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TGF-beta latency: biological significance and mechanisms of activation
Gleizes PE; Munger JS; Nunes I; Harpel JG; Mazzieri R; Noguera I; Rifkin DB
Transforming growth factor (TGF-) beta is secreted as a latent complex in which the mature growth factor remains associated with its propeptide. In order to elicit a biological response, the cytokine must be released from the latent complex, a process termed latent TGF-beta activation or TGF-beta formation. Although latent TGF-beta activation is a critical step in the regulation of its activity, little is known about the molecular mechanisms that lead to the production of active TGF-beta. In this article, we present an overview of the data available on this topic, and we propose a tentative model for the mechanism of TGF-beta formation based upon the observations with different cell systems and on recent findings on the structure of the latent TGF-beta complex
PMID: 9170210
ISSN: 1066-5099
CID: 7154
Structure and activation of the large latent transforming growth factor-beta complex
Nunes I; Munger JS; Harpel JG; Nagano Y; Shapiro RL; Gleizes PE; Rifkin DB
Most cell types express transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) as a large latent TGF-beta complex that must be converted to an active form before TGF-beta can interact with cell surface TGF-beta receptors. This conversion involves the release of mature TGF-beta from the complex by disrupting noncovalent interactions between mature TGF-beta and its propeptide, latency associated peptide. A critical step in regulating TGF-beta effects may be the activation of the large latent TGF-beta complex. Activation of the complex can be achieved by chemical and enzymatic treatments, or by various cell systems. We have identified that coculturing bovine endothelial and smooth muscle cells generates active TGF-beta. Coculture activation of the large latent TGF-beta complex occurs through a plasmin-dependent mechanism that requires concentration of reactants on the cell surface and/or extracellular matrix. The mechanism of latent TGF-beta activation self-regulates through effectors of plasmin generation
PMID: 8680476
ISSN: n/a
CID: 12639
Tissue destruction by proteases
Chapter by: Munger, John S; Chapman, Harold A
in: Tuberculosis by Rom, William; Garay, Stuart M [Eds]
Boston : Little Brown, 1996
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0316755745
CID: 4835
Lysosomal processing of amyloid precursor protein to A beta peptides: a distinct role for cathepsin S
Munger JS; Haass C; Lemere CA; Shi GP; Wong WS; Teplow DB; Selkoe DJ; Chapman HA
To investigate the potential contribution of the lysosomal compartment in the processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP) to amyloid beta-peptides (A beta s), we stably overexpressed a series of lysosomal proteases (the cysteine proteases, cathepsins B, L and S, and the aspartic protease, cathepsin D) in a human kidney epithelial cell line (293) transfected to express high levels of beta APP. Preliminary experiments indicated that 293 cells endogenously synthesize cathepsins B, L and D, but not cathepsin S. A beta secretion was assessed by immunoprecipitation and ELISA and found to be increased approximately 2-fold following cathepsin S expression, but to be unchanged (cathepsins B, L) or decreased (cathepsin D) in the other double transfectants. E-64d, an inhibitor of lysosomal cysteine proteases, significantly reduced A beta secretion by the cathepsin S transfectants, but had no effect on cells expressing the other proteases. Radiosequencing of A beta secreted by cathepsin S-expressing cells revealed that a previously unreported variant beginning at Met -1 (relative to the most common A beta N-terminus, Asp -1) accounted for most of the increase in A beta secretion. Immunostaining of human brain sections revealed cathepsin S in cortical neurons and glia in samples of brain from patients with Alzheimer's disease. These results provide evidence in living cells for a pathway in which cathepsin S generates A beta from amyloidogenic fragments of beta APP in the endosomal/lysosomal compartment. This pathway appears to be inducible, distinct from a constitutive pathway used by 293 and other cells to generate A beta, and may be relevant to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease
PMCID:1136152
PMID: 7575468
ISSN: 0264-6021
CID: 35178
The lysosomal cysteine protease, cathepsin S, is increased in Alzheimer's disease and Down syndrome brain. An immunocytochemical study
Lemere CA; Munger JS; Shi GP; Natkin L; Haass C; Chapman HA; Selkoe DJ
Expression of cathepsin (cat) S, a lysosomal cysteine protease, has recently been shown to cause an increase in production of amyloid beta-peptides in transfected human cells. In this study, we examined the presence and localization of cat S by immunocytochemistry in 21 control, 24 Alzheimer's disease (AD), and 10 Down syndrome (DS) postmortem brains. An antiserum to a human cat S fusion protein was affinity purified and its specificity confirmed by abolition of immunoreactivity after adsorption with cat S but not cat L fusion protein. A small minority of control cases showed light, focal staining of scattered cortical neurons. Many control cases, as well as most AD and DS cases, showed prominent staining of vascular smooth muscle cells, particularly in leptomeningeal vessels. Both AD and DS brain tissue showed increased immunoreactivity in a subset of neocortical and hippocampal neurons and glia. Cat S immunoreactivity occurred in a granular, cytoplasmic pattern in some neurons or in a more dense staining pattern in certain neurofibrillary tangle-bearing neurons. Cat S-positive neurons were also present in amygdala and basal forebrain in AD brains. A subset of astrocytes were immunoreactive with the cat S antibody in AD and DS but not in control brains. In rare AD cases, cat S immunostaining was observed in astrocytes in the periphery of amyloid-beta-containing plaques. These results suggest that cat S is up-regulated in AD and DS brain. The association of cat S immunoreactivity with tangle-bearing neurons, astrocytes, and rare senile plaques implies a role for altered cat S activity in the pathogenesis of AD
PMCID:1869262
PMID: 7717452
ISSN: 0002-9440
CID: 35179
The role of thiol proteases in tissue injury and remodeling
Chapman HA Jr; Munger JS; Shi GP
Human lung macrophages express all four of the known lysosomal thiol proteases: cathepsins B, H, L, and S. These enzymes share a similar size and targeting mechanism for lysosomal accumulation and all have relatively indiscriminate substrate specificity in comparison with such highly selective serine proteases as urokinase or thrombin. These enzymes do have distinctive properties: only cathepsin B has C-terminal dipeptidase activity, only cathepsin H has potent aminopeptidase activity, and only cathepsin L and S are elastolytic. Cathepsin S is unique in that it is stable at neutral pH; indeed, at neutral pH it has elastolytic activity roughly comparable with that of neutrophil elastase. Recent studies of the differential expression of these cathepsins suggest they not only cooperate in terminal degradation of endocytized protein but also have specific functions such as proenzyme activation, antigen processing, and tissue remodeling, especially bone matrix resorption. Lysates of lung macrophages degrade elastin at neutral pH, suggesting that necrosis of macrophages at sites of macrophage accumulation, e.g., caseation necrosis, could contribute to tissue destruction. Tissue destruction and remodeling by thiol proteases expressed by live macrophages, however, is limited by tight compartmentalization of cathepsins to lysosomes. Nonetheless, macrophages accumulate at sites of known injury in cigarette smokers. Because these cells contain potent elastases, and because lysosomal enzyme release and cell surface acidification are regulated events, dysregulation of thiol protease expression in stimulated macrophages may contribute to the injury observed in cigarette smokers with non-alpha-1-protease inhibitor-type emphysema
PMID: 7952652
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 35180
Human cathepsin S: chromosomal localization, gene structure, and tissue distribution
Shi GP; Webb AC; Foster KE; Knoll JH; Lemere CA; Munger JS; Chapman HA
The human lysosomal cysteine proteinases, cathepsins H, L, and B, have been mapped to chromosomes 15, 9, and 8, respectively, and the genomic structures of cathepsins L and B have been determined. We report here the chromosomal localization and partial gene structure for a recently sequenced human cysteine proteinase, cathepsin S. A 20-kilobase pair genomic clone of the human cathepsin S gene was isolated from a human fibroblast genomic library and used to map the human cathepsin S gene to chromosome 1q21 by fluorescence in situ hybridization. This clone contains exons 1 through 5, introns 1 through 4, part of intron 5, and > 7 kilobase pairs of the 5'-flanking sequence. The gene structure of human cathepsin S is similar to that of cathepsin L through the first 5 exons, except that cathepsin S introns are substantially larger. Sequencing of the 5'-flanking region revealed, similar to human cathepsin B, no classical TATA or CAAT box. In contrast to cathepsin B, cathepsin S contains only two SP1 and at least 18 AP1 binding sites that potentially could be involved in regulation of the gene. This 5'-flanking region also contains CA microsatellites. The presence of AP1 sites and CA microsatellites suggest that cathepsin S can be specifically regulated. Results of Northern blotting using probes for human cathepsins B, L, and S are consistent with this hypothesis; only cathepsin S shows a restricted tissue distribution, with highest levels in spleen, heart, and lung. In addition, immunostaining of lung tissue demonstrated detectable cathepsin S only in lung macrophages. The high level of expression in the spleen and in phagocytes suggests that cathepsin S may have a specific function in immunity, perhaps related to antigen processing
PMID: 8157683
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 35181
Molecular cloning and expression of human alveolar macrophage cathepsin S, an elastinolytic cysteine protease
Shi GP; Munger JS; Meara JP; Rich DH; Chapman HA
Human alveolar macrophages (HAM) express an elastase activity of acidic pH optimum inhibitable by cysteine protease inhibitors. Recent studies indicate that the only known eukaryotic elastinolytic cysteine protease, cathepsin L, cannot completely account for this activity. In order to search for additional cysteine proteases with elastinolytic activity, low degeneracy oligonucleotide primers based on regions of strong homology among the known cysteine proteases were used to screen reverse-transcribed HAM RNA for cysteine proteases by the polymerase chain reaction. Among the cDNA sequences generated was a 493-base pair product highly homologous to bovine cathepsin S. Screening of a HAM cDNA eukaryotic expression library with this cDNA yielded a 1.7-kilobase full-length cDNA highly homologous to bovine cathepsin S (approximately 85% identical). This cDNA predicts a 331-amino acid preprocathepsin. Expression of this cDNA in COS cells revealed the active enzyme to be a single chain 28-kDa protease, as judged by active site labeling with a novel iodinated analogue of N-(L-3-trans-carboxyoxirane-2-carbonyl)-L-leucylamido-(4-gua nido)butane (E-64). The recombinant enzyme was found to be elastinolytic toward 3H-labeled elastin (bovine ligamentum nuchae) at pH 5.5 but with 25% of this activity retained at pH 7.0. Labeling of HAM with the active site probe revealed these cells express a 28-kDa cysteine protease, and Northern blot analysis revealed the presence of a approximately 1.7-kilobase cathepsin S mRNA. These data establish that human macrophages express at least two cysteine proteases with elastinolytic activity. The relatively broad pH range of human cathepsin S activity suggests this enzyme may contribute to the contact-dependent elastase activity of live human alveolar macrophages
PMID: 1373132
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 35182
A serine esterase released by human alveolar macrophages is closely related to liver microsomal carboxylesterases
Munger JS; Shi GP; Mark EA; Chin DT; Gerard C; Chapman HA
We identified a 60-kDa diisopropylfluorophosphate-(DFP) reactive protein in human bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, at a yield of 50-100 pmol/lavage. The protein is associated with the cell-free lavage fluid sediment, which consists mainly of surfactant. [3H]DFP labeling is inhibited by heating to 56 degrees C, 2 mM phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride and 1 mM bis(4-nitrophenyl)-phosphate. An identical 60-kDa [3H]DFP-reactive protein is present in the insoluble fraction of alveolar macrophage-conditioned culture medium and in total membrane preparations of alveolar macrophages. The [3H]DFP-labeled protein was purified approximately 30-fold from lavage fluid sediment by size-exclusion (Sephacryl S-200) and ion-exchange (Mono-Q) chromatography. Cyanogen bromide treatment of the partially purified protein produced a major labeled peptide of 14 kDa with an NH2-terminal sequence 90% identical to a region of form 1 rabbit liver microsomal carboxylesterase. Esterase activity in unlabeled starting material, detected using p-nitrophenyl valerate as substrate, copurified with the [3H]DFP-labeled enzyme. Degenerate oligonucleotide primers were designed based on the partial amino acid sequence and on a highly conserved region of known liver carboxylesterase sequences. Polymerase chain reaction using these primers and reverse-transcribed human alveolar macrophage mRNA yielded a 354-base pair product which was then used to screen a human alveolar macrophage cDNA library. A complete esterase sequence was obtained from two incomplete, overlapping clones, and is virtually identical to human liver carboxylesterase partial sequences. Northern blot analysis demonstrated a single approximately 1.7-kilobase transcript in human monocytes and alveolar macrophages, with much higher levels in the latter. These data indicate that human alveolar macrophages both contain and release a serine esterase that is apparently identical to liver microsomal carboxylesterase. Its enzymatic profile suggests it is a major component of alveolar macrophage-nonspecific esterase activity. We hypothesize that it acts as a detoxication enzyme in the lung
PMID: 1918003
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 35183