Neuronal thread proteins (NTPs) are molecules that accumulate in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease, and may play a key role in both normal and neurodegenerative neuritic sprouting. In this investigation we determined whether NTP expression is up-regulated by insulin, an important neurotrophic factor that stimulates differentiation-associated neurite outgrowth, and studied the effects of ethanol, a known inhibitor of growth factor receptor tyrosine phosphorylation, on NTP expression and insulin-mediated signal transduction cascade in neuronal [primitive neuroectodermal tumour cell line 2; (PNET2)] cells. PNET2 cells were treated with 50 m-units/ml insulin in the presence or absence of 100 mM ethanol for 0.2-96 h, and cell proliferation and expression of NTP molecules were investigated by metabolic labelling, immunoprecipitation and immunohistochemical staining. Insulin stimulation resulted in an immediate increase in the levels of three (38, 18 and 15 kDa) of five NTP species (the others were of 26 and 21 kDa), followed by a decline in expression within 120 min; however, studies performed up to 96 h of culture demonstrated up-regulation by insulin of all five NTP species. Ethanol either abolished or severely muted the short- and long-term insulin-mediated upregulation of NTP expression, and substantially reduced insulin-mediated neuronal differentiation. The effects of ethanol on NTP gene expression were associated with impaired insulin-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of both the insulin receptor beta subunit and the insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1), resulting in decreased association of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase with IRS-1. The findings suggest that ethanol may inhibit NTP expression associated with central nervous system neuronal differentiation by uncoupling the IRS-1-mediated insulin signal transduction pathway.
In this study, a B cell growth stimulatory factor, constitutively secreted by a human CD4+ T cell hybridoma clone, MP6, has been purified and characterized. Serum-free 24 h culture media from MP6 cells were collected, concentrated by ultrafiltration and separated by gel chromatography. Fractions were analyzed for stimulatory activity using [3H]thymidine incorporation in normal and leukemic (B-CLL) B cells as target cells. Activity was present in a 12 kDa protein peak. Upon storage this lost activity indicating that the factor was sensitive to air oxidation, a well-known property of mammalian thioredoxins (Trxs). Treatment of the inactive fraction with dithiothreitol restored full activity. When culture medium was analyzed with a radioimmunoassay for human placenta Trx, the MP6 clone was shown to release 30-50 ng/ml per million cells during 24 h. The B cell stimulatory activity of the MP6 medium was removed by Sepharose-bound anti-human placenta Trx IgG and activity was recovered by elution from the antibodies. Furthermore, MP6 medium showed Trx activity with NADPH and Trx reductase using an insulin disulfide reduction assay. Starting from 5 l of serum-free MP6 conditioned medium, the Trx was purified approximately 100,000-fold. After gel electrophoresis banding, the material was analyzed by peptide sequencing and a full length sequence of an 104 amino acid long protein was obtained. This Trx sequence was identical to the previously published sequence of human Trx from HTLV-1 transformed T cells, adult T cell leukemia-derived factor/Trx.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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