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1.
Biomed Khim ; 70(1): 5-14, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38450676

ABSTRACT

The cellular response to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress accompanies plasma cell maturation and is one of triggers and cofactors of the local inflammatory response. Chemical chaperones, low-molecular substances that eliminate pathological ER stress, are proposed as means of treating pathologies associated with ER stress. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect and mechanisms of influence of chemical chaperones on the humoral response in a low-dose model of allergy. The allergic immune response was induced in BALB/c mice by repeated administration of ovalbumin at a dose of 100 ng for 6 weeks. Some animals were injected with both the antigen and the chemical chaperones, TUDCA (tauroursodeoxycholic acid) or 4-PBA (4-phenylbutyrate). Administration of TUDCA, but not 4-PBA, suppressed production of allergen-specific IgE (a 2.5-fold decrease in titer). None of the chemical chaperones affected the production of specific IgG1. The effect of TUDCA was associated with suppression of the switch to IgE synthesis in regional lymph nodes. This phenomenon was associated with suppressed expression of genes encoding cytokines involved in type 2 immune response, especially Il4 and Il9, which in turn could be caused by suppression of IL-33 release. In addition, TUDCA significantly suppressed expression of the cytokine APRIL, and to a lesser extent, BAFF. Thus, TUDCA inhibition of the allergy-specific IgE production is due to suppression of the release of IL-33 and a decrease in the production of type 2 immune response cytokines, as well as suppression of the expression of the cytokines APRIL and BAFF.


Subject(s)
Hypersensitivity , Interleukin-33 , Taurochenodeoxycholic Acid , Animals , Mice , Hypersensitivity/drug therapy , Immunoglobulin E , Cytokines , Allergens
2.
Biochemistry (Mosc) ; 70(6): 672-84, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16038610

ABSTRACT

Mammalian serine proteases such as the chromosome 14 (Homo sapiens, Mus musculus) located granzymes, chymases, cathepsin G, and related enzymes including duodenase collectively represent a special group within the chymotrypsin family which we refer to here as "granases". Enzymes of this group have lost the ancient active-site disulfide bond Cys191-Cys220 (bovine chymotrypsinogen A numbering) which is strongly conserved in classic serine proteases such as pancreatic, blood coagulation, and fibrinolysis proteases and others (granzymes A, M, K and leukocyte elastases). We sequenced the cDNA encoding bovine (Bos taurus) duodenase, a granase with unusual dual trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like specificity. The sequence revealed a 17-residue signal peptide and two-residue (GlyLys) activation peptide typical for granases. Production of the mature enzyme is apparently accompanied by further proteolytic processing of the C-terminal pentapeptide extension of duodenase. Similar C-terminal processing is known for another dual-specific granase, human cathepsin G. Using phylogenetic analysis based on 39 granases we retraced the evolution of residues 189 and 226 crucial for serine protease primary specificity. The analysis revealed that while there is no obvious link between mutability of residue 189 and the appearance of novel catalytic properties in granases, the mutability of residue 226 evidently gives rise to different specificity subgroups within this enzyme group. The architecture of the extended substrate-binding site of granases and structural basis of duodenase dual specificity based on molecular dynamic method are discussed. We conclude that the marked selectivity of granases that is crucial to their role as regulatory proteases has evolved through the fine-tuning of specificity at three levels--primary, secondary, and conformational.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Models, Molecular , Serine Endopeptidases/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Binding Sites , Cattle , DNA, Complementary , Disulfides/chemistry , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Structure , Phylogeny , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Serine Endopeptidases/chemistry , Substrate Specificity/genetics
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