Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy is a common complication of lung and certain other cancers. The hypercalcemia results from the actions of tumor factors on bone and kidney. We report here the isolation of full-length complementary DNA clones of a putative hypercalcemia factor, and the expression from the cloned DNA of the active protein in mammalian cells. The clones encode a prepro peptide of 36 amino acids and a mature protein of 141 amino acids that has significant homology with parathyroid hormone in the amino-terminal region. This previously unrecognized hormone may be important in normal as well as abnormal calcium metabolism.
Although combination antiretroviral therapy has resulted in a considerable improvement in the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 (HIV-1) infection, the emergence of resistant virus is a significant obstacle to the effective management of HIV infection and AIDS. We have developed a novel phenotypic drug susceptibility assay that may be useful in guiding therapy and improving long-term suppression of HIV replication. Susceptibility to protease (PR) and reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors is measured by using resistance test vectors (RTVs) that contain a luciferase indicator gene and PR and RT sequences derived from HIV-1 in patient plasma. Cells are transfected with RTV DNA, resulting in the production of virus particles that are used to infect target cells. Since RTVs are replication defective, luciferase activity is measured following a single round of replication. The assay has been automated to increase throughput and is completed in 8 to 10 days. Test results may be useful in facilitating the selection of optimal treatment regimens for patients who have failed prior therapy or drug-naive patients infected with drug-resistant virus. In addition, the assay can be used to evaluate candidate drugs and assist in the development of new drugs that are active against resistant strains of HIV-1.
N-terminal as well as internal amino acid sequence data were obtained from the GH dependent, insulin-like growth factor (IGF) binding protein, BP-53, purified from human plasma. Based on these sequence data, full-length cDNA clones of BP-53 have been isolated, and the complete deduced sequence of BP-53 determined. This sequence contains a 27 amino acid putative signal sequence followed by a mature protein of 264 amino acids containing 18 cysteine residues clustered near the N- and C-terminus. The deduced protein sequence of BP-53 has 33% amino acid identity including conservation of all 18 cysteine residues with the recently cloned BP-28, a smaller human IGF-binding protein identified in amniotic fluid and also secreted by the cell line HEP G2. Expression of the cloned BP-53 cDNA in mammalian tissue culture cells results in secretion of the protein into the culture medium. This expressed protein is identical to plasma-derived BP-53 in its immunoreactivity, high affinity binding of IGF-I and IGF-II, and mobility on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis.
The cell surface glycoprotein, Pgp-1 (CD44), has been shown to be a marker of murine memory T lymphocytes. When activated, Pgp-1hi memory T cells produce strikingly higher amounts of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) than naive Pgp-1lo T cells, yet both subsets make similar levels of interleukin (IL)2. Whereas Pgp-1hi cells represent only 20%-25% of peripheral T cells from most strains, this marker is expressed by the vast majority (greater than 90%) of T cells from autoimmune MRL mice homozygous for the lymphoproliferation (lpr) gene. The massive lymphadenopathy that develops in lpr/lpr mice is composed of both non-mature (CD4-CD8-) T cells as well as a greatly expanded number (up to 300-fold) of mature (CD4+CD8-,CD4-CD8+) T cells. Paralleling the expression of high levels of Pgp-1, we find that compared to normal mouse T cells, the lpr mature T lymphocyte subsets are also very high producers on a per cell basis of IFN-gamma and, for the CD4+ subset, IL 4. Increased concentrations of IFN-gamma and IL 4 produced by large numbers of lpr Pgp-1hi mature T cells could contribute to the autoimmune syndrome in MRL lpr/lpr mice through the effects of these cytokines on augmenting MHC class II expression and production of certain classes of antibodies.
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