scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Research Triangle Park published in 1994"


Journal ArticleDOI
18 Nov 1994-Science
TL;DR: Transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis thaliana expressing the bacterial enzyme salicylate hydroxylase cannot accumulate salicylic acid, which makes the plants unable to induce systemic acquired resistance, but also leads to increased susceptibility to viral, fungal, and bacterial pathogens.
Abstract: Transgenic tobacco and Arabidopsis thaliana expressing the bacterial enzyme salicylate hydroxylase cannot accumulate salicylic acid (SA). This defect not only makes the plants unable to induce systemic acquired resistance, but also leads to increased susceptibility to viral, fungal, and bacterial pathogens. The enhanced susceptibility extends even to host-pathogen combinations that would normally result in genetic resistance. Therefore, SA accumulation is essential for expression of multiple modes of plant disease resistance.

1,662 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
27 Oct 1994-Nature
TL;DR: Agouti protein is used to demonstrate that agouti is a high-affinity antagonist of the MSH receptor and blocks α-MSH stimulation of adenylyl cyclase, the effector through which α- MSH induces eumelanin synthesis.
Abstract: The genetic loci agouti and extension control the relative amounts of eumelanin (brown-black) and phaeomelanin (yellow-red) pigments in mammals: extension encodes the receptor for melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) and agouti encodes a novel 131-amino-acid protein containing a signal sequence. Agouti, which is produced in the hair follicle, acts on follicular melanocytes to inhibit alpha-MSH-induced eumelanin production, resulting in the subterminal band of phaeomelanin often visible in mammalian fur. Here we use partially purified agouti protein to demonstrate that agouti is a high-affinity antagonist of the MSH receptor and blocks alpha-MSH stimulation of adenylyl cyclase, the effector through which alpha-MSH induces eumelanin synthesis. Agouti was also found to be an antagonist of the melanocortin-4 receptor, a related MSH-binding receptor. Consequently, the obesity caused by ectopic expression of agouti in the lethal yellow (Ay) mouse may be due to the inhibition of melanocortin receptor(s) outside the hair follicle.

1,066 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that the principal defect in poor metabolizers is a single base pair (G-->A) mutation in exon 5 of CYP2C19, which creates an aberrant splice site that results in a truncated, non-functional protein.

942 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review provides a brief history of SAR research, discusses recent findings that indicate a central role for the SAR pathway in plant health and presents the current working model of SAR induction.
Abstract: In the spectrum of plant-microbe interactions disease is a rare outcome. In many interactions complex, integrated defense mechanisms prevent infection and disease. These defensive systems include preformed physical and chemical barriers as well as inducible defenses such as the strengthening of cell walls or synthesis of antimicrobial compounds (i.e., phytoalexins) and proteins.1,2 In certain cases plants react to pathogen attack by developing long-lasting, broad-spectrum systemic resistance to later attacks by pathogens. This phenomenon, termed systemic acquired resistance (SAR), has been observed in many species and may be ubiquitous among higher plants. In the last five years progress has been made toward understanding the molecular basis of SAR. In this review we first provide a brief history of SAR research, then describe our present knowledge of the manifestation and induction of SAR. We discuss recent findings that indicate a central role for the SAR pathway in plant health and finally present our current working model of SAR induction.

844 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
20 May 1994-Cell
TL;DR: Six Arabidopsis mutants are described, defining at least four loci, that spontaneously form necrotic lesions on leaves, a novel mutant class Isd (for lesions simulating disease resistance response) that varies in cell type preferences for lesion onset and spread.

716 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Five algorithms proposed in the literature for library search identification of unknown compounds from their low resolution mass spectra were optimized and tested by matching test spectra against reference spectra in the NIST-EPA-NIH Mass Spectral Database.

702 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a data base containing information relevant to the setting of Toxic Equivalency Factors (TEFs), and, based on the available information, to assess the relative potencies and to derive consensus TEFs for PCDDs, PCDFs and dioxin-like PCBs.

698 citations


Patent
10 Feb 1994
TL;DR: In this article, a hemostatic clip applicator can be directly connected to a trigger assembly or indirectly connected to the trigger assembly through the use of an extension, which is secured to prevent accidental release during the procedure.
Abstract: The surgical instrument system disclosed is particularly useful for endoscopic procedures. In the preferred embodiment, a hemostatic clip applicator can be directly connected to a trigger assembly or indirectly connected to the trigger assembly through the use of an extension. The connection between the extension and the clip applicator is secured to prevent accidental release during the procedure. The applicator receives a longitudinal input and translates the input into relative component motion through the use of gearing to apply the clips. The handle stem assembly in an alternative embodiment has a drive rod configuration that connects to a closure member so as not only to provide the distal biasing force, but also to provide, if needed, a proximal pulling force to assist in release of the jaw if it becomes necessary.

679 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: DARE's short-term effectiveness for reducing or preventing drug use behavior is small and is less than for interactive prevention programs.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES. Project DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) is the most widely used school-based drug use prevention program in the United States, but the findings of rigorous evaluations of its effectiveness have not been considered collectively. METHODS. We used meta-analytic techniques to review eight methodologically rigorous DARE evaluations. Weighted effect size means for several short-term outcomes also were compared with means reported for other drug use prevention programs. RESULTS. The DARE effect size for drug use behavior ranged from .00 to .11 across the eight studies; the weighted mean for drug use across studies was .06. For all outcomes considered, the DARE effect size means were substantially smaller than those of programs emphasizing social and general competencies and using interactive teaching strategies. CONCLUSIONS. DARE's short-term effectiveness for reducing or preventing drug use behavior is small and is less than for interactive prevention programs.

648 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Transgenic tobacco root-stocks were shown to be fully capable of delivering a signal that renders nontransgenic scions resistant to further pathogen infection, indicating that the translocating, SAR-inducing signal is not SA.
Abstract: Infection of plants by necrotizing pathogens can induce broad-spectrum resistance to subsequent pathogen infection. This systemic acquired resistance (SAR) is thought to be triggered by a vascular-mobile signal that moves throughout the plant from the infected leaves. A considerable amount of evidence suggests that salicylic acid (SA) is involved in the induction of SAR. Because SA is found in phloem exudate of infected cucumber and tobacco plants, it has been proposed as a candidate for the translocated signal. To determine if SA is the mobile signal, grafting experiments were performed using transgenic plants that express a bacterial SA-degrading enzyme. We show that transgenic tobacco root-stocks, although unable to accumulate SA, were fully capable of delivering a signal that renders nontransgenic scions resistant to further pathogen infection. This result indicated that the translocating, SAR-inducing signal is not SA. Reciprocal grafts demonstrated that the signal requires the presence of SA in tissues distant from the infection site to induce systemic resistance.

643 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Social network analysis was used to identify peer groups (cliques), clique liaisons, and isolates among adolescents in 5 schools at 2 data collection rounds and suggested the importance of using social network analysis in studies of peer group influence and selection.
Abstract: Understanding the homogeneity of peer groups requires identification of peer groups and consideration of influence and selection processes. Few studies have identified adolescent peer groups, however, or examined how they become homogeneous. This study used social network analysis to identify peer groups (cliques), clique liaisons, and isolates among adolescents in 5 schools at 2 data collection rounds (N = 926). Cigarette smoking was the behavior of interest. Influence and selection contributed about equally to peer group smoking homogeneity. Most smokers were not peer group members, however, and selection provided more of an explanation than influence for why isolates smoke. The results suggest the importance of using social network analysis in studies of peer group influence and selection.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: As the concentrations of M1 in the serum of pregnant rats and their pups on Postnatal Day 3 meet or exceed the in vitro Ki for androgen receptor inhibition, it is suggested that the demasculinizing effects of vinclozolin exposure in vivo also may be mediated via the antiandrogenic metabolites M1 and/or M2.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A well-characterized genetic polymorphism occurs in the 2C subfamily which is associated with the metabolism of the anticonvulsant drug mephenytoin, and the availability of genotyping tests for this polymorphism will enhance the assessment of the role of this pathway in clinical studies.
Abstract: The cytochromes P450 (CYP) are a superfamily of hemoproteins which metabolize foreign chemicals as well as a number of endogenous compounds such as steroids. The human CYP2C subfamily appears to principally metabolize a number of clinically used drugs. Four members of this subfamily have been identified in humans: CYP2C8, CYP2C9, CYP2C18, and CYP2C19. CYP2C9 is important in the metabolism certain of therapeutically used drugs including the anticoagulant drug warfarin and a number of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. A number of allelic variants of CYP2C9 exist in humans, but the effects of these allelic variants on metabolism in vivo remain to be determined. A well-characterized genetic polymorphism occurs in the 2C subfamily which is associated with the metabolism of the anticonvulsant drug mephenytoin. In population studies, individuals can be segregated into extensive and poor metabolizers of mephenytoin. Poor metabolizers are unable to 4'-hydroxylate the S-enantiomer of mephenytoin. There are marked interracial variations in the frequency of the poor metabolizer phenotype which represents 3-5% of Caucasians, but 18-23% of Oriental populations. The mechanism of this polymorphism has been recently elucidated. The enzyme responsible for S-mephenytoin metabolism has been shown to be CYP2C19, and two defects in the CYP2C19 gene have been described in poor metabolizers. The first defect, CYP2C19m1, consists of the creation of an aberrant splice site in exon 5. This defect accounts for approximately 75-85% of Caucasian and Japanese poor metabolizers. A second defect, CYP2C19m2, has been found only in Oriental populations and accounts for the remaining 25% of poor metabolizers in Japanese populations. The availability of genotyping tests for this polymorphism will enhance the assessment of the role of this pathway in clinical studies.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The gene encoding cytosine deaminase (CD) has been expressed in the human colorectal carcinoma cell line WiDr and metabolism studies confirm that tumor cells expressing CD convert the very nontoxic prodrug 5-fluorocytosine (5FCyt) to 5- fluorouracil (5FUra) and 5FUra metabolites.
Abstract: The gene encoding cytosine deaminase (CD) has been expressed in the human colorectal carcinoma cell line WiDr. Metabolism studies confirm that tumor cells expressing CD convert the very nontoxic prodrug 5-fluorocytosine (5FCyt) to 5-fluorouracil (5FUra) and 5FUra metabolites. Tumor xenografts composed of CD-expressing cells can selectively generate tumor levels of > 400 microM 5FUra when the host mouse is dosed with nontoxic levels of 5FCyt. The selective metabolic conversion of 5FCyt to 5FUra in CD-expressing tumor cells results in the inhibition of thymidylate synthase and incorporation of 5FUra into RNA. 5FUra is also liberated into the surrounding environment when CD-expressing tumor cells are treated with 5FCyt. The liberated 5FUra is able to kill neighboring, non-CD-expressing tumor cells in vitro and in vivo. Most importantly, when only 2% of the tumor mass contains CD-expressing cells (98% non-CD-expressing cells), significant regressions in all tumors are observed when the host mouse is dosed with nontoxic levels of 5FCyt.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Between 1989 and 1993 the use of condoms in commercial sex in Thailand increased from 14 to 94%, according to surveys of prostitutes, and the number of cases of the five major sexually transmitted diseases declined by 79% in men.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1994-Neuron
TL;DR: Nine Ca(2+)-activated K+ channel isoforms from human brain are cloned and expressed, suggesting a broad functional role for these channels in the regulation of neuronal excitability.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The data suggest that d-methamphetamine, d-MDA and d-MDMA, but not d-FEN, produce damage to neural elements of mouse striatum and cortex, as well as tyrosine hydroxylase, DA and 5-HT systems.
Abstract: Dopaminergic (DA) and serotonergic (5-HT) projections to striatum and cortex have been implicated as the primary targets of substituted amphetamine (AMP)-induced neurotoxicity, largely on the basis of the propensity of these compounds to cause protracted decrements in DA and 5-HT rather than on the basis of AMP-induced alterations of indices linked to neural damage. Moreover, most studies of AMP-induced neurotoxicity, regardless of the endpoints assessed, have been conducted using a rat model; relatively little attention has been focused on the effects of these compounds in the mouse. Here, we evaluated the potential neurotoxic effects of d-methamphetamine (d-METH), d-methylenedioxyamphetamine (d-MDA), d-methylene-dioxymethamphetamine (d-MDMA) and d-fenfluramine (d-FEN) in the C57BL6/J mouse. Astrogliosis, assessed by quantification of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), was taken as the main index of AMP-induced neural damage. A silver degeneration stain also was used to obtain direct evidence of AMP-induced neuronal damage. Assays of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), DA and 5-HT were used to assess effects on DA and 5-HT systems. Mice received d-METH (10 mg/kg), d-MDA (20 mg/kg), d-MDMA (20 mg/kg) or d-FEN (25 mg/kg) every 2 hr for a total of four s.c. injections. d-METH, d-MDA and d-MDMA caused a large (300%) increase in striatal GFAP that resolved by 3 weeks and a 50 to 75% decrease in TH and DA that did not resolve. d-METH, d-MDA and d-MDMA also caused fiber and terminal degeneration in striatum as revealed by silver staining. d-FEN did not affect any parameters in striatum. d-METH, d-MDA and d-MDMA also increased GFAP in cortex, effects that were associated with small (10-25%) and transient decrements in cortical 5-HT. d-FEN caused prolonged (weeks) decrements (20%) in cortical 5-HT but did not affect cortical GFAP. The effects of d-METH, d-MDA and d-MDMA were stereoselective and were blocked by pretreatment with MK-801. Core temperature was slightly elevated by d-METH, d-MDA and d-MDMA but was dramatically lowered by d-FEN. The data suggest that d-METH, d-MDA and d-MDMA, but not d-FEN, produce damage to neural elements of mouse striatum and cortex.

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: The degree of inequality in the levels of well-being of its citizens tells us a great deal about a society and enables us to judge its social and economic system, identify those citizens with a claim on community compassion, to identify the sources of hardship, and to devise strategies for reducing levels of hardship.
Abstract: The degree of inequality in the levels of well-being of its citizens tells us a great deal about a society It enables us to judge its social and economic system, to identify those citizens with a claim on community compassion, to identify the sources of hardship, and to devise strategies for reducing levels of hardship The value of such information is undoubted But we confront a severe practical problem in first defining, and then measuring, what we mean by well-being It is surely multi-dimensional, and difficult to reduce to a scalar-valued index

Journal ArticleDOI
10 Feb 1994-Nature
TL;DR: The three-dimensional structure of the ligand-binding region of human E-selectin has been determined and reveals limited contact between the two domains and a coordination of Ca2+ not predicted from other C-type lectins.
Abstract: The three-dimensional structure of the ligand-binding region of human E-selectin has been determined at 2.0 A resolution. The structure reveals limited contact between the two domains and a coordination of Ca2+ not predicted from other C-type lectins. Structure/function analysis indicates a defined region and specific amino-acid side chains that may be involved in ligand binding. These features of the E-selectin/ligand interaction have important implications for understanding the recruitment of leukocytes to sites of inflammation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the role of CYP3A4 in the formation of carbamazepine-10,11-epoxide was investigated in human liver microsomes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although a consensus was not achieved, operationally it was agreed that 2000 cells per animal and four animals per group was a minimum requirement, in general, the available database suggests that the use of one gender is adequate for screening.
Abstract: The following summary represents a consensus of the working group except where noted. The items discussed are listed in the order in which they appear in the OECD guideline (474) for easy reference. Introduction, purpose, scope, relevance, application and limits of test. The analysis of immature erythrocytes in either bone marrow or peripheral blood is equally acceptable for those species in which the spleen does not remove micronucleated erythrocytes. In the mouse, mature erythrocytes are also an acceptable cell population for micronucleus analysis when the exposure duration exceeds 4 weeks. Test substances. Organic solvents such as DMSO are not recommended. Freshly prepared solutions or suspensions should be used unless stability data demonstrate the acceptability of storage. Vegetable oils are acceptable as solvents or vehicles. Suspension of the test chemicals is acceptable for p.o. or i.p. administration but not for i.v. injection. The use of any unusual solvent should be justified. Selection of species. Any commonly used laboratory rodent species is acceptable. There is no strain preference. Number and sex. The size of experiment (i.e., number of cells per animal, number of animals per group) should be finalized based on statistical considerations. Although a consensus was not achieved, operationally it was agreed that 2000 cells per animal and four animals per group was a minimum requirement. In general, the available database suggests that the use of one gender is adequate for screening. However, if there is evidence indicating a significant difference in the toxicity between male and female, then both sexes should be used. Treatment schedule. No unique treatment schedule can be recommended. Results from extended dose regimens are acceptable as long as positive. For negative studies, toxicity should be demonstrated or the limit dose should be used, and dosing continued until sampling. Dose levels. At least three dose levels separated by a factor between 2 and square root of 10 should be used. The highest dose tested should be the maximum tolerated dose based on mortality, bone marrow cell toxicity, or clinical symptoms of toxicity. The limit dose is 2 g/kg/day for treatment periods of 14 days or less and 1 g/kg/day for treatment periods greater than 14 days. A single dose level (the limit dose) is acceptable if there is no evidence of toxicity. Controls. Concurrent solvent (vehicle) controls should be included at all sampling times. A pretreatment sample, however, may also be acceptable only in the short treatment period peripheral blood studies. A concurrent positive control group should be included for each experiment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

Patent
10 Mar 1994
TL;DR: In this article, the dominant colors of an image are determined using groups of pixels where the average color is used to select an appropriate dominant color for display, and the size of the thumbnail displayed and the area set for displaying the thumbnail can be changed to allow visual review of either a large number of thumbnails or a smaller but larger size set of thumbnail images.
Abstract: A system which creates, stores, retrieves and displays thumbnail images. The dominant colors of the image are displayed in the thumbnail images. The dominant colors in an image are determined using groups of pixels where the average color is used to select an appropriate dominant color for display. The size of the thumbnails displayed and the area set for displaying the thumbnails can be changed to allow visual review of either a large number of thumbnails or a smaller but larger size set of thumbnails. Thumbnails, and other image files and other related text files and non-related files can be indexed and searched using keywords by using keyword views into the stored files to indicate a match when the views designate the same file. The system allows a search to be based on a partial match of keywords. Searching can be performed using super-keywords, which are combinations of keywords and other file and data characteristics. Super-keywords can be combined with other super-keyword or keywords for searching purposes. To facilitate multi-media storage and searching and integration of off-line media into the system, the system includes a master directory having a full directory containing entries of each media as a branch of the master directory tree. The system also includes the utilities necessary to create, access, retrieve and update local and network accessed remote files on any type of media.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 1994-Immunity
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the majority of neutrophil migration in both models requires an endothelial selectin but that E-selectin and P- selectin are functionally redundant, which has important implications in the use of selectin antagonists in the treatment of inflammatory disease.

Journal Article
TL;DR: NF-kappa B regulates a nonconsensus CRE site in addition to the consensus binding site at -296/-286 bp and suggest that NF- kappa B may play multiple roles in the induction of IL-1 beta transcription.
Abstract: In these studies, we show that NF-kappa B induces transcription from the human pro-IL-1 beta (IL-1 beta) gene. A recombinant plasmid pIL-1(-4000)-CAT, containing 4 kb of the IL-1 beta gene upstream regulatory sequence was transactivated by the p65 subunit of NF-kappa B or by treatment of the cells with a combination of NF-kappa B inducers including LPS, PMA, and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (L+P+C) in U937 cells. Coexpression of p65 with L+P+C treatment led to a synergistic response, whereas coexpression of the I kappa B alpha/MAD-3 protein, in place of p65, blocked L+P+C induction. A series of 5' deletion mutants of the IL-1 beta promoter were used to define two p65 response regions: region I located between -2800 to -2720 bp and region II located between -512 and -133 bp. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays confirmed that NF-kappa B-like proteins could bind to two consensus binding sites in region II. A site-specific mutation in only one of these NF-kappa B sites (-296/-286 bp) caused a specific loss of induction by p65 or L+P+C. A cyclic AMP response element (CRE) site (-2761/-2753 bp) in region I has been shown previously to be critical for L+P+C induction. Mutation of the CRE in an enhancerless test plasmid containing two copies of region I blocked transactivation by p65. Likewise, coexpression of I kappa B alpha inhibited CRE-dependent L+P+C induction of the wild-type counterpart. These data show that NF-kappa B regulates a nonconsensus CRE site in addition to the consensus binding site at -296/-286 bp and suggest that NF-kappa B may play multiple roles in the induction of IL-1 beta transcription.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate no clear quantitative or qualitative correlation between inhibition of DNA polymerases, particularly mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma, and the inhibition of mitochondrial DNA synthesis in Molt-4 cell culture, and indicate that inhibition of isolated DNA polymerasing may not be predictive of in vitro or in vivo toxicity.
Abstract: Inhibition constants were determined for 16 nucleoside analog triphosphates against human DNA polymerases alpha, beta, gamma, and epsilon, and 7 nucleoside analogs were examined as inhibitors of mitochondrial DNA synthesis in human Molt-4 cells in culture. The results demonstrate no clear quantitative or qualitative correlation between inhibition of DNA polymerases, particularly mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma, and the inhibition of mitochondrial DNA synthesis in Molt-4 cell culture. Furthermore, the data indicate that inhibition of isolated DNA polymerases may not be predictive of in vitro or in vivo toxicity. Finally, it is not clear whether inhibition of mitochondrial DNA synthesis will be an accurate predictor of the potential in vivo toxicity of antiviral nucleoside analogs.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared cell-free extracts from RER+ endometrial and colorectal cancer cell lines to RER- cell lines, and found that the defect in these lines likely involves pre-incision events or the excision step, but not the incision, polymerization, or ligation steps.

Journal Article
TL;DR: Results suggest that alterations in topoisomerase I expression in humans are tumor type specific and that the increase inTopoisomerases I levels results from either increased transcription of the topoisomersase I gene or increased mRNA stability.
Abstract: Topoisomerase I has been identified as an intracellular target of camptothecin, a plant alkaloid with anticancer activity. Various lines of evidence suggest that the sensitivity of cells to this drug is directly related to the topoisomerase I content. In humans, the levels of topoisomerase I have been shown to be elevated in colorectal tumors, compared to normal colon mucosa. The aim of our study was to determine whether (a) topoisomerase I levels are elevated in other solid tumors, (b) the elevated enzyme is catalytically active in these tumors, and (c) the increase in topoisomerase I levels in colorectal tumors is a result of increased transcription or translation. Topoisomerase I levels were quantitated in crude extracts from colorectal, prostate, and kidney tumors and their matched normal counterparts by Western blotting and by direct determination of catalytic activity, and mRNA levels were determined by Northern blotting. By Western blotting, colorectal tumors showed 5-35-fold increases in topoisomerase I levels, compared to their normal colon mucosa. In the case of prostate tumors, the increase was 2-10-fold, compared with benign hyperplastic prostate tissue from the same patients. However, no difference was observed in topoisomerase I levels in kidney tumors, compared to their normal counterparts. The catalytic activity of topoisomerase I was determined by a quantitative 32P-transfer assay in crude homogenates, without isolating nuclei. Colorectal and prostate tumors exhibited 11-40- and 4-26-fold increases, respectively, in catalytic activity. However, kidney tumors did not show any alteration in catalytic activity, compared to their normal matched samples. Thus, for all three tumor types there was a good correlation between enzyme levels and catalytic activity. Finally, colorectal tumors were analyzed for steady state mRNA levels. A 2-33-fold increase in mRNA levels was found in colorectal tumors, compared to normal colon mucosa. These results suggest that alterations in topoisomerase I expression in humans are tumor type specific and that the increase in topoisomerase I levels results from either increased transcription of the topoisomerase I gene or increased mRNA stability.

Journal ArticleDOI
21 Jan 1994-Science
TL;DR: The detailed description of protein-inhibitor interactions present in the structure will aid in the design of compounds that selectively inhibit individual members of the MMP family.
Abstract: Collagenase is a zinc-dependent endoproteinase and is a member of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family of enzymes. The MMPs participate in connective tissue remodeling events and aberrant regulation has been associated with several pathologies. The 2.4 angstrom resolution structure of the inhibited enzyme revealed that, in addition to the catalytic zinc, there is a second zinc ion and a calcium ion which play a major role in stabilizing the tertiary structure of collagenase. Despite scant sequence homology, collagenase shares structural homology with two other endoproteinases, bacterial thermolysin and crayfish astacin. The detailed description of protein-inhibitor interactions present in the structure will aid in the design of compounds that selectively inhibit individual members of the MMP family. Such inhibitors will be useful in examining the function of MMPs in pathological processes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Increased understanding of the mechanism of dioxin's effects as well as elucidation of exposure-dose relationships is leading to the development of a biologically based dose-response model in the ongoing process of incorporating the best science into the risk assessment of TCDD and related compounds.
Abstract: Risk characterization involves hazard identification, determination of dose-response relationships, and exposure assessment. Improvement of the risk assessment process requires inclusion of the best available science. Recent findings in the area of dioxin toxicity have led to a major effort to reassess its risk. 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), commonly referred to as "dioxin," is the most toxic member of a class of related chemicals including the polyhalogenated dibenzo-p-dioxins, dibenzofurans, biphenyls, naphthalenes, azo- and azoxy-benzenes, whose toxicities can be expressed as fractional equivalencies of TCDD. These chemicals exert their effects through interaction with a specific intracellular protein, the Ah receptor. While binding to the receptor is necessary, it is not sufficient to bring about a chain of events leading to various responses including enzyme induction, immunotoxicity, reproductive and endocrine effects, developmental toxicity, chloracne, tumor promotion, etc. Some of these responses appear to be linear at low doses. Immunotoxicity and effects on the reproductive system appear to be among the most sensitive responses. The Ah receptor functions as a transcriptional enhancer, interacting with a number of other regulatory proteins (heat shock proteins, kinases, translocases, DNA binding species). Interaction with specific base sequences in the DNA appear to be modulated by the presence of other growth factors, hormones and their receptors as well as other regulatory proteins. Thus, dioxin appears to function as a hormone, initiating a cascade of events that is dependent upon the environment of each cell and tissue. While Ah receptor variants exist, all vertebrates examined have demonstrated such a protein with similar numbers of receptors and binding affinity for TCDD. Most species respond similarly to dioxin and related compounds. While a given species may be an outlier for a given response, it will behave like other animals for other responses. For both in vivo and in vitro end points where animal and human data exist, such as enzyme induction, chloracne, immunotoxicity, developmental toxicity, and cancer, the sensitivity of humans appears similar to that of experimental animals. Current levels of environmental exposure to this class of chemicals may be resulting in subtle responses in populations at special risk such as subsistence fisherman and the developing infant, as well as in the general population. Increased understanding of the mechanism of dioxin's effects as well as elucidation of exposure-dose relationships is leading to the development of a biologically based dose-response model in the ongoing process of incorporating the best science into the risk assessment of TCDD and related compounds.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results demonstrate that potent and selective inhibition of human NOS isozymes is achievable and suggest that these alkyl substitutions fit into a small hydrophobic pocket.