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Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.

The exposure of the macrophage cell line, J774 to mast cell granules (MCG) led to the formation of altered nuclear transcription factor proteins (NF-kappaBx), which had faster electrophoretic mobility than the p50 homodimer of NF-KB, but retained comparable DNA binding capacity. Antibodies to N-term...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ito, N, Li, Y, Suzuki, T, Stechschulte, D J, Dileepan, K N
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1781875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9927232
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author Ito, N
Li, Y
Suzuki, T
Stechschulte, D J
Dileepan, K N
author_facet Ito, N
Li, Y
Suzuki, T
Stechschulte, D J
Dileepan, K N
author_sort Ito, N
collection PubMed
description The exposure of the macrophage cell line, J774 to mast cell granules (MCG) led to the formation of altered nuclear transcription factor proteins (NF-kappaBx), which had faster electrophoretic mobility than the p50 homodimer of NF-KB, but retained comparable DNA binding capacity. Antibodies to N-terminal peptides of p50, p52, p65 or c-Rel supershifted only a fraction of NF-kappaBx. Western blot analyses revealed that nuclear p65 and c-Rel were progressively degraded after exposure to MCG, whereas nuclear p50 appeared to be unaffected. In contrast, cytoplasmic p50, p65, c-Rel as well as IkBalpha remained intact after MCG treatment, although p52 was clearly degraded. In comparison to J774 cells, incubation of mouse peritoneal macrophages with MCG resulted in more extensive alterations to NF-KB proteins. The alterations in NF-KB proteins did not affect the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) or TNF-alpha mRNA inJ774 cells. These data indicate that exposure of J774 cells to MCG leads to generation of altered nuclear p52, p65 and c-Rel, which retain intact N-terminal peptides, specific oligonucleotide binding and transactivating activity. On the other hand, in peritoneal macrophages, MCG induce more extensive modifications to NF-KB proteins with associated inhibition of iNOS or TNF-alpha mRNA expression.
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spelling pubmed-17818752007-01-25 Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules. Ito, N Li, Y Suzuki, T Stechschulte, D J Dileepan, K N Mediators Inflamm Research Article The exposure of the macrophage cell line, J774 to mast cell granules (MCG) led to the formation of altered nuclear transcription factor proteins (NF-kappaBx), which had faster electrophoretic mobility than the p50 homodimer of NF-KB, but retained comparable DNA binding capacity. Antibodies to N-terminal peptides of p50, p52, p65 or c-Rel supershifted only a fraction of NF-kappaBx. Western blot analyses revealed that nuclear p65 and c-Rel were progressively degraded after exposure to MCG, whereas nuclear p50 appeared to be unaffected. In contrast, cytoplasmic p50, p65, c-Rel as well as IkBalpha remained intact after MCG treatment, although p52 was clearly degraded. In comparison to J774 cells, incubation of mouse peritoneal macrophages with MCG resulted in more extensive alterations to NF-KB proteins. The alterations in NF-KB proteins did not affect the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) or TNF-alpha mRNA inJ774 cells. These data indicate that exposure of J774 cells to MCG leads to generation of altered nuclear p52, p65 and c-Rel, which retain intact N-terminal peptides, specific oligonucleotide binding and transactivating activity. On the other hand, in peritoneal macrophages, MCG induce more extensive modifications to NF-KB proteins with associated inhibition of iNOS or TNF-alpha mRNA expression. 1998 /pmc/articles/PMC1781875/ /pubmed/9927232 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Ito, N
Li, Y
Suzuki, T
Stechschulte, D J
Dileepan, K N
Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.
title Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.
title_full Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.
title_fullStr Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.
title_full_unstemmed Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.
title_short Transient degradation of NF-kappaB proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.
title_sort transient degradation of nf-kappab proteins in macrophages after interaction with mast cell granules.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1781875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9927232
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