracted from epiphyseal cartilage and separated on agarose gels migrated more slowly than controls and stained poorly with alcian blue. The patient's cultured cells showed reduced incorporation of [35S]sulfate relative to [3H]glucosamine, impaired uptake of sulfate, and higher resistance to chromate toxicity compared to control cells. Epiphyseal chondrocytes cultured in alginate beads synthesized proteoglycans of normal molecular size as judged by gel filtration chromatography, but undersulfated as judged by ion exchange chromatography and by the amount of nonsulfated disaccharide. High performance liquid chromatography analysis of chondroitinase-digested proteoglycans showed that sulfated disaccharides were present, although in reduced amounts, indicating that at least in vitro, other sources of sulfate can partially compensate for sulfate deficiency. A t1475c transition causing a L483P substitution in the eleventh transmembrane domain of the sulfate/chloride antiporter was present on both alleles in the patient who was the product of a consanguineous marriage. The results indicate that the defect of sulfate transport is expressed in both chondrocytes and fibroblasts and results in the synthesis of proteoglycans bearing glycosaminoglycan chains which are poorly sulfated but of normal length
A diastrophic dysplasia sulfate transporter (SLC26A2) mutant mouse: morphological and biochemical characterization of the resulting chondrodysplasia phenotype
Mutations in the diastrophic dysplasia sulfate transporter (DTDST or SLC26A2) cause a family of recessively inherited chondrodysplasias including, in order of decreasing severity, achondrogenesis 1B, atelosteogenesis 2, diastrophic dysplasia (DTD) and recessive multiple epiphyseal dysplasia. The gene encodes a widely distributed sulfate/chloride antiporter of the cell membrane whose function is crucial for the uptake of inorganic sulfate, which is needed for proteoglycan sulfation. To provide new insights in the pathogenetic mechanisms leading to skeletal and connective tissue dysplasia and to obtain an in vivo model for therapeutic approaches to DTD, we generated a Dtdst knock-in mouse with a partial loss of function of the sulfate transporter. In addition, the intronic neomycine cassette in the mutant allele contributed to the hypomorphic phenotype by inducing abnormal splicing. Homozygous mutant mice were characterized by growth retardation, skeletal dysplasia and joint contractures, thereby recapitulating essential aspects of the DTD phenotype in man. The skeletal phenotype included reduced toluidine blue staining of cartilage, chondrocytes of irregular size, delay in the formation of the secondary ossification center and osteoporosis of long bones. Impaired sulfate uptake was demonstrated in chondrocytes, osteoblasts and fibroblasts. In spite of the generalized nature of the sulfate uptake defect, significant proteoglycan undersulfation was detected only in cartilage. Chondrocyte proliferation and apoptosis studies suggested that reduced proliferation and/or lack of terminal chondrocyte differentiation might contribute to reduced bone growth. The similarity with human DTD makes this mouse strain a useful model to explore pathogenetic and therapeutic aspects of DTDST-related disorder
Omic Approach in Non-Smoker Female with Lung Squamous Cell Carcinoma Pinpoints to Germline Susceptibility and Personalized Medicine
Lung cancer is strongly associated to tobacco smoking. However, global statistics estimate that in females the proportion of lung cancer cases that is unrelated to tobacco smoking reaches fifty percent, making questionable the etiology of the disease
Possible role of overglycosylation in the type I collagen triple helical domain in the molecular pathogenesis of osteogenesis imperfecta.
The underlying defect in patients affected by a form of osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) clarified at the molecular level regards the amount or the structure of type I collagen synthesized. This leads to a decreased and/or abnormal mineral deposition in bone and affects bone mass and/or strength. Abnormal interactions between collagen molecules in the presence of mutant trimers could give rise to abnormal fibrils, which, in turn, can determine incorrect interactions with noncollagenous matrix macromolecules. The interactions can be disturbed or modulated by an abnormal distribution on the collagen fibril surface of electrically charged or hydrophobic groups, or by an increased presence of sugar moieties linked to hydroxylysyl residues due to chain post-translational overmodifications (lysyl overhydroxylation and hydroxylysyl overglycosylation) of the portion of the triple helical domain of abnormal type I collagen molecules N-terminal with respect to the defect localization
Micellar electrokinetic chromatography as a complementary method to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for studying limited proteolysis of proteins.
Micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) has been utilized as an analytical method to perform investigations on limited proteolysis of proteins. To this purpose partial proteolysis experiments with a series of proteinases were performed, utilizing as model protein pyruvate kinase (PK) from Escherichia coli, an enzyme that is regulated allosterically by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP). Data obtained with sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and MEKC were compared; the profiles generated by submitting digests of PK treated with different proteinases in the presence and absence of FBP to electrophoretic analysis provided a useful adjunct for a better understanding of the effects of the allosteric activator on the conformation of the model enzyme. MEKC was also found to be a convenient technique for determining the kinetics of substrate proteolysis
Effect of different surfactants on the separation by micellar electrokinetic chromatography of a complex mixture of dipeptides in urine of prolidase-deficient patients.
Prolidase deficiency is a severe disorder characterized by massive excretion of metabolites with closely related structures. At present, micellar electrokinetic chromatography is the separation method which provides the highest selectivity of structurally similar solutes. However, the structure of a surfactant can greatly affect the selectivity of separation depending on factors such as the length of hydrophobic alkyl chain or the nature of the hydrophilic group. Here we investigated the effect of three non-ionic and four anionic detergents for obtaining the best separation conditions for resolving imidodipeptide mixtures. The effect on resolution of variables such as temperature, surfactant concentrations and organic solvents was also examined. The greatest resolution was obtained at the lowest temperature studied (10 degrees C) using 50 mM sodium borate, pH 9.3 containing 50 mM pentanesulfonate and 10% (v/v) methanol. Under these experimental conditions almost all excreted components were baseline separated and identified
Simultaneous determination of Pseudomonas aeruginosa elastase, human leukocyte elastase and cathepsin G activities by micellar electrokinetic chromatography
Micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) is a new method for analysing proteolytic activities simultaneously present in incubation mixtures. Here we demonstrate that MEKC differentiates between the enzymatic activities of Pseudomonas aeruginosa elastase (PsE) and human leukocyte elastase (HLE) or cathepsin G (Cat G) in assays using the chromogenic peptide substrates Suc-Ala-Ala-Ala-NA or Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-NA, respectively (where Suc = succinyl and NA = 4-nitroaniline/u-nitroanilide). When PsE and Cat G were incubated at equimolar ratio with Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-NA, the PsE-specific cleavage products PheNA and Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro were detected whereas inhibition of the metalloproteinase PsE with EDTA resulted in detection of NA and Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe only. Similarly, when PsE and HLE were incubated at equimolar ratio with Suc-Ala-Ala-Ala-NA, the PsE-specific cleavage products Suc-Ala and Ala-Ala-NA were detected whereas at an PsE-HLE ratio 1:50, both the PsE-specific and the HLE-specific cleavage products NA and Suc-Ala-Ala-Ala were separated. MEKC also allowed determination of the kinetic constants for the interactions of PsE, Cat G and HLE with the substrates considered
Separation of closely related peptide substrates of human proteinases by micellar electrokinetic chromatography with anionic and nonionic surfactants.
In order to use micellar electrokinetic chromatography to determine the proteolytic activity of different proteinases simultaneously present in physiological fluids, the technique must be able to separate mixtures of substrates with closely related structures. In an attempt to determine the best electrophoretic conditions for resolving six p-nitroanilide peptides used as synthetic substrates of the elastolytic enzymes (human neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, Pseudomonas aeruginosa elastase) most commonly involved in pulmonary diseases, we investigated the efficiency of ionic and nonionic surfactants in achieving the separation of this complex mixture. The results presented here show that, of all the electrophoretic systems tested, 30 mM sodium tetraborate, pH 9.3, containing 25 mM Brij 35 as micellar agent offered the best performance; the separation efficiency of peptides is greater than that obtained with other reagents and all peaks are baseline resolved and unambiguously identifiable. Analysis of the micelle-solute interaction with the surfactants investigated allowed better definition of the mechanism involved in the distribution of these peptides to the micelles and identification of some structural features that determined the magnitude of the micelle peptide complex formation
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