Tissue ACE phenotyping in lung cancer
Authors:
Sergei M. Danilov aff001; Roman Metzger aff004; Eckhard Klieser aff005; Karl Sotlar aff005; Ilya N. Trakht aff006; Joe G. N. Garcia aff002
Authors place of work:
Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep and Allergy, University of Illinois at Chicago, IL, United States of America
aff001; Department of Medicine, University of Arizona Health Sciences, Tucson, AZ, United States of America
aff002; Medical Center, Moscow University, Moscow, Russia
aff003; Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Surgery, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria
aff004; Institute of Pathology, Paracelsus Medical University, University Hospital Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria
aff005; Department of Medicine, Columbia University, New York, NY, United States of America
aff006
Published in the journal:
PLoS ONE 14(12)
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226553
Summary
Background
Pulmonary vascular endothelium is the main metabolic site for Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme (ACE)-mediated degradation of several biologically-active peptides (angiotensin I, bradykinin, hemo-regulatory peptide Ac-SDKP). Primary lung cancer growth and lung cancer metastases decrease lung vascularity reflected by dramatic decreases in both lung and serum ACE activity. We performed precise ACE phenotyping in tissues from subjects with lung cancer.
Methodology
ACE phenotyping included: 1) ACE immunohistochemistry with specific and well-characterized monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to ACE; 2) ACE activity measurement with two ACE substrates (HHL, ZPHL); 3) calculation of ACE substrates hydrolysis ratio (ZPHL/HHL ratio); 4) the pattern of mAbs binding to 17 different ACE epitopes to detect changes in ACE conformation induced by tumor growth (conformational ACE fingerprint).
Results
ACE immunostaining was dramatically decreased in lung cancer tissues confirmed by a 3-fold decrease in ACE activity. The conformational fingerprint of ACE from tumor lung tissues differed from normal lung (6/17 mAbs) and reflected primarily higher ACE sialylation. The increase in ZPHL/HHL ratio in lung cancer tissues was consistent with greater conformational changes of ACE. Limited analysis of the conformational ACE fingerprint in normal lung tissue and lung cancer tissue form the same patient suggested a remote effect of tumor tissue on ACE conformation and/or on “field cancerization” in a morphologically-normal lung tissues.
Conclusions/Significance
Local conformation of ACE is significantly altered in tumor lung tissues and may be detected by conformational fingerprinting of human ACE.
Keywords:
Blood – Lung and intrathoracic tumors – Adenocarcinomas – Adenocarcinoma of the lung – Non-small cell lung cancer – Secondary lung tumors – Squamous cell lung carcinoma – Small cell lung cancer
Introduction
Pulmonary vascular endothelium is the main site of metabolism of vasoactive peptides -angiotensin I and bradykinin [1] and likely hemoregulatory peptide Ac-SDKP [2] by Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme (ACE) as 100% of lung capillaries express ACE whereas only 5–15% of systemic capillaries express ACE [3–4]. Primary lung cancer growth and lung cancer metastases decrease lung vascularity reflected by dramatic decreases in both lung and serum ACE activity. [5–6] and preoperative serum ACE activity was suggested as a useful prognostic indicator in lung cancer [7] or as a tool for monitoring serum ACE levels–for the management of patients with lung malignancies [8–10].
ACE and ACE inhibitors (ACEI) have received considerable attention in oncology as preclinical and clinical data suggested that ACEI may potentiate the effect of certain systemic antitumor therapies [11–12]. The use of ACE inhibitors was associated with better outcomes in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy [13–14] or anti-VEGF therapy [12]. Progress in ACE biology over the last decade prompted us to re-evaluate the status of ACE (ACE phenotype) in lung cancer.
Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE, CD143, EC 3.4.15.1), a Zn2+ carboxydipeptidase with two catalytic centers [15], is a key regulator of blood pressure which also participates in the development of vascular pathology and remodeling [16–17]. The somatic isoform of ACE (sACE) is highly expressed as a type I membrane glycoprotein in endothelial [4, 18–19], epithelial and neuroepithelial cells [20–21], as well as immune cells–macrophages and dendritic cells [22–23]. ACE has been designated as a CD marker, namely CD143 [3, 24]. Apart from membrane-bound ACE, blood and other biological fluids contain a variable amount of soluble ACE that lacks the transmembrane domain [25]. ACE enters the circulating pool via proteolytic shedding from the endothelial cell surface by an unidentified ACE secretase [26]. In healthy individuals, the concentration of ACE in blood is stable [27], but is significantly increased in subjects with either sarcoidosis or Gaucher disease (3 to 5-fold increase in blood) serving as a potential clinical biomarker of disease severity [28–29].
Our studies with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to numerous conformational epitopes on human ACE revealed that the pattern of mAb binding to ACE is a very sensitive marker of the local conformation in ACE. The changes of the mAb binding pattern i.e. the “conformational fingerprint of ACE”, is attributed to partial denaturation of ACE, chemical modification, inhibitor binding, mutations, and differences in glycosylation/deglycosylation [30–33]. Moreover, the “conformational fingerprint of ACE” can be cell- and/or tissue specific as shown in macrophages/dendritic cells [30], epithelial cells [32] and from cardiac-derived endothelial cells [34] when compared lung endothelial cell ACE. We also demonstrated the presence of conformationally-altered ACE in blood of patients with sarcoidosis [30], uremia [31] or Gaucher disease [35].
Here we report the complete phenotyping of ACE from lung cancer tissue. The data show that ACE expression as well as local conformation of ACE is altered by tumor formation. We suggest that these conformational changes in ACE may be related to 1) greater levels of sialylation in the lung tumor tissue or, alternatively, 2) expression of proteins in tumor tissue that may be novel ACE effectors–like ACE effector found in normal spleen tissue [35]. Moreover, conformational fingerprinting of ACE was sufficiently sensitive to detect conformational changes of ACE in matching morphologically normal lung tissue in specific patients, which points towards a possibility of a bystander effect of tumor on surrounding lung tissue or a “field cancerization” effect.
Materials and methods
Study participants
This pilot study was conducted according to the principles of the Helsinki Declaration and was approved by the Institutional Review Boards of Columbia University Medical Center (New York), Paracelsus Medical University (Salzburg, Austria) and the University of Illinois at Chicago. All tissue procurement procedures were carried out in accordance with institutional guidelines. After obtaining a written informed consent from the patients or next of kin, surgical specimens of lung carcinomas and adjacent tumor-free lung parenchyma, were collected for measurements of enzymatic activity and immunochemical and immunohistochemical characterization. Patient selection for ACE enzymatic activity and immunochemical characterization is outlined in Table 1 with 11 of 12 patients diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), 1 patient with small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Patients were evaluated at the time of diagnosis, the stage of disease was as following: one presented with stage I disease (8.3%), two with stage II (16.6%), 6 with stage III (50%) and 2 with stage IV (16.6%). Histologically, we registered 8 adenocarcinomas (ADC) (66.7%), and 3 squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) - 25.0% and one—large cells carcinoma (8.3%).
Immunohistochemistry
Processed formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues of archival lung cancer specimens (n = 12) were cut to 3μm sections, mounted on adhesive glass slides (TOMO adhesive glass slides, Matsunami, Osaka, Japan), and dried at 60°C for one hour. Deparaffinization, antigen retrieval at pH 9, immunostaining, counter staining, dehydration and cover slip application as well as pre-treatment were conducted using standard immuno-histochemistry (IHC) protocols [36] and performed on a Ventana Benchmark Ultra instrument (Ventana Medical Systems, Tucson, AZ, USA) using primary mouse monoclonal antibodies. Sections were incubated with anti-CD-143 (clone CG2, catalog number: T-1129; Biomedicals AG, Augst, Switzerland), anti-CD68 (clone: KP-1, catalog number: 790–2931; Ventana Medical Systems, Tucson, AZ, USA; trademark of Hoffmann-La Roche AG, Basel, Switzerland) and anti-AE1/3 (clone: AE1/AE3, catalog number: M3515; Dako, Vienna, Austria). Negative controls were performed by omitting primary antibodies from the buffer during first incubation. The ultraView Universal DAB Detection Kit utilizing a polymer complex with a linked secondary antibody (catalog number 760–500; Ventana Medical Systems, Tucson, AZ, USA) was used for visualization of staining.
ACE activity assay
ACE activity in lung tissue homogenates was measured using a fluorimetric assay with two ACE substrates, 2 mM Z-Phe-His-Leu or 5 mM Hip-His-Leu at pH 8.3 [37]. Briefly, 20–40 μl aliquots of samples were added to 200 μl of ACE substrate and incubated for the appropriate time at 37ºC. His-Leu product was quantified based on its complex forming with o-phtaldialdehyde.
Complementing ACE activity measurement, we calculated the ratio of the rates of their hydrolysis—ZPHL/HHL ratio. The two domains of ACE hydrolyze a range of natural and synthetic substrates, but with different efficacy [38–41] i.e. HHL is hydrolyzed faster (9-fold) by the C domain [38] whereas ZPHL is hydrolyzed at similar rates by both domains [37]. As a result, the ratio of the rates of hydrolysis of these two substrates (ZPHL/HHL ratio) serves as a characteristic of a definite ACE form: for somatic two-domain human ACE it is about 1–1.5, for N-domain– 5–7, and C-domain—0.6–0.8 [42].
Immunological characterization of ACE (enzyme-captured immunoprecipitation assay)
Ninety six-well plates (Corning, Corning, NY) were coated with 17 anti-ACE mAbs using precoated goat anti-mouse IgG (Pierce, Rockford, IL) as a capture and incubated with tissue homogenates containing ACE. Plate-bound ACE activity was measured using ACE substrate Z-Phe-His-Leu directly in the wells [30,43].
Statistical analysis
All data are presented as mean ± SD. Significance was calculated using the Mann-Whitney test with STATISTICA 6 (StatSoft, Inc., OK).
Results and discussion
Immunohistochemical detection of ACE in lung cancer tissues
We performed immunostaining with anti-ACE mAbs CG2 in 12 lung cancer tissues: 3 cases of SCLC (small cell lung cancer), 9 NSCLC (non-small lung cancer), 3 squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), 3 adenocarcinoma (ADC) and 3 neuroendocrine carcinoma (NEC) (Figs 1 and 2). ACE is expressed strongly in macrophages (Fig 2B), in the tumor vascular endothelium (Fig 2A, 2C and 2D) and in adenocarcinoma (Figs 1J and 2A). ACE was not detected in cancer cells of SCLC, SCC and NEC (Fig 1B, 1F and 1N).
ACE activity in lung cancer tissues
ACE activity in 12 lung cancer tissue homogenates (Table 1) was significantly (3-fold) lower than in their nine “normal’ counterparts (macroscopically visible “normal” lung tissues) or in lung tissues of unrelated patients (Fig 3), which is consistent with previously reported studies [5].
Blood ACE appears in circulation due to proteolytic cleavage (shedding) from endothelial cell membrane [44] and primarily from the vast pulmonary microvasculature that exhibits 100% ACE expression compared to 10–15% expression in capillaries of systemic circulation [4]. Based on this finding and the fact that 30% of all endothelial cells are in the lungs [45], we estimated that ~ 75% of blood ACE originates from lung capillaries. Therefore, it is not surprising that in reported studies on blood ACE in patients with lung cancer, the levels of ACE are dramatically decreased—up to 2-fold [6]. Moreover, the measurement of preoperative serum ACE activity may be a useful prognostic indicator in lung cancer [7]. Monitoring of serum ACE levels may be useful also in management of patients with malignant disease in the lungs [8–10].
In five patients with paired cancerous and macroscopically-normal lung tissues we measured ACE activity using two substrates (ZPHL and HHL) and calculated the ratio of the rates of their hydrolysis—ZPHL/HHL ratio. The ZPHL/HHL ratio was used primarily to detect the presence of common ACE inhibitors taken as a drug in patients’ blood at the time of blood sampling [42,46]. It can also be utilized for detection of inactivation or inhibition of a separate domain [42].
The ZPHL/HHL ratio is characterized by very low inter-individual variability: while ACE levels varies 3–4 fold (with standard deviation (SD) about ~30% [27,43], ZPHL/HHL ratio is extremely constant (both for blood or tissue ACEs—with SD for ACE in blood at only 3–5% [31,42]. In 2 out of 5 cancer tissues we found a significant increase of ZPHL/HHL ratio reflecting: a) conformational changes in cancer ACE rather than the presence of commercial ACE inhibitors in their tissues (see below in Fig 4), or, alternatively, b) the presence of newly discovered (but not identified yet) ACE effector/inhibitor, which is present at high levels in normal spleen, but disappears in Gaucher spleen [35]. Recently, we found that prostate cancer tissue ACEs are also characterized by an increase in ZPHL/HHL ratio [47].
Conformational fingerprinting of ACE in lung cancer
To characterize the conformation of ACE in lung cancer, we performed conformational fingerprinting of ACE in paired cancer and normal lung tissues using a panel of mAbs directed against 16 different epitopes located on the N and C-domains of catalytically active human ACE [30]. Previously we showed that the pattern of precipitation of ACE by this set of mAbs provides a sensitive tool for detecting changes in local conformation of ACE due to denaturation, inhibition [30–31], mutations [33,48] and references therein, or cell/tissue origin [30,32,34–35].
Сonformational fingerprints of ACE from homogenates of cancer and macroscopically normal lung tissues are presented as tumor/normal tissue ratio in Fig 4. By using normal and cancer tissues from the same patient we eliminated possible effect of numerous SNPs in ACE gene (908 of those that change amino acids) that were identified up to date [http://useast.ensembl.org/Homo_sapiens/Transcript/Sequence_cDNA?db=core;g=ENSG00000159640;r=17:63477061-63498380;t=ENST00000290866]. Conformational fingerprinting of ACE is a very sensitive tool, which can detect even single amino-acid substitution [33, 49–50]. Therefore, using paired tumor and normal tissue from the same donor significantly decrease false-positive results.
The binding of several anti-ACE mAbs - 3A5 (N domain) and 1B3, 1B8, 3F10 and 2H9 (C domain of ACE) was increased, while binding of mAb 5F1 (N domain) was decreased in all cancer tissues in comparison to ACE from “normal” tissue (blue boxed in Fig 4). One of the explanations for that can be different glycosylation of ACE in normal and cancer tissue, namely, in the following glycosylation sites: Asn82 located in 3A5 epitope [51], Asn117 (or Asn480), both located in 5F1 epitope [52], Asn731, within overlapping regions for mAbs 1B8, 3F10 and 1B3 and Asn685 located in 2H9 epitope [53]. Previous mass-spectroscopy studies of various purified ACE preparations (lung, seminal fluid, heart) demonstrated that alterations in mAbs binding were accompanied by changes in glycan structures revealed by mass-spectroscopy [32, 54]. We hypothesized that particular differences in mAbs 1B8 and 3F10 binding to lung cancer ACE (Fig 4) may result from greater extent of sialylation of glycan in Asn731 in tumor. This possibility arise from the observation that these very mAbs better bind to plasma ACE than to lung ACE (Fig 10A in [55]), and plasma ACE is known to be more sialylated than its “parent” lung enzyme as a result of elimination of unsialylated proteins from plasma by liver lectins [56].
There is mounting evidence for the role of abnormal glycosylation of proteins in cancerous transformation of cells and tumor progression [57]. Onе of changes reported for cancer cells is the increase of sialic acid carbohydrates on their cell membrane [58]. Hyperglycosylation as the increase of sialic acids most likely results from the overexpression of sialyltransferases–a broad family of more than 20 different enzymes which have defined tissue-specificity [59]. Cell and tissue specificity of these enzymes allows to assume, that each type (including probably malignant cells) have a unique “sialome” which may be used to document cell origin or pathology [60]. Therefore, our hypothesis that observed changes in binding of mAbs to ACE from lung tumor tissues is limited to mAbs that are sensitive to hypersialylation (Fig 4) seems reasonable.
ACE from tumor tissues from patients #1 and #2 has increased ZPHL/HHL ratio (Z/H in Fig 4). Moreover, an increased mAbs binding to ACE from tumor tissues from those two patients was noticed for more mAbs from the 17-antibodies set we used. In patients with unchanged ZPHL/HHL ratio fewer antibodies showed changes of binding to ACE (Fig 4). Therefore, the increased ZPHL/HHL ratio for ACE from lung cancer tissues of these two patients may be caused by more profound changes in local conformation of ACE, as shown by changes in mAbs binding pattern. However, an expression of certain proteins in tumor tissue that may be novel endogenous ACE effectors/inhibitors, similar to what we identified recently in human spleen [35], still cannot be ruled out and we will plan to pursue this issue in future studies.
We also compared conformational fingerprinting of ACE in macroscopically normal lung tissues from 5 patients. Expressing binding of 17 mAbs to ACE from these tissues as a percentage of average binding to ACE from unrelated lung tissues (Fig 5), clearly shows that only ACE from normal tissue from patient #2 seems normal, whereas ACEs from 4 other “normal” lung tissues shows different changes in mAbs binding. ACE from “normal” lung tissue from patient #3 shows changes in conformation similar to ACE from cancerous tissue of the same patient. It appears that conformational fingerprinting of ACE in this patient #3 can detect “field cancerization”- which is a phenomenon, when tumor markers (or somatic tumor mutations) can be detected in morphologically normal tissues [61–63].
In conclusion, we performed ACE phenotyping of lung cancer tissues and found unique kinetic properties and ACE conformation with the conformation of ACE both tissue- and disease-specific. These findings may be clinically relevant especially with the recognition that tissue renin-angiotensin system is a target not only for therapy of cardiovascular disorders [64], but also in cancer chemotherapy [12].
Zdroje
1. Bakhle YS and Vane JR. (Eds), 1977 Metabolic Functions of the lung. New York: Marcel Dekker Inc.
2. Junot C, Nicolet L, Ezaqn E, Gonzales M-F, Menard J, Azizi M (1999) Effect of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme inhibition on plasma, urine, and tissue concentrations of hemoregulatory Peptide Acetyl-Ser-Asp-Lys-Pro in rats. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 291: 982–989. 10565814
3. Franke FE, Metzger R, Bohle R-M, Kerkman L, Alhenc-Gelas F, Danilov SM. Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme (CD 143) on endothelial cells in normal and in pathological conditions. In: Leucocyte Typing VI: White Cell Differentiation Antigens. ( Kishimoto T et al., Eds.) Garland Publishing Inc. New York, 1997; pp. 749–751.
4. Metzger R, Franke FF, Bohle R-M, Alhenc-Gelas F, Danilov SM (2011) Heterogeneous distribution of Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (CD143) in the human and rat vascular systems: vessels, organs and species specificity. Microvasc Res 82: 206–215.
5. Prohazka J, Krepela E, Sedo A, Viklicky J, Fiala P (1991) Aminopeptidases and angiotensin-I converting enzyme in primary lung tumors and lung parenchyma. Neoplasma. 38: 501–508. 1683470
6. Ashutosh K and Kieghley JF (1976) Diagnostic value of serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity in lung diseases. Thorax 31: 552–557. doi: 10.1136/thx.31.5.552 186911
7. Romer FK. (1981) Angiotensin-converting enzyme and its association with outcome in lung cancer. Br J Cancer 43: 135–142. doi: 10.1038/bjc.1981.21 6258623
8. Mansfield CM, Kimler BF, Henderson SD, Vats TS, Svoboda DJ (1984) Angiotensin-I-converting enzyme in cancer patients. J Clin Oncol 2: 452–456. doi: 10.1200/JCO.1984.2.5.452 6327925
9. Schweisfurth H, Heinrich J, Brugger E, Steinl C, Maiwald L (1985). The value of angiotensin-I-converting enzyme determinations in malignant and other diseases. Clin Physiol Biochem 3: 184–192. 2990799
10. Varela AS and Bosco Lopez Saez JJ (1993) Utility of serum activity of angiotensin-converting enzyme as a tumor marker. Oncology 50: 430–435. doi: 10.1159/000227224 8233282
11. Lever AF, Hole DJ, Gillis CR, McCallum IR, McInnes GT, MacKinnon PL (1998) Do inhibitors of angiotensin I-converting enzyme protect against risk of cancer? Lancet 352: 162–163. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(05)77800-4
12. Pinter M, Jain RK. (2017) Targeting the renin-angiotensin system to improve cancer treatment: implication for immunotherapy. Science Transl Med 9: eaan5616.
13. Miao L, Chen W, Zhou L, Wan H, Gao B, Feng Y (2016) Impact of angiotensin I-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II type-1 receptor blockers on survival of patients with NSCLC. Sci Rep 6: 21359. doi: 10.1038/srep21359 26883083
14. Menter AR, Carroll NM, Sakoda LC, Delate T, Hornbrook MC et al. (2017) Effect of angiotensin system inhibitors on survival in patients receiving chemotherapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer. Clin Lung Cancer 18: 189–197. doi: 10.1016/j.cllc.2016.07.008 27637408
15. Soubrier F, Alhenc-Gelas F, Hubert C, Allegrini J, John M, et al. (1988) Two putative active centers in human angiotensin I-converting enzyme revealed by molecular cloning. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 85: 9386–9390. doi: 10.1073/pnas.85.24.9386 2849100
16. Sturrock ED, Anthony S, Danilov SM. Peptidyl-dipeptidase A/Angiotensin I-converting enzyme. In Handbook of Proteolytic Enzymes, Eds. Neil D. Rawlings, Guy Salvesen, 3rd Edition, (Academic Press, Oxford, 2012) Chapter 98, pp.480–494 (3rd Edition,).
17. Bernstein K. Bernstein KE., Ong FS, Blackwell WL Shah KH et al. (2012) A modern understanding of the traditional and nontraditional biological functions of angiotensin-converting enzyme. Pharmacol Rev 65: 1–46. doi: 10.1124/pr.112.006809 23257181
18. Ryan JW, Ryan US, Shultz DR, Whiteker RC, Chung A (1975) Subcellular localization of pulmonary angiotensin-converting enzyme (Kininase II). Biochem J 146: 497–499. doi: 10.1042/bj1460497 168877
19. Caldwell PR, Seegal BC, Hsu KC, Das H, Soffer RL (1976) Angiotensin-converting enzyme: vascular endothelial localization. Science 191: 1050–1051. doi: 10.1126/science.175444 175444
20. Defendini R, Zimmerman EA, Weare JA, Alhenc-Gelas F, Erdos EG (1983) Angiotensin-converting enzyme in epithelial and neuroepithelial cells. Neuroendocrinology 37: 32–40. doi: 10.1159/000123512 6310427
21. Hooper NM, Turner AJ (1987) Isolation of two differentially glycosylated forms of peptidyl-dipeptidase A (angiotensin-converting enzyme) from pig brain: a re-evaluation of their role in neuropeptide metabolism. Biochem J 241: 625–633. doi: 10.1042/bj2410625 2439065
22. Silverstein E, Friedland J, Setton C (1978) Angiotensin-converting enzyme in macrophages and Freund’s adjuvant granuloma. Isr J Med Sci 14: 314–318. 205523
23. Danilov SM, Sadovnikova E, Scharenbourg N, Balysnikova IV, Svinareva DA, et al. (2003) Angiotensin-converting enzyme (CD143) is abundantly expressed by dendritic cells and discriminates human monocytes-derived dendritic cells from acute myeloid leukemia-derived dendritic cells. Exp Hem 31: 1301–1309.
24. Danilov SM, Franke FE, Erdos EG. Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme (CD143). In: Leucocyte Typing VI: White Cell Differentiation Antigens. ( Kishimoto T. et al., Eds.) Garland Publishing Inc.New York. 1997; pp.746–749.
25. Hooper NM, Keen J, Pappin DJ, Turner AJ (1987) Pig kidney angiotensin converting enzyme. Purification and characterization of amphipathic and hydrophilic forms of the enzyme establishes C-terminal anchorage to the plasma membrane. Biochem J. 247: 85–93. doi: 10.1042/bj2470085 2825659
26. Parkin ET, Turner AJ, Hooper NM (2004) Secretase-mediated cell surface shedding of the angiotensin-converting enzyme. Protein Pept Lett 11: 423–432. doi: 10.2174/0929866043406544 15544563
27. Alhenc-Gelas F, Richard J Courbon D, Warnet JM, Corvol P (1991) Distribution of plasma angiotensin I-converting enzyme levels in healthy men: Relationship to environmental and hormonal parameters. J Lab Clin Med 117:33–39. 1846167
28. Romer FK (1984) Clinical and biochemical aspects of sarcoidosis. With special reference to angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE). Acta Med Scand Suppl 690: 3–96. 6097101
29. Beneteau-Burnat B, Baudin B (1991) Angiotensin-converting enzyme: clinical applications and laboratory investigation in serum and other biological fluids. Crit Rev Clin Lab Sci 28: 337–356. doi: 10.3109/10408369109106868 1663362
30. Danilov SM, Balyasnikova IB, Danilova AS, Naperova IA, Arablinskaya E, et al. (2010) Conformational fingerprinting of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE): Application in sarcoidosis. J Proteome Res 9: 5782–5793. doi: 10.1021/pr100564r 20873814
31. Petrov MN, Shilo VY, Tarasov AV Schwartz DE, Garcia JGN et al. (2012) Conformational changes of blood ACE in chronic uremia. PLoS One 7: e49290 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0049290 23166630
32. Kryukova OV, Tikhomirova VE, Golukhova EZ, Evdokimov VV, Kalantarov GF, et al. (2015) Tissue Specificity of human angiotensin I-converting enzyme. PLoS One 10: e0143455. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143455 26600189
33. Danilov SM, Lünsdorf H, Akinbi HT, Nesterovitch AB, Epshtein Y, et al. (2016) Lysozyme and bilirubin bind to ACE and regulate its conformation and shedding. Sci Rep. 6: 34913. doi: 10.1038/srep34913 27734897
34. Tikhomirova VE, Kost OA, Kryukova OV, Bulaeva NI, Zholbaeva AZ et al. (2017) ACE phenotyping in human heart. PLoS One 12: e0181976. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181976 28771512
35. Danilov SM, Tikhomirova VE, Metzger R, Naperova IA, Bukina TM et al. (2018) ACE phenotyping in Gaucher disease. Mol Genet Metab 123: 501–510. doi: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2018.02.007 29478818
36. Metzger R, Bohle RM, Pauls K, Eichner G, Alhenc-Gelas F et al. (1999) Angiotensin-converting enzyme in non-neoplastic kidney diseases. Kidney Int 56: 1442–1454. doi: 10.1046/j.1523-1755.1999.00660.x 10504496
37. Danilov S, Jaspard E, Churakova T, Towbin H, Savoie F, et al. (1994) Structure-function analysis of angiotensin I-converting enzyme using monoclonal antibodies. J Biol Chem 269: 26806–26814. 7523412
38. Wei L, Alhenc-Gelas F, Corvol P, Clauser E (1991) The two homologous domains of human angiotensin I-converting enzyme are both catalytically active. J Biol Chem. 266: 9002–9008. 1851160
39. Jaspard E, Wei L, Alhenc-Gelas F. (1993) Differences in properties and enzymatic specificities between the two active sites of human angiotensin I-converting enzyme: studies with bradykinin and other natural peptides. J Biol Chem 268: 9496–9503. 7683654
40. Georgiadis D, Beau F, Czarny B, Cotton J, Yiotakis A, Dive V (2003) Roles of the two active sites of somatic angiotensin-converting enzyme in the cleavage of angiotensin I and bradykinin: insights from selective inhibitors. Circ Res 93: 148–154. doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000081593.33848.FC 12805239
41. Skirgello OE, Binevski PV, Pozdnev VF, Kost OA (2005) Kinetic probes for inter-domain cooperation in human somatic angiotensin-converting enzyme. Biochem J 391: 641–647. doi: 10.1042/BJ20050702 16033330
42. Danilov SM, Balyasnikova IV, Albrecht RFII, Kost OA (2008) Simultaneous determination of ACE activity with two substrates provides information on the status of somatic ACE and allows detection of inhibitors in human blood. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol 52: 90–103. doi: 10.1097/FJC.0b013e31817fd3bc 18645413
43. Danilov S, Savoie F, Lenoir B, Jeunemaitre X, Azizi M, et al. (1996) Development of enzyme-linked immunoassays for human angiotensin I converting enzyme suitable for large-scale studies. J Hypertens 14: 719–727. doi: 10.1097/00004872-199606000-00007 8793694
44. Ching SF, Hayes LW, Slakey LL (1983) Angiotensin-converting enzyme in cultured endothelial cells. Synthesis, degradation and transfer to culture medium. Arteriosclerosis 3: 581–588. doi: 10.1161/01.atv.3.6.581 6316884
45. Fishman A. Dynamics of pulmonary circulation. In: Hamilton WF, Dow P., eds/ Handbook of physiology, Washington DC, Am Physiol Sco 1963: 2: 1667.
46. Danilov SM, Tovsky SI, Schwartz DE, Dull RO (2017) ACE phenotyping as a guide toward personalized therapy with ACE inhibitors. J Cardiovasc Pharm Ther 22: 374–386.
47. Danilov SM, Kadrev AV, Kurilova OV, Tikhomirova VE, Kryukova OV et al. (2019) Tissue ACE phenotyping in prostate cancer. Oncotarget 10: 6349–6361. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.27276 31695843
48. Danilov SM, Wade MS, Schwager SL, Douglas RG, Nesterovitch AB et al. (2014). A novel angiotensin I-converting enzyme mutation (S333W) impairs N-domain enzymatic cleavage of the anti-fibrotic peptide, AcSDKP. PLoS One 9: e88001. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0088001 24505347
49. Danilov SM, Deinum J, Balyasnikova IV, Sun Z-L, Kramers C, et al. (2005) Detection of mutated angiotensin I-converting enzyme by serum/plasma analysis using a pair of monoclonal antibodies. Clin Chem 51: 1040–1043. doi: 10.1373/clinchem.2004.045633 15914791
50. Danilov S.M. Gordon K, Nesterovitch AB, Lünsdorf H, Chen Z et al. (2012) An angiotensin I-converting enzyme mutation (Y465D) causes a dramatic increase in blood ACE via accelerated ACE shedding. PLoS One 6: e25952.
51. Danilov SM, Watermeyer JM, Balyasnikova IB, Gordon K, Kugaevskaya EV, et al. (2007) Fine epitope mapping of mAb 5F1 reveals anticatalytic activity toward the N domain of human angiotensin-converting enzyme. Biochemistry 46: 9019–9031. doi: 10.1021/bi700489v 17630779
52. Skirgello OE, Balyasnikova IV, Binevski PV, Sun ZL, Baskin II et al. (2006) Inhibitory antibodies to human angiotensin-converting enzyme: fine epitope mapping and mechanism of action. Biochemistry 45: 4831–4847. doi: 10.1021/bi052591h 16605251
53. Naperova IA, Balyasnikova IV, Schwartz DE, Watermeyer J, Sturrock DE, et al. (2008) Mapping of conformational mAb epitopes to the C domain of human angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE). J Proteome Res 7: 3396–3411. doi: 10.1021/pr800142w 18576678
54. Kost OA, Tikhomirova VE, Kryukova OV, Gusakov AV, Bulaeva NI et al. (2018) A conformational fingerprint of angiotensin-converting enzyme. Russian J Bioorg Chem 44: 52–63.
55. Danilov SM, Tikhomirova VE, Kryukova OV, Balatsky AV, Bulaeva NI, et al. (2018) Conformational fingerprint of blood and tissue ACEs: personalized approach. PLoS ONE.13: e0209861. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0209861 30589901
56. Ashwell G and Harford J (1982) Carbohydrate-specific receptors of the liver. Annu Rev Biochem, 51: 531–554. doi: 10.1146/annurev.bi.51.070182.002531 6287920
57. Stowell SR, Ju T, Cummings RD (2015) Protein glycosylation in cancer. Annu Rev Pathol 10: 473–510. doi: 10.1146/annurev-pathol-012414-040438 25621663
58. Bull C, Stoel MA, den Brok MH, Adema GJ (2014) Sialic acids sweeten a tumor’s life. Cancer Res 74: 3199–3204. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-0728 24830719
59. Takashima S and Tsuji S (2011) Functional diversity of mammalian sialyl transferases. Trends Glycosci Glycotechnol 23:178–193.
60. Cohen M and Varki A (2010) The sialome–far more than the sum of its parts. OMICS 14: 455–464. doi: 10.1089/omi.2009.0148 20726801
61. Nelson MA, Wymer J, Clements N (1996) Detection of K-ras gene mutations in non-neoplastic lung tissue and lung cancers. Cancer Lett 103: 115–121. doi: 10.1016/0304-3835(96)04202-4 8616804
62. Tang X, Shigematsu H, Bekele BN, Roth JA, Minna JDet al. (2005) EGFR tyrosine kinase domain mutations are detected in histologically normal respiratory epithelium in lung cancer patients. Cancer Res 65: 7568–7572. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-05-1705 16140919
63. Cooper CS, Eeles R, Wedge DC, Van Loo P, Gundem G et al. (2015) Analysis of the genetic phylogeny of multifocal prostate cancer identifies multiple independent clonal expansions in neoplastic and morphologically normal prostate tissue. Nature Genet 47: 367–372. doi: 10.1038/ng.3221 25730763
64. Bader M (2010) Tissue renin-angiotensin-aldosterone systems: targets for pharmacological therapy. Ann Rev Pharmacol Toxicol 50: 439–465.
Článek vyšel v časopise
PLOS One
2019 Číslo 12
- S diagnostikou Parkinsonovy nemoci může nově pomoci AI nástroj pro hodnocení mrkacího reflexu
- Je libo čepici místo mozkového implantátu?
- Metamizol jako analgetikum první volby: kdy, pro koho, jak a proč?
- Pomůže v budoucnu s triáží na pohotovostech umělá inteligence?
- AI může chirurgům poskytnout cenná data i zpětnou vazbu v reálném čase
Nejčtenější v tomto čísle
- Methylsulfonylmethane increases osteogenesis and regulates the mineralization of the matrix by transglutaminase 2 in SHED cells
- Oregano powder reduces Streptococcus and increases SCFA concentration in a mixed bacterial culture assay
- The characteristic of patulous eustachian tube patients diagnosed by the JOS diagnostic criteria
- Parametric CAD modeling for open source scientific hardware: Comparing OpenSCAD and FreeCAD Python scripts