Lung tissue from patients with emphysema and airway obstruction carries excess adenoviral E1A DNA that is expressed as protein in airway surface epithelium and is associated with an increased inflammatory response. To examine mechanisms by which latent adenoviral infection might amplify the inflammatory process, we transfected primary human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells from three separate patients undergoing lung resection so that they stably expressed adenovirus E1A. Lipopolysaccharide stimulation of the E1A-transfected HBE cells increased intercellular adhesion molecule-1 and interleukin-8 mRNA and protein expression compared with control cells from the same patient. It also induced greater intercellular adhesion molecule-1 promoter activity and greater nuclear factor-kappa B binding activity of nuclear extracts in E1A transfectants than controls. E1A-positive transfectants constitutively expressed transforming growth factor-beta 1 mRNA and protein, whereas this expression was either very low or not detected in control cells. We conclude that adenoviral E1A transfection transforms primary HBE cells and upregulates their production of mediators that are clinically relevant to the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Three alpha chains of type V collagen--alpha 1 (V), alpha 2 (V), and alpha 3 (V)--were initially demonstrated together with the expected collagen types I and III in the pepsin-soluble fraction of both normal mandibular bone and tooth extraction wound tissues of rabbits, as analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. The total collagen content of each extraction wound, as determined by the hydroxyproline assay, was observed to increase continuously from day 5 through day 17 and then leveled off or decreased. The ratio of type V to type I collagen was significantly higher in the initial stage of wound healing and decreased sharply down to the level of mandibular bone by day 5. The ratio of type III to type I collagen in the pepsin-soluble fraction increased and reached a maximum on day 5, whereas it was maximal on day 7 in the cyanogen bromide-soluble fraction, and thereafter decreased gradually in both fractions. The ratio for the pepsin-soluble fraction was, however, significantly higher than that for the cyanogen bromide-soluble fraction in the early stage of wound healing.
By use of a new computer-assisted u.v.-spectrophotometric assay method, the kinetic parameters of the reaction catalysed by Bacillus licheniformis 749/C beta-lactamase were re-examined and the mode of inhibition of the enzyme by compound PS-5, a novel beta-lactam antibiotic, was studied with benzylpenicillin as substrate. (1) The fundamental assay conditions for the determination of Km and V were examined in detail with benzylpenicillin as substrate. In 0.1 M-sodium/potassium phosphate buffer, pH 6.8, at 30 degrees C, initial substrate concentrations of benzylpenicillin above 0.7 mM were very likely to lead to substrate inhibition. The Km value of the enzyme for benzylpenicillin at initial concentrations from 1.96 to 0.07 mM was calculated to be 97-108 microM. (2) The Km values of the enzyme for 6-aminopenicillanic acid, ampicillin and cephaloridine were found to be 25, 154-161 and 144-161 microM respectively. (3) Compound PS-5 was virtually unattacked by Bacillus licheniformis 749/C beta-lactamase. (4) The activity of the enzyme was diminished by compound PS-5, to extents depending on the duration of incubation and the concentration of the inhibitor. The rate of inactivation of the enzyme by compound PS-5 followed first-order kinetics. (5) In an Appendix, a new computer-assisted u.v.-spectrophotometric enzyme assay method, in which a single reaction progress curve of time-absorbance was analysed by the integrated Michaelis-Menten equation, was devised for the accurate and precise determination of the kinetic constants of beta-lactamase. For conversion of absorbance readings into molar substrate concentrations, the initial or final absorbance reading that was independent of the reaction time was used as the basis of calculation. In calculation of Km and V three systematic methods of data combination were employed for finer analysis of the reaction progress curve. A list of the computer program named YF6TAIM is obtainable from the author on request or as Supplementary Publication SUP 50100 (12 pages) from the British Library Lending Division, Boston Spa, Wetherby, West Yorkshire LS23 7BQ, U.K., on the terms indicated in Biochem. J. (1978) 169, 5.
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