Acylation stimulating protein (ASP) is a 14 kDa plasma protein which causes in vitro triacylglycerol synthesis in human adipocytes and fibroblasts to increase substantially. ASP was found to stimulate human adipose tissue microsomal glycerophosphate acyltransferase and diacylglycerol acyltransferase activities by 23% and 90%, respectively. However, phosphatidate phosphohydrolase activity showed no increase in activity, nor did microsomal acyl-CoA synthetase activity. Moreover, ASP did not decrease the apparent Km of diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT), but rather increased its apparent Vmax suggesting direct interaction of ASP with DGAT.
These results demonstrate that there is a preferential expression of T-helper type 1 cytokines in pulmonary sarcoidosis, and that cytokines related to macrophage activation are the most prominent. In addition, these data implicate an elevated expression of interleukin-2, -10 and -12 and interferon-γ in active compared to nonactive sarcoidosis.
Eosinophilic inflammation and interleukin-5 (IL-5) expression are characteristic features of the bronchial mucosa in asthma. We have investigated the differential expression of membrane and soluble isoforms of alpha IL-5 receptor (alpha IL-5Rm and alpha IL-5Rs) mRNA in asthmatics and in normal control subjects and examined the correlation between alpha IL-5Rm and alpha IL-5Rs expression and the FEV1 and airway hyperresponsiveness. Nineteen subjects with stable asthma (atopic = 9; intrinsic = 10) and 22 control subjects (atopic = 12; nonatopic = 10) were recruited. Endobronchial biopsies were obtained and processed for in situ hybridization and double-staining techniques. There was a significant increase in the number of cells per millimeter basement membrane expressing mRNA for total, membrane-bound, and soluble alpha IL-5R in asthmatics when compared with that in nonasthmatic control subjects (p < 0.001); 93% of the cells positive for alpha IL-5R mRNA were EG2+ve eosinophils. There was no significant difference in the expression of alpha IL-5Rm and alpha IL-5Rs between the atopic and nonatopic asthmatics. The expression of alpha IL-5Rm and alpha IL-5Rs was also nonsignificantly different between the atopic and nonatopic control subjects. However, in the asthmatic subjects, the number of positive cells expressing mRNA for alpha IL-5Rm inversely correlated with FEV1(r2 = 0.89, p < 0.001), whereas the expression of alpha IL-5Rs mRNA directly correlated with FEV1 (r2 = 0.52, p < 0.001). There were no significant correlations between alpha IL-5R isoforms and the methacholine PC20. These results suggest that alpha IL-5R upregulation and differential regulation of alternatively spliced alpha IL-5R mRNA transcripts may influence the eosinophil response and the accompanying changes in airflow limitation in both atopic and nonatopic variants of chronic asthma.
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