The Infona portal uses cookies, i.e. strings of text saved by a browser on the user's device. The portal can access those files and use them to remember the user's data, such as their chosen settings (screen view, interface language, etc.), or their login data. By using the Infona portal the user accepts automatic saving and using this information for portal operation purposes. More information on the subject can be found in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By closing this window the user confirms that they have read the information on cookie usage, and they accept the privacy policy and the way cookies are used by the portal. You can change the cookie settings in your browser.
Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) is the hormone of pregnancy and forms the basis of all pregnancy tests as well as diagnostic assays for a variety of pathological states including certain types of cancers and some diseases of pregnancy and genetic abnormalities. In recent years, the discovery of the diagnostic utility of measurement of the free subunits and fragments of the hormone, especially in...
The gonadotropin hormone family is distinguished by its heterodimeric structure in which the members share a common α subunit and a hormone-specific β subunit. Since assembly of the heterodimer is often the rate-limiting step in production of functional hormone, single-chain hormones have been engineered by genetically linking the two subunits. The single-chain hormone can in turn be fused to its...
Complete carbohydrate composition analysis of glycoprotein hormones, their subunits, and oligosaccharides isolated from individual glycosylation sites can be accomplished using high-pH anion-exchange chromatography combined with pulsed amperometric detection. Neutral and amino sugars are analyzed from the same hydrolyzate by isocratic chromatography on a Dionex CarboPAC PA1 column in 16 mM NaOH. Sialic...
As a glycoprotein hormone, human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) is not a single molecular entity. This term comprises not only the bioactive heterodimer hCG but also an array of molecular protein backbone and glycosylation variants, such as its free β (hCGβ) and α (hCGα) subunits and clipped, cleaved, terminally differently sialylated, and overglycosylated forms. This heterogeneity places great demands...
Bioassays constitute a unique approach to determine the functional aspects of gonadotropins. Indeed, these highly complex glycoprotein hormones, including pituitary lutropin (LH) and follitropin (FSH), are heterogeneous in terms of both peptidic and carbohydrate moieties, and, as a consequence, the bioactivity of the different molecular forms often does not match their immunoreactivity. In this article,...
This article provides the reader with an overview of methodological strategies to investigate structure–function relationships of human thyroid-stimulating hormone (hTSH). Various aspects of hTSH production, purification, and characterization described here in more detail are not only relevant to studies on other members of the glycoprotein hormone family, but also applicable to studies of other glycosylated...
The luteinizing, follicle-stimulating, and thyroid-stimulating hormone receptors belong to the huge family of G-protein-coupled receptors. Identification of either activating or inactivating mutations of these receptors has led to a fundamental improvement in our understanding of glycoprotein hormone/receptor interaction. Furthermore, clinical phenotypes such as precocious puberty, follicle-stimulating...
Plasminogen-deficient mice hold great promise as tools for analyzing the contribution of plasminogen activators produced by infectious agents to pathogenesis. However, the pathology caused by congenital plasminogen deficiency complicates the interpretation of infection experiments conducted with these animals. This pathology, the most prominent features of which are poor weight gain, wasting after...
A series of methods for analyzing the interaction of group A streptococci with the human plasminogen system are described. Examples of group A streptococcal isolates capable of assembling surface plasminogen activator activity when grown in human plasma are presented and the key requirements for this process are evaluated. The stabilities of cell-associated plasmin and plasminogen activator complexes...
Methods to assess in vitro the role of plasminogen activation in enterobacterial degradation of extracellular matrices and their protein components as well as in penetration through basement membrane are described. Development of these methods was initiated after the findings that enterobacterial surface structures (fimbriae and the Pla surface protease) function in plasminogen activation as well...
Recent research in various areas has appreciably expanded our knowledge of streptokinase, a plasminogen activator produced by all human group A (GAS), group C (GCS), and group G (GGS) streptococci. Several molecular genetic approaches are described here to study the expression of the streptokinase gene, skn. Southern hybridization analysis demonstrated homology of synteny of ska, skc, and skg in the...
Cleavage of the hemagglutinin (HA) molecule by proteases is a prerequisite for the infectivity of influenza A viruses. Plasminogen binds to the viral glycoprotein neuraminidase (NA), and NA-bound plasminogen is activated to plasmin, which cleaves the HA of influenza A/WSN/33 (WSN) (H1N1) virus. Here we present assays for detecting functional plasminogen binding to the influenza virus NA.
Group A streptococci are common human pathogens that cause a variety of infections. They express M proteins which are important cell wall-bound type-specific virulence factors. We have found that a set of strains, associated primarily with skin infections, express M proteins that bind plasminogen and plasmin with high affinity. The binding is mediated by a 13-amino-acid internal repeated sequence...
Immunoglobulin G from a patient convalescing from acute poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis (APSGN) bound specific antigenic sites in early APSGN glomeruli. A streptococcal cytoplasmic antigen (preabsorbing antigen, PA-Ag), could selectively preabsorb fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled IgG and prevented glomerular staining. The antigen was purified and identified as an Mr ∼ 43,000 protein...
Although the roles of plasminogen and plasmin in mediating blood clot dissolution are well known, the availability of mice deficient for components of the fibrinolytic system has allowed direct approaches to be made toward elucidating the role of these proteins in other diverse physiological and pathophysiological processes. A number of these studies have identified plasminogen as playing an important...
The spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, the etiologic agent of Lyme disease, is transmitted to the host by a feeding Ixodid tick. The spirochete subsequently disseminates through the skin, enters the bloodstream, and becomes systemic. A potential mechanism for this invasiveness was identified with the discovery that B. burgdorferi can bind components of the plasminogen activation system (PAS). The methodology...
Helicobacter pylori is the causative agent of chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer, and gastric malignancies. A number of virulence factors have been described including several adhesins, a cytotoxin, neutrophil-activating protein, and expression of binding of extracellular matrix proteins, like collagen type IV, laminin, and vitronectin. H. pylori strains commonly express binding of soluble plasminogen...
Development of any new assay proceeds in several phases. When an assay is intended for regular use to support regulatory decision-making, there are significant additional stages in the development process beyond the initial description of the method. In this paper we discuss some of the studies related to the development of a flow cytometric method for counting micronuclei in rodent erythrocytes....
Set the date range to filter the displayed results. You can set a starting date, ending date or both. You can enter the dates manually or choose them from the calendar.