A general procedure, using the commonly employed solid-phase peptide synthesis methodology for obtaining internally quenched fluorogenic peptides with ortho-aminobenzoyl/dinitrophenyl groups as donor-acceptor pairs, is presented. The essential feature of this procedure is the synthesis of an N~-Boc or -Fmoc derivative of glutamic acid with the a-carboxyl group bound to N-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)-ethylenediamine (EDDnp), which provides the quencher moiety attached to the C-terminus of the substrate. The fluorescent donor group, ortho-aminobenzoic acid (Abz), is incorporated into the resin-bound peptide in the last coupling cycle. Depending on the resin type used, Abz-peptidyl-Gln-EDDnp or Abz-peptidyl-Glu-EDDnp is obtained. Using the procedure described above, substrates for human renin and tissue kallikreins were synthesised. Spectrofluorimetric measurements of Abz bound to the a-amino group of proline showed that strong quenching of Abz fluorescence occurs in the absence of any acceptor group.
1 Low doses of bradykinin (below 10 nM), as well as of K+ (below 10 mM) induced relaxation, whereas higher doses caused contraction of the rat duodenum. 2 The relaxant responses induced by bradykinin and K+ were not affected by ouabain (1 LLM), but pre-incubation with 5.9 mM K+ abolished the responses to that ion but not those to bradykinin.3 The contractile and relaxant components of the response to bradykinin (but not those to K+) increased with the time elapsed after mounting of the preparation, and this was due to stretching by the load of the recording system. 4 Specific and reversible desensitization (tachyphylaxis) was observed with the contractile response (but not the relaxation) induced by bradykinin. 5 Des-Arg9-bradykinin, an analogue specific for B1-receptors, was much less active than bradykinin, and elicited only a contractile response. 6 Among four bradykinin potentiating peptides that were tested, potentiator C enhanced the relaxation only, whereas BPP5a and captopril potentiated only the contraction and BPP9a potentiated both types of response to bradykinin. 7 Our results support the hypothesis that the relaxant and contractile components of the rat duodenum's response to bradykinin are due to actions at different receptor sites, which can be distinguished by their properties (desensitization) and their different apparent affinities for agonists and for potentiating peptides.
Levels of autoantibodies to oxidized low‐density lipoprotein (oxLDL) have been correlated to atherosclerosis; however, contradictory results have been shown. To better understand the role of autoantibodies to oxLDL in atherogenesis, and their potential to predict risk of developing coronary artery disease we investigated the antibody response of unstable angina (UA) patients and healthy controls against chromatographic separated fractions of oxLDL. Five major peaks were detected after chromatographic separation of oxLDL and 10 fractions were collected. Surprisingly, when the response to high molecular weight fractions was analysed, we observed a significant increase in the levels of autoantibodies in controls compared to UA. In contrast, when the autoantibody response to intermediate and low molecular weight fractions was analysed, we observed that the UA group showed consistently higher levels compared with controls. Our data demonstrates that within oxLDL there are major fractions that can be recognized by autoantibodies from either UA patients or healthy individuals, and that the use of total oxLDL as an antigen pool may mask the presence of some antigenic molecules and their corresponding antibodies. Further studies are needed, but the analysis of antibody profiles may indeed open up a novel approach for evaluation and prevention against atherosclerosis.
The nonlinear optical response of human normal and oxidized by Cu2+ low-density lipoproteins particles (LDL), were investigated by the Z-scan technique as a function of temperature and concentration of LDL particles. The Z-scan signals increase linearly with concentration of normal LDL particles, following the usual Beer-Lambert law in a broad range of concentrations. The oxidized LDL particles do not show nonlinear optical response. On the other hand, normal LDL increases its nonlinear optical response as a function of temperature. These behaviors can be attributed to an absorbing element that is modified by the oxidative process. Contrarily, changes in the physical state of the cores and conformation of the ApoB100 protein due to an increase in temperature seems to enhance their nonlinear optical properties. This tendency is not due to aggregation of particles. The main contribution to the nonlinear optical response of normal LDL particles comes from the phospholipid fraction of the particles.
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