Publications by Year: 1986

1986

Kahn, and Marsh. (1986) 1986. “Monoclonal antibodies to the major Lolium perenne (rye grass) pollen allergen Lol p I (Rye I)”. Mol Immunol 23 (12): 1281-8.
Thirteen monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) were produced against Lol p I (Rye I), the major Lolium perenne (rye grass) pollen allergen. Spleen cells from A/J and SJL mice immunized with highly purified Lol p I (Lol I) were allowed to fuse with cells from the non-secreting Sp2/0-Ag14 myeloma cell line. Each MAb was analyzed for antigenic specificity by radioimmunoassay (RIA) using 125I-Lol I. The epitope specificities of seven of the MAbs were examined by competitive binding against a labelled standard MAb for the Lol I antigen (Ag). The dissociation constant, Kd, of one MAb (No. 3.2) that was studied most extensively was determined by double Ab RIA to be 3.5 X 10(-6) L/M. This MAb recognized the related 27,000-30,000 Group I glycoproteins found in the pollens of nine other species of grass pollens tested, including weak binding to Bermuda grass Group I (Cyn d I), which by conventional analysis using polyclonal anti-Lol I serum shows no detectable binding. Monoclonal antibody No. 3.2 was coupled covalently to Sepharose 4B and used to prepare highly purified Lol I from a partially purified rye pollen extract. Finally, an RIA was developed which permitted the analysis of the Group I components in rye grass and nine other grass pollen species. The latter assay is likely to prove useful in the standardization of grass pollen extracts according to their Group I contents.
Okamoto, White, Maron, and Kahn. (1986) 1986. “Autophosphorylation and kinase activity of insulin receptor in diabetic rats”. Am J Physiol 251 (5 Pt 1): E542-50. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.1986.251.5.E542.
Insulin resistance is observed in insulin-deficient diabetic states in spite of an increase in insulin binding to its target cells. To characterize this type of insulin resistance, autophosphorylation and kinase activity of the insulin receptor on liver was studied with streptozotocin (STZ)-induced and BB diabetic rats. Insulin binding capacity was increased in proportion to the severity of the diabetic state in the STZ rat. In the diabetic BB rat, the insulin binding capacity was also increased, and this was partially normalized by insulin treatment. By contrast, insulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of the beta-subunit of the insulin receptor was decreased in proportion to the severity of the diabetic state in the STZ rat. Peptide mapping by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography revealed a decrease in labeling at all sites of autophosphorylation. Kinase activity of the insulin receptor to exogenous substrates was also decreased in proportion to the diabetic state. In the BB rat, autophosphorylation and kinase activity of the insulin receptor were both decreased in the diabetic state and partially normalized by insulin treatment. In addition to the beta-subunit of insulin receptor, a 170 kdalton phosphotyrosine-containing protein was also identified in the glycoprotein fraction of liver. Although the phosphorylation of this protein was not insulin dependent, it was decreased markedly in the diabetic state. This protein is immunologically distinct from the insulin receptor, but is rich in phosphotyrosine. Based on its size and phosphotyrosine content, this protein may be the epidermal growth factor receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Kaye, Adri, Soeldner, Rabinowe, Kaldany, Kahn, Bistrian, Srikanta, Ganda, and Eisenbarth. 1986. “Acquired defect in interleukin-2 production in patients with type I diabetes mellitus”. N Engl J Med 315 (15): 920-4. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJM198610093151502.
Deficient production of interleukin-2 has been reported in Type I diabetes, but its cause has not been elucidated. We therefore measured interleukin-2 production in 27 patients with Type I diabetes, 20 patients with Type II diabetes (6 requiring insulin), 5 monozygotic twin pairs discordant for Type I diabetes, and 10 nondiabetic persons with islet-cell antibodies. Interleukin-2 production was decreased in patients with Type I diabetes as compared with controls (35.8 +/- 2.5 vs. 61.6 +/- 4.6 percent, P less than 0.001). Interleukin-2 production did not differ between patients with Type II diabetes and controls, regardless of whether the patients used insulin. Twins with Type I diabetes had decreased interleukin-2 production as compared with normal controls (33.2 +/- 5.4 vs. 61.6 +/- 4.6 percent, P less than 0.001) and with their nondiabetic twins (33.2 +/- 5.4 vs. 54.5 +/- 3.4 percent, P less than 0.005). Interleukin-2 production in nondiabetic twins and in nondiabetic persons with islet-cell antibodies was normal. There was no correlation between glycosylated hemoglobin levels and interleukin-2 production in any diabetic group. We conclude that patients with Type I diabetes have an acquired defect in interleukin-2 production, whereas patients with Type II diabetes do not, and that this defect is not correlated with an ongoing autoimmune process, with hyperglycemia, or with insulin administration or oral hypoglycemic therapy. Thus, the defect appears to be related to marked beta-cell destruction, although not to the metabolic consequences thereof or the responsible autoimmune process.
Maratos-Flier, Goodman, Murray, and Kahn. (1986) 1986. “Ammonium inhibits processing and cytotoxicity of reovirus, a nonenveloped virus”. J Clin Invest 78 (4): 1003-7. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI112653.
Successful viral infection involves a series of interactions between the virus and the host cell. The outcome of viral infection is, in fact, dependent on intact cellular function; it is required for viral binding, internalization, and uncoating. To determine the potential importance of lysosomal processing on the outcome of infection with a nonenveloped virus, we have studied the effects of NH4Cl on the course of reovirus infection on a beta-cell tumor in culture. Addition of 10 mM NH4C1 to the medium inhibited viral growth by greater than 80% and reduced toxic effects of the virus on cell viability, protein, and DNA synthesis by 30-45%. In addition, synthesis of viral proteins was markedly decreased. Uptake of virus prelabeled with [35S]methionine was not affected by the ammonium; however, cleavage of mu1C, an outer capsid protein of the virus whose cleavage appears to be required for viral replication, was delayed. These results suggest that intracellular processing of reovirus is dependent on a lysosomal pathway and that disruption of this pathway can alter the course of viral infection.
Krolewski, Warram, Rand, Christlieb, Busick, and Kahn. 1986. “Risk of proliferative diabetic retinopathy in juvenile-onset type I diabetes: a 40-yr follow-up study”. Diabetes Care 9 (5): 443-52.
The development of proliferative diabetic retinopathy was studied in three cohorts consisting of 292 patients with recent juvenile-onset, type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes who were followed 20-40 yr beginning in 1939, 1949, and 1959. The risk of this severe eye complication was almost nonexistent during the first 10 yr of diabetes, rose abruptly to its maximum level (approximately 30/100 person-years), and remained at that level for the next 25 yr. This pattern did not vary with sex, age at onset of diabetes, or level of glycemic control during the first 5 yr of diabetes. However, the risk of proliferative retinopathy was strongly related to the level of glycemic control during the several years preceding onset of this complication. This was a dose-dependent relationship, with patients in the highest quartile of the distribution of the index of frequency of hyperglycemia having a 10-fold higher risk than individuals in the lowest quartile. A virtually identical pattern was observed in patients who developed diabetes in 1959 as was observed in those who developed diabetes in 1949 or 1939. In contrast, diabetic nephropathy as evidenced by persistent proteinuria showed a lower incidence in the 1959 than in the 1939 cohort. In conclusion, these incidence data do not support the notion that the risk of proliferative retinopathy is mainly a function of duration of diabetes. Instead, the pattern of occurrence of this severe eye complication in type I diabetes suggests that the process leading to the development of proliferative retinopathy consists of two or more stages and that progression through each stage may be governed by different factors.
Verdin, Maratos-Flier, Carpentier, and Kahn. (1986) 1986. “Persistent infection with a nontransforming RNA virus leads to impaired growth factor receptors and response”. J Cell Physiol 128 (3): 457-65. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1041280315.
The potential role of viral persistence with nontransforming viruses on cellular growth and cellular function has received little attention. We found that when infected with type 3 reovirus (five plaque-forming units (PFU/cell), balb/C 3T3 cells (a mouse embryo fibroblast cell line) undergo a limited lytic phase. The surviving cells, about 90% of the original cells, appear morphologically normal by light microscopy and exhibit normal growth patterns in serum-supplemented medium but are persistently infected by electron microscopy. These persistently infected cells shed infectious virus in the culture medium (1.6-60 X 10(6) PFU per 10(6) cells per 24 h). In comparison to control uninfected 3T3 cells, the persistently infected cells exhibit a 70-90% decrease in receptor number for epidermal growth factor (EGF). This occurs without production of any EGF-like material and is associated with a parallel decrease in EGF-stimulated DNA synthesis. By contrast, insulin receptors are increased in number three-fold and insulin and serum stimulated DNA synthesis are comparable to control uninfected cells. These results suggest that persistent infection with a nontransforming virus may lead to major alteration in control of cell growth by specific growth factors.
Podskalny, and Kahn. (1986) 1986. “Insulin activation of glycogen synthase in cultured human fibroblasts is not mediated solely via the insulin receptor”. Horm Metab Res 18 (5): 335-40. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-2007-1012309.
Insulin binds to its specific cell surface receptor in cultured human fibroblasts and also stimulates the conversion of glycogen synthase from the glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) dependent to the G-6-P independent form. Although these two processes are tightly coupled in most target tissues for insulin action, in the fibroblast a variety of findings question the relationship of these two events to one another. In human fibroblasts the amount of insulin required to displace half of the 125I-insulin bound to the insulin receptor is 4 ng/ml (6.6 X 10(-10)M), but the activation of glycogen synthase is not maximal until 1-10 micrograms/ml with an ED50 of 30 ng/ml insulin. Antibodies directed against the insulin receptor, which activate glycogen synthase in both fat and muscle, do not stimulate the activation of glycogen synthase in the fibroblast. Fab fragments from anti-insulin receptor antibody compete for insulin binding, but do not inhibit the insulin-stimulated rise in independent activity. The insulin-like growth factor, MSA, which is 1% as potent as insulin in stimulating glucose oxidation in rat fat cells and in inhibiting 125I-insulin binding to human fibroblasts, is 25% as potent as insulin in stimulating glycogen synthase. Proinsulin is 2-10% as potent as insulin, but behaves as a "partial agonist" of insulin action in the fibroblast, i.e. proinsulin is able to elicit only 60% of the maximal response of insulin in the glycogen synthase assay, even at high concentrations. Finally, cell lines from patients with clearly defective insulin receptors exhibit normal insulin dose response curves for the activation of glycogen synthase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Catanese, Grigorescu, King, and Kahn. (1986) 1986. “The human erythrocyte insulin-like growth factor I receptor: characterization and demonstration of ligand-stimulated autophosphorylation”. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 62 (4): 692-9. https://doi.org/10.1210/jcem-62-4-692.
To characterize the insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) receptor on human erythrocytes, cells were purified from peripheral blood by Ficoll-Hypaque gradient centrifugation and incubated with [125I]IGF-I. Specific binding was maximal at pH 8.0 after 24 h at 4 C and increased linearly with cell number to 3.9 +/- 0.2% (+/- SEM) for 3.0 X 10(9) cells/ml. The Scatchard plot of the binding data was linear, with 7 fmol [125I]IGF-I bound/10(9) cells and an affinity constant (K) of 1.8 X 10(9) M-1. Unlabeled IGF-I inhibited tracer binding half-maximally at 6 ng/ml. Multiplication-stimulating activity (or rat IGF-II) was 40% as potent (ED50, 15 ng/ml), whereas insulin and proinsulin were 30- to 500-fold less potent. A monoclonal antibody to the IGF-I receptor (alpha IR-3) inhibited IGF-I binding by 50% at a 1:1000 dilution and by 80% at a 1:250 dilution. Insulin binding was unaffected by the same dilutions. IGF-I receptor phosphorylation was studied in erythrocyte ghosts prepared by hypotonic lysis and solubilized in 1% Triton. The extract was preincubated with and without 100 ng/ml IGF-I or porcine insulin and incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of Mn2+, and the receptor was identified by immunoprecipitation with alpha IR-3 antibody and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. IGF-I stimulated 4-fold the incorporation of 32P into a protein of 95,000 mol wt, which was immunoprecipitated by alpha IR-3; insulin produced a 2-fold stimulation of this protein. This protein corresponds to the beta-subunit of the IGF-I receptor. These data demonstrate that human erythrocytes have specific receptors for IGF-I, and that this IGF-I receptor, like the insulin receptor, undergoes ligand-stimulated autophosphorylation. Thus, analysis of erythrocyte IGF-I binding and receptor phosphorylation may be useful tools for the study of patients with a variety of growth disorders.