Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.16.3.1 (
ceruloplasmin
)
5,074
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A number of soluble proteins contained in human aortic intimal tissue was extracted into buffered saline (pH 7.4) and identified and quantitated by immunoelectrophoresis and immunodiffusion. The proteins included IgA, IgG, IgM, B1C (C3), alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 2-macroglobulin, fibrinogen, albumin, LDL, HDL, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, beta 2-glycoprotein,
transferrin
and
ceruloplasmin
. The concentration of soluble proteins was significantly higher in the atherosclerotic intima than in the normal intima. The diseased intima also contained a small amount of tissue-bound IgG, IgA and B1C which was extractable with citrate buffer at pH 3.2. The vascular band IgG, and B1C were shown by enzymatic and immunohistochemical studies to be closely associated with the collagenous tissue of the plaque. The Ig contained in the atherosclerotic plaque may be derived in part from the biosynthesis of Ig by the artery, since the incorporation of 14C-labeled leucine into IgG by the atheromatous plaque was demonstrable by radioimmunoelectrophoresis. In contrast to the diseased artery, the normal artery did not synthesize IgG and did not contain vascular bound IgG or complement. However, the normal artery was capable of fixing IgG and B1C eluted from the diseased artery. The present studies suggested that the IgG contained and synthesized by the plaque might represent an immune response to an endogenous or exogenous antigen closely associated with plaque collagen. IgG and B1C either alone or in the form of an immune complex also may play an important role in phagocytosis in the plaque and thereby influence the course of atherosclerosis. The proteolytic inhibitors, alpha 1-antitrypsin and alpha 2-macroglobulin, found in relatively high concentrations in the plaque, could enhance fibrosis of the lesion because of thier known inhibitory effects on collagenase and elastase.
...
PMID:Soluble proteins in the human atherosclerotic plaque. With spectral reference to immunoglobulins, C3-complement component, alpha 1-antitrypsin and alpha 2-macroglobulin. 9 93
A surface coat of host serum proteins was detected on virulent Treponema pallidum by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. The loosely associated serum proteins could be removed by repeated washings in a protein-free medium. Washed T. pallidum retained the ability to readsorb numerous host proteins from rabbit serum as well as iodinated rabbit or human albumin. In addition, various avidly associated host serum proteins including albumin, alpha(2)-macroglobulin,
transferrin
,
ceruloplasmin
, immunoglobulin G, immunoglobulin M, and C3 were identified on the outer envelope of washed treponemes by an immunoadsorbent technique with protein A-bearing staphylococcus. Hyaluronidase treatment did not remove the avidly associated host proteins from the surface of washed treponemes, whereas trypsin treatment resulted in decreased levels of agglutination. Electrophoretic patterns of trypsin-treated treponemes showed that treponemal proteins as well as adsorbed host proteins were released concurrently by protease digestion. Reacquisition studies involving alpha(2)-macroglobulin and
transferrin
suggested the presence of noncompetitive binding sites for serum proteins on the treponemal outer envelope. Finally, differences among the T. pallidum preparations from individual rabbits with respect to incorporation of [(35)S]methionine, extent of agglutination with antisera, and length of time required for removal of avidly associated host proteins by trypsin treatment indicated biological variability among the treponemal populations.
...
PMID:Surface-associated host proteins on virulent Treponema pallidum. 9 74
Human liver-specific gene products are expressed by hybrid cells resulting from the fusion of human amniocytes with mouse hepatoma cells. Amniocytes grown from human amniotic fluid have no detectable levels of secreted human albumin,
transferrin
, alpha-1 antitrypsin, or
ceruloplasmin
, while the mouse hepatoma line, HH--, secretes several mouse liver-specific gene products including
transferrin
and albumin. Fifty-five hybrids were isolated and analyzed for the expression of serum proteins by Ouchterlony double diffusion and Laurell immunoelectrophoresis. All hybrids continued to express mouse albumin and
transferrin
, and 29 hybrids from this series were found to express one or more human serum proteins. Activation of the human amniocyte genome provides a model for prenatal diagnosis of serum protein abnormalities.
...
PMID:Expression of human hepatic genes in mouse hepatoma--human amniocyte hybrids. 10 1
Venous blood samples were obtained from 42 children hospitalized for the recurrent episode of scarlet fever: immediately after admission and toward the end of one week's hospitalisation, after a three-week period and at a later control after four months. The 14 specific proteins were simultaneously quantitated in the serum specimens using radial immunodiffusion on antibodyagar plates. Antistreptolysin O titres were also determined and compared with the corresponding immunoglobulin levels. However, the titres showed only minor differences in various stages of illness the course of which was mild and without complications. Serum levels of prealbumin, albumin, alpha2HS-glycoproetin,
transferrin
and beta 2-glycoprotein I were found decreased at the acute clinical stage. Of the "negative acute phase reactants" prealbumin proved to be the most expressive one. Of a triad of "positive reactants" the largest relative increments showed haptoglobin, its increase was twofold of orosomucoid and that threefold of
ceruloplasmin
. C-reactive protein was increased almost in two thirds of patients on admission, but normalized in all cases about the end of the first week of penicillin therapy. No significant changes were found for alpha 2-macroglobulin. We could demonstrate significant rise and fall of IgD concentration in serum together with IgG, IgA, and IgM, all manifested the peak values already after one week's hospitalisation. In the recurrent episode of scarlet fever IgA showed significantly minor increments compared with the first illness.
...
PMID:Profiles of fourteen specific serum proteins in children with recurrent scarlet fever. 11 13
The effect of clofibrate (1.5 g/day) on different plasma proteins and on components of the hemostatic system was studied in eight men with either mild diabetes mellitus or cardiosclerosis. Before treatment, the subjects were investigated weekly on five occasions. The means of these determinations were compared with the values observed after 2, 6 and 14 weeks of treatment. During the treatment albumin and
transferrin
increased significantly while orosomucoid,
ceruloplasmin
, beta1 E-globulin, IgA, IgM and fibrinogen decreased significantly. The decreases of the last proteins in per cent were found to be associated with each other in single subjects, i.e. a subject who reacted with a certain degree of change in one protein tended to react in a similar way with regard to the other proteins. A correlation was observed between the concentration before the treatment and the decrease in concentration during the treatment for
ceruloplasmin
, IgG, IgA, IgM and fibrinogen. The fibrinolytic activity increased significantly. Plasminogen decreased after 6 weeks and increased after 14 weeks of treatment. Platelet adhesiveness was not influenced.
...
PMID:Effect of clofibrate on plasma proteins including components of the hemostatic mechanism. 13 Oct 8
The blood, spleen and liver of mice were examined by means of electron spin resonance (e.s.r.), throughout the course of myeloid leukaemia induced by intravenous injection of leukaemic spleen cells. In blood, marked increases in the concentrations of iron
transferrin
and
ceruloplasmin
occurred within the first 3 days after injection. In the spleen, changes in the concentrations of paramagnetic copper and iron complexes were detectable by about the 5th day, before any measurable splenic enlargement, whilst in the liver changes were detectable by about the 8th day. The changes occurring in blood, spleen and liver during the development of leukaemia appear to be related and they are discussed in terms of iron transport.
...
PMID:Electron spin resonance study of changes during the development of a mouse myeloid leukaemia. I. Paramagnetic metal ions. 16 66
Ceruloplasmin (
ferroxidase
) the blue Cu-protein of vertebrate plasma, possesses significant oxidase activity towards Fe(II) and numerous aromatic amines and phenols. Its
ferroxidase
activity has led to the discovery that it is a molecular link between copper and iron metabolism. Ceruloplasmin mobilizes iron into the plasma from iron storage cells in the liver. An additional role of Cp may be as a contributor to the regulation of the balance of biogenic amines through its oxidase action on the epinephrine and the hydroxyindole series. Ceruloplasmin also serves as a major copper transport vehicle, comparable to
transferrin
for iron. Evidence is presented that the copper atoms of Cp are a prerequisite for copper utilization in the biosynthesis of cytochrome oxidase. The ability of Cp to release copper at specific cellular sites is believed to be related to its broad substrate spectrum of biological reducing agents. Thus Cp is a serum protein with several important functions, all of which are directly related to its oxidase activity.
...
PMID:The biological role of ceruloplasmin and its oxidase activity. 18 81
Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy was used to examine changes in the concentration of paramagnetic metal ions in Yoshida tumours carried by female Wistar rats. Blood, spleen and lymph nodes from these animals were also examined by ESR. A decrease in the concentration of a paramagnetic species associated with mitochondrial activity, and marked increases in those thought to be associated with inflammatory or immune reactions and cell lysis, were observed in the tumours within one day of implantation. During development of the tumour, and during its regression after treatment with methylene dimethane sulphonate (MDMS), further changes were observed in the concentration of the species. These were dependent on the region of the tumour examined. In blood, development of the tumour produced an increase in
ceruloplasmin
and a decrease in iron-
transferrin
. An increase in spleen weight, as the tumour developed, was accompanied by a small decrease in the concentration of species with g-values of 6-0 and 4-3, which was reversed on regression of the treated tumour. The presence of metastases in the regional lymph nodes produced distinguishable changes in the ESR spectra.
...
PMID:Electron spin resonance study of changes during development of solid yoshida tumour. II. Paramagnetic metal ions. 18 10
Electron spin resonance spectroscopy has proved a useful and simple technique for the measurement of levels of
caeruloplasmin
and iron
transferrin
in whole blood from 50 patients with Hodgkin's disease. Those patients with clinically active disease show higher
caeruloplasmin
levels and lower iron
transferrin
levels than those with inactive disease. The results indicate that these tests are good indicators of the state of the disease and that serial measurement of these parameters may help in early prediction of clinical reactivity and in monitoring response to treatment. The combined information from iron
transferrin
and
caeruloplasmin
levels appears to be more predictive than that from the erythrocyte sedimentation rate and neutrophil alkaline phosphatase score.
...
PMID:Electron spin resonance as a useful technique in the management of Hodgkin's disease. 19 8
Caeruloplasmin and iron
transferrin
level were measured in blood of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in different stages of disease activity and compared with erythrocyte sedimentation rate and NAP level in the same samples. It was found that both
caeruloplasmin
level and sedimentation rate showed a slight increase in mean level in patients with active disease as compared with those in remission, particularly in the group of patients with poorly or undifferentiated diffuse disease. No difference was observed in levels of iron
transferrin
or NAP. Both
caeruloplasmin
and sedimentation rate showed occasional abnormal values in patients in remission but in most cases where both were elevated the patients subsequently entered a more active phase of the disease.
...
PMID:Electron spin resonance measurements of blood caeruloplasmin and iron transferrin levels in patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. 19 9
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>