SummaryVon Willebrand factor (vWf), a multimeric adhesive glycoprotein synthesized, stored, and secreted in megakaryocytes and endothelial cells, is normally found in plasma, platelets and subendothelium. While many substances mediate the release of vWf from endothelial cells, factors that enhance vWf synthesis and partitioning to its regulated pathway are currently unknown. We studied the effect of pharmacologic doses of heparin on the vWf content of endothelial cells. After a lag of 8 h and in the presence of crude or purified growth factor, heparin at doses between 0.25 and 2 U (1.4-11 μg)/ml, increased the content of high moleculr weight vWf. The increased amounts of vWf were localized to Weibel-Palade bodies and extracellular matrix. Lower molecular weight highly sulfated heparin or heparin-like compounds were most active in growth factor dependent endothelial cell vWf expression. There was no clear importance of polysaccharide sequence or protein core.
Cardiac glycosides (CGs), inhibitors of Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA), used clinically to treat heart failure, have garnered recent attention as potential anti-cancer and anti-viral agents. A high-throughput phenotypic screen designed to identify modulators of promyelocytic leukemia protein (PML) nuclear body (NB) formation revealed the CG gitoxigenin as a potent activator of PML. We demonstrate that multiple structurally distinct CGs activate the formation of PML NBs and induce PML protein SUMOylation in an NKA-dependent fashion. CG effects on PML occur at the post-transcriptional level, mechanistically distinct from previously described PML activators and are mediated through signaling events downstream of NKA. Curiously, genomic deletion of PML in human cancer cells failed to abrogate the cytotoxic effects of CGs and other apoptotic stimuli such as ceramide and arsenic trioxide that were previously shown to function through PML in mice. These findings suggest that alternative pathways can compensate for PML loss to mediate apoptosis in response to CGs and other apoptotic stimuli.
A 15 year old girl with aplastic anemia developed a heparin-like anticoagulant during the course of systemic candidiasis. This was initially detected in the laboratory by an elevation of the thrombin clotting time which corrected with toluidine blue but not by mixing with normal plasma. In vivo and in vitro the anticoagulant was remarkably resistant to neutralization by protamine sulfate. Nevertheless, its heparin-like nature was confirmed by its sensitivity to heparinase and its dependence on antithrombin III.
Mice infected with Listeria monocytogenes (LM) produce large numbers of H2-M3-restricted CD8 T cells directed against the formylated peptides, f-MIGWII and f-MIVIL. To examine responsiveness to these epitopes in the absence of infection, we inoculated mice with recombinant lemA (r-lemA) containing f-MIGWII or r-vemA (a variant of r-lemA containing f-MIVIL in place of f-MIGWII) without adjuvant. To monitor responses, we measured peptide-specific cytoplasmic IFN-gamma production ex vivo by freshly harvested splenocytes at varying times post-inoculation. B6 mice inoculated with r-lemA produced substantial numbers of epitope-specific CD8 cells with peak levels on day 7 when there were 1.1 x 10(6) f-MIGWII-specific CD8 cells in the spleen (8.2% of total CD8 splenocytes). The r-vemA-treated animals accumulated 0.25 x 10(6) cells (1.8% of total CD8 cells) at this time point. Comparable responses were observed after rechallenge of immunized animals. Other elements in the lemA moiety distinct from the immunogenic peptide were required since mice did not respond to equimolar amounts of synthetic f-MIGWII or f-MIVIL alone. In comparative studies, B6 and C3H/HeJ mice responded to r-lemA much more vigorously than BALB/c animals. When r-lemA- or r-vemA-treated B6 animals were challenged i.v. with LM 7 days later, they suppressed splenic accumulation of bacteria much more effectively than controls. On the other hand, antigen-treated animals were not protected against infection 1 month later. Thus, responsive strains of mice respond vigorously to H2-M3-restricted epitopes, even in the absence of bacterial infection or adjuvant. The resulting effectors acutely enhance antimicrobial resistance but do not confer long-term memory protection.
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