Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.14.11.2 (prolyl hydroxylase)
1,814 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum type IV collagen fragment (7S collagen domain) was measured in 30 controls and 152 liver disease patients with a radioimmunoassay using a polyclonal antibody to human placenta 7S collagen. The serum concentrations of 7S collagen (mean +/- SD) were 4.2 +/- 0.9 ng/mL in controls, 5.1 +/- 2.0 ng/mL in acute hepatitis, 6.5 +/- 2.5 ng/mL in chronic inactive hepatitis, 9.5 +/- 3.8 ng/mL in chronic active hepatitis, 14.4 +/- 7.5 ng/mL in liver cirrhosis, and 14.4 +/- 6.9 ng/mL in hepatocellular carcinoma. In acute hepatitis, 7S collagen was slightly increased, whereas type III procollagen N-peptide and prolyl hydroxylase were markedly increased. In chronic liver disease, 7S collagen concentrations increased with the severity of the disease, and also reflected the degree of fibrosis. The serum 7S collagen concentrations were significantly correlated with those of type III procollagen N-peptide and prolyl hydroxylase in all subjects. These results suggest that serum 7S collagen concentration is a useful diagnostic aid for determining hepatic collagen metabolism in liver diseases.
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PMID:Clinical significance of serum 7S collagen in various liver diseases. 133 51

Most liver diseases lead to a pathobiochemical reaction termed liver fibrosis. This is a dynamic process implying different rates of progression or regression. Thus, histological examination of a liver biopsy is essential for a diagnosis but biochemical tests are necessary for assessing the activity of the process and monitoring its evolution. We review the most important constituents of liver connective tissue and the biochemical tests developed for evaluating liver fibrosis. The aminopeptide of type III procollagen is the most widely used parameter: two different radioimmunoassays have been developed with different affinities for the two circulating forms of the molecule. The determination of serum P3P reveals an elevation of blood levels both in acute and chronic liver diseases. In the first, serum P3P is an index of hepatic necrosis and inflammation which correlates with other biochemical parameters. In the second it is an index of active fibrogenesis. Moreover, in primary biliary cirrhosis this parameter is an independent prognostic variable and an important predictor of survival. Other immunoassays exist for different collagen cleavage products, but their clinical value is not established. Laminin and fibronectin are the principal structural glycoproteins in liver. Fibronectin determination does not seem to be of clinical value in liver disease. In contrast, serum laminin correlates with the severity of portal venous pressure in advanced liver disease. Its concentration parallels the severity of varices and may indicate the risk of bleeding. Hyaluronate is a high molecular weight polysaccharide, raised serum concentrations reflect both its increased synthesis by activated fibroblasts and its impaired catabolism by the liver. Thus, it may be useful for evaluating and monitoring the progression of chronic liver disease. The measurement of the activity of prolyl 4-hydroxylase as well as that of lysine oxidase and other enzymes has been proposed, but their clinical value is not sufficiently demonstrated. A panel of tests (e.g., laminin, hyaluronate and the aminopeptide of type III procollagen) seems to be recommended for a biochemical assessment of liver fibrosis in clinical practice.
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PMID:Biochemical markers of hepatic fibrosis. 165 19

Lysyl oxidase was partially purified from serum by a diethylaminoethyl batch procedure in the presence of 6 mol/L urea and dialyzed against 3 mol/L KSCN. Using this method, we determined serum lysyl oxidase activity in 52 patients with liver disease and in 14 healthy controls, and we examined usefulness of serum lysyl oxidase in assessing liver fibrogenesis. For this purpose, serum lysyl oxidase activity in chronic liver disease was compared with serum levels of prolyl hydroxylase and laminin P1. As compared with controls, serum lysyl oxidase activity increased 1.6-fold in chronic persistent hepatitis, 4.4-fold in chronic active hepatitis and 11.8-fold in cirrhosis, indicating an increase in concert with the development of liver fibrosis. In hepatocellular carcinoma, the serum activity, although significantly increased, was lower than that in cirrhosis. Serum prolyl hydroxylase was significantly increased in chronic active hepatitis, in liver cirrhosis and in hepatocellular carcinoma. Serum laminin P1 was significantly increased in chronic active hepatitis, in cirrhosis and in hepatocellular carcinoma. Serum lysyl oxidase activity did not correlate significantly with serum levels of prolyl hydroxylase and laminin P1 in any subject or in any subgroup. The magnitude of the increase and the abnormal percentage of serum lysyl oxidase activity were larger than those for serum prolyl hydroxylase and laminin P1. These results suggest that serum lysyl oxidase activity is a more sensitive indicator of liver fibrosis than serum prolyl hydroxylase and laminin P1.
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PMID:Serum lysyl oxidase activity in chronic liver disease in comparison with serum levels of prolyl hydroxylase and laminin. 168 40

In an effort to assess connective tissue biosynthetic activity in human liver disease, collagen proline hydroxylase (a key enzyme in collagen biosynthesis) and the uptake of (35)S sulphate (a precursor of sulphated mucopolysaccharides) were measured in hepatic tissue obtained mainly by percutaneous biopsy.A procedure is described for the quantitation of collagen proline hydroxylase in cryostat sections which allows for the simultaneous histopathological examination of the liver specimen. A three to eightfold increase in the activity of this enzyme was found in four cirrhotic livers compared with the mean value of four normal livers and two biopsies from patients with Gilbert's syndrome. Elevated hydroxylase levels were found also in five patients with hepatic dysfunction but without cirrhosis (four alcoholics and one patient with persistent hepatitis associated with serum smooth muscle antibody). It is suggested that the hepatic level of collagen proline hydroxylase may be a useful quantitative index of fibroblastic activity in human liver disease. Autoradiographic studies of radioactive sulphate uptake in biopsy specimens from patients with chronic liver disease showed an exaggerated incorporation of isotope not only at sites of established fibrogenesis but also in the walls of sinusoids throughout the liver.
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PMID:Collagen proline hydroxylase activity and 35S sulphate uptake in human liver biopsies. 436 10

Carbon tetrachloride inhalation in phenobarbitone treated rats caused a rapid rise in hepatic prolyl hydroxylase activity which was followed by an increase in hepatic collagen and free proline concentrations. Colchicine in a dose of 5 micrograms/day largely prevented the increase in hepatic collagen. This effect was not mediated by impairment of prolyl hydroxylase activity. Colchicine is of potential therapeutic value in preventing the progression of chronic liver disease to cirrhosis.
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PMID:Hepatic collagen synthesis in a rat model of cirrhosis, and its modification by colchicine. 627 60

To clarify the link between cytotoxic damage to the hepatocyte and the development of fibrosis, we immunoenzymatically measured serum prolyl hydroxylase (hPH), type IV collagen (CL-IV) and circulating intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (clCAM-1). The population studied was comprised of 122 patients with liver disease (acute hepatitis; mild chronic liver disease; cirrhosis; hepatocellular carcinoma) and 33 patients with extrahepatic diseases. Similar patterns were observed for hPH, CL-IV, and clCAM-1, that were higher in patients with acute hepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma than in those with mild chronic liver disease (Bonferroni's test for pairwise comparisons, p < 0.01). Liver function tests and markers of fibrosis showed a strict correlation, which disappeared when the linear effect of clCAM-1 was removed. The ability to predict serum hPH and CL-IV from clCAM-1 might suggest the existence of a causal relationship between fibrosis and targeting of cytotoxic damage.
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PMID:Prediction of serum markers of fibrosis by levels of circulating intercellular adhesion molecule-1 in acute and chronic liver disease. 786 19

C-terminal peptide of procollagen I, N-terminal peptide of procollagen III, collagen IV and serum prolyl hydroxylase were measured in 100 patients with cirrhosis and 71 patients with noncirrhotic chronic liver disease. Patients with cirrhosis had significantly higher mean values of prolyl hydroxylase, collagen IV, N-terminal peptide of procollagen III and C-terminal peptide of procollagen I as compared to noncirrhotic patients. This difference was maintained for collagen products even after stratification for alcohol intake, although all markers of fibrosis were higher in alcoholics. Stepwise logistic regression analysis showed that collagen IV, and N-terminal peptide of procollagen III were independently associated with cirrhosis. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves showed that collagen IV and N-terminal peptide of procollagen III perform more efficiently than C-terminal peptide of procollagen I and prolyl hydroxylase in identifying cirrhosis.
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PMID:A comparison of four serum markers of fibrosis in the diagnosis of cirrhosis. 913 47

The treatment of chronic liver disease represents still now an open problem in medicine. The first objective of therapy has to be the causal agent removal; however, there are many cases (viral infections, autoimmunity, genetic disease) in which it is not possible to reach this issue; in these situations the secondary objective of the therapy is to inhibit the hepatic fibrogenesis, in attempt of easing or blocking the transformation of chronic liver disease in cirrhosis. The aim of this work is to review the various compounds which showed an antifibrotic activity, using a simple classification model, allowing a fast setting of different compounds. These last, on the basis of their main action, can be divided into two main groups: drugs with direct action, which interfere with collagen metabolism (for instance interferons, glucocorticoids, prolyl 4-hydroxylase inhibitors, cyclosporin A, colchicine, D-penicillamine, phosphatidylcholine and so on) and drugs with indirect action, that decrease the inflammatory stimuli, capable of stirring up the fibrogenetic hepatic process (S-adenosylmethionine, malotilate, ursodeoxycholic acid, ribavirin and so on). There are drugs that have both mechanisms of action, without the prevalence of one or other mechanism (prostaglandins).
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PMID:[Drugs inhibiting the hepatic fibrogenesis]. 1649 80