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Query: EC:1.16.3.1 (
ceruloplasmin
)
5,074
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An in vitro method was developed to assess human erythrocyte lead uptake and release directly, rapidly, and reproducibly; the technique requires small aliquots of blood and uses silicone fluid to separate erythrocytes from their suspending media. Uptake occurred rapidly and was directly related to temperature. Increasing quantities of available elemental lead were associated with increasing absolute quantities but decreasing percentages of uptake. Low values of pH diminished the uptake and enhanced the release of radiolead by erythrocytes, and could be correlated with diminished lead-hemoglobin binding para-Chloromecuribenzoate increased and dithiothreitol inhibited radiolead uptake but neither compound affected lead release, suggesting that sulfhydryl groups are important for lead binding to the erythrocyte. Cyanamide and N-ethylmaleimide did not significantly affect the net uptake or release of radiolead. Calcium disodium EDTA, penicillamine, and dimercaprol significantly reduced lead uptake, although only incubation with dimercaprol resulted in a net removal of lead from erythrocytes. Iron and
ceruloplasmin
significantly decreased radiolead uptake, but inorganic metal cations other than iron, hyperosmolarity, human
serum albumin
, cholesterol, and transferrin had no significant effect on uptake or release.
...
PMID:Retention of radiolead by human erythrocytes in vitro. 273 94
The biochemistry of the essential trace element copper has been outlined. Following absorption, Cu(II) is transported by
serum albumin
and transcuprein to the liver where it is incorporated into the plasma Cu-protein,
ceruloplasmin
, or, possibly, stored as Cu-metallothionein or as superoxide dismutase. Ceruloplasmin is the long-term copper transporter and carries Cu(II) to the tissues for the biosynthesis of key Cu(II) enzymes, especially cytochrome c oxidase, lysyl oxidase and others. The production of copper enzymes raises many new questions about the metabolism of copper. Since
ceruloplasmin
is the centerpiece of copper metabolism and function, we conclude with more details on its chemistry and multifunctions. This Cu-protein of 132,000 daltons has now been totally sequenced and the copper-containing active sites located. Finally, we have proposed seven possible functions for
ceruloplasmin
, and there is now good evidence for the existence of
ceruloplasmin
receptors to expedite some of these functions.
...
PMID:Perspectives on copper biochemistry. 300 68
Chicks were fed on diets containing either no added vitamin A or 3300 micrograms/kg or 330,000 micrograms/kg retinol equivalents for 30 d. Concentrations of copper, iron and zinc were higher in liver and lower in plasma at low and high intakes of vitamin A. Haemoglobin, packed cell volume and erythrocyte levels were depressed by both low and high vitamin A intake and could be related to vitamin A levels by quadratic equations. The Zn and Fe levels in erythrocytes and
serum albumin
and
ceruloplasmin
were also affected in a similar fashion by low or high vitamin A diets. Hepatic activity of alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1) and cytochrome oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) paralleled Zn and Cu concentrations respectively. Superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1) and hydrolysis of triolein and retinyl palmitate were not correlated significantly with concentrations of metals but were correlated negatively with log vitamin A concentration. No changes in bone concentrations of Cu, Fe or Zn were detected. It is suggest that vitamin A influences metabolism of Cu, Fe and Zn possibly, in part, due to a decrease in secretion of transport proteins by the liver.
...
PMID:The effect of different dietary levels of vitamin A on metabolism of copper iron and zinc in the chick. 303 14
1. In rats iron was absorbed after administration into the gut lumen as ferric iron bound to
serum albumin
, to nitrilotriacetic acid, and to 8-OH-quinoline sulfonic acid, or as isolated diferri-transferrin. 2. Iron absorption from 59Fe-labelled transferrin was inhibited by the addition of rat plasma. 3. The inhibitory component in the rat plasma turned out to be
ceruloplasmin
(ferrous iron oxidase, EC 1.16.2.1). 4. The absorption of iron from these ferric iron complexes was also inhibited by addition to the incubation medium of ferrozine, a strong anionic Fe(II)-ligand. 5. Uptake and absorptive utilization of transferrin-bound ferric iron was decreased after a prewash of the gut lumen and could be restored by the addition of ascorbate to the incubation medium. 6. The conclusion was drawn from these results that luminal reduction precedes ferric iron absorption and that this is a prerequisite for the uptake into the mucosa.
...
PMID:Dependence of intestinal iron absorption on the valency state of iron. 312 86
The acute response to injury and infection is manifested by increased synthesis of acute-phase proteins by the liver, an increased white blood cell count, fever, a negative nitrogen balance, and altered serum mineral levels (zinc, iron, and copper). This response is thought to be partially mediated by cytokines such as interleukin-1, but has not been well studied in head-injured patients. In this study, 25 patients were studied for evidence of the acute-phase response extending from hospital admission up to 21 days postinjury. The patients were divided into two groups to determine if severity of injury influenced the response. Group 1 consisted of nine patients with admission peak 24-hour Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores of 4 or less; Group 2 consisted of 16 patients with admission peak 24-hour GCS scores of 8 or greater. All patients demonstrated some evidence of the acute-phase response. Serum alpha-1 acid glycoprotein,
ceruloplasmin
, and C-reactive protein levels were elevated on admission and throughout the study.
Serum albumin
and zinc levels were depressed on admission; zinc levels gradually normalized by Day 21 in both groups, but hypoalbuminemia was observed throughout the study period. Serum copper levels were normal on admission but increased to above normal in both groups by Day 11 postinjury. Urinary urea nitrogen excretion was elevated in both groups and peaked on Day 7 for Group 1 and Day 11 for Group 2 patients. The patients with admission GCS scores equal to or less than 4 had overall higher temperatures than were seen in those with GCS scores greater than or equal to 8 (p = 0.009). All patients but one had an elevated white blood cell count on admission. It is concluded that brain-injured patients with admission GCS scores of 3 to 4 and 8 to 14 demonstrate an acute-phase response which lasts for at least 3 weeks postinjury. It is speculated that this response is at least partially mediated by increased intraventricular interleukin-1 activity.
...
PMID:The acute-phase response of the brain-injured patient. 313 34
Severely head-injured patients are hypermetabolic/hypercatabolic and exhibit many aspects of the postinjury acute-phase response. These patients have hypoalbuminemia, hypozincemia, hypoferremia, hypercupria, fever, and increased synthesis of acute-phase proteins such as
ceruloplasmin
and higher C-reactive protein levels. It has been suggested that increased interleukin-1 (IL-1) in the ventricular fluid may be responsible, at least in part, for these metabolic abnormalities. In the present study,
serum albumin
levels were evaluated throughout an 18-day study period in 62 head-injured patients receiving aggressive nutritional support. Hypoalbuminemia (mean +/- standard error of the mean 3.10 +/- 0.2 gm/dl; normal value 3.5 to 5 gm/dl) was observed upon hospital admission; these albumin levels continued to decrease until 2 weeks postinjury, despite aggressive nutritional support. This hypoalbuminemia may be mediated via altered endothelial permeability properties due to endothelial cell dysfunction caused by cytokines such as IL-1. Transendothelial movement of albumin was assayed using a pulmonary artery endothelial cell culture system. Both a crude macrophage supernatant derived from a murine P388D cell line having IL-1 activity (mIL-1) and human recombinant IL-1 (rIL-1) were tested. The amount of albumin transferred was time- and concentration-dependent, with maximal transfer at 24 hours and 20 U of mIL-1 per 0.5 ml of culture medium. Endothelial permeability changes observed after incubation with mIL-1 were confirmed using rIL-1. Compared to control cultures, 20 U of rIL-1 and 20 U of mIL-1 increased albumin transfer across endothelial monolayers 205% and 459%, respectively. These findings suggest that the mechanism of hypoalbuminemia seen after severe head trauma can be explained in part by IL-1-induced endothelial cell injury, resulting in enhanced endothelial permeability to albumin.
...
PMID:Mechanisms and implications of hypoalbuminemia in head-injured patients. 326 27
The morbidly obese who undergo elective gastric partitioning surgery serve as models of surgical stress and subsequent severe protein calorie restriction. The short and long term effects of gastric partitioning surgery on circulating proteins and the specific micronutrients carried by the proteins were studied in 22 such patients (ages 23-56 years). Serum micronutrient values paralleled the levels of their carrier proteins. Mean concentrations of both short and long turnover proteins decreased significantly in the early postoperative period, whereas the acute phase reactant
ceruloplasmin
reached preoperative levels by the seventh postoperative day. Transthyretin and retinol binding protein remained depressed with long term reductions in protein and calorie intake, whereas
ceruloplasmin
and transferrin were somewhat less sensitive to prolonged protein-calorie restriction. Mean
serum albumin
, after an initial postoperative fall, rose to the baseline level by 1 month after surgery.
Serum albumin
levels remained within the normal range despite low protein and calorie intakes.
...
PMID:The short and long term effect of gastric partitioning surgery on serum protein levels. 359 25
Several reports have suggested that variations of albumin concentration in the incubation medium can modulate the magnitude of transferrin binding to the cells. We have investigated this problem further using K562 cells. In the absence of human
serum albumin
, transferrin binding demonstrated a non-saturable curve which, upon Scatchard analysis, showed two components with high and low affinities. In the presence of 0.5% human
serum albumin
, the low-affinity but not the high-affinity component was totally inhibited and, thus, the binding showed a saturation plateau at transferrin concentration of 6 micrograms/ml. Increasing concentrations of human
serum albumin
in the incubation medium led to progressive inhibition of transferrin binding, reaching a plateau at 0.2% human
serum albumin
. At this concentration transferrin binding was about 12 ng/10(6) cells, corresponding to the saturation plateau for high-affinity binding. Low-affinity transferrin binding in the absence of human
serum albumin
could readily be displaced by subsequent addition of albumin. Similar inhibition was obtained by another serum protein,
ceruloplasmin
, suggesting that this inhibition is not unique to albumin and may be a common property of all proteins. Incubation at 37 degrees C with 59Fe-labeled transferrin indicated that all iron uptake occurs through high-affinity binding. We conclude that the reported variations in magnitude of transferrin binding by the cell due to variations in albumin concentration are the result of inhibition of low-affinity binding of transferrin by albumin.
...
PMID:Albumin inhibition of transferrin low-affinity binding to K562 cells. 394 82
Sheep were rendered hypocupraemic using parenteral ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (ATM). Fifteen thousand third stage larvae of Trichostrongylus axei and T. colubriformis in the ratio 1:1 were administered three times per week for six weeks, starting four weeks after cessation of ATM treatment. The changes in liver and plasma copper (Cu),
caeruloplasmin
activity, serum proteins, faecal nematode egg counts and total nematode counts were measured in the sheep for 10 weeks after infection. Decreases in liver Cu, plasma Cu and
caeruloplasmin
activities were detected soon after infection. There was a significant (P less than 0.05) interaction of the effects of Cu deficiency and nematode infection on these changes. Hypoproteinaemia, attributed to
serum albumin
loss, was demonstrated seven weeks after infection, but this was not associated with the interaction of Cu deficiency and nematode infection. No changes in serum globulins were detected. Although the results support the contention that gastro-intestinal nematodiasis can significantly exacerbate an existing Cu deficiency in sheep, there was no evidence that hypocuprosis would predispose sheep to higher nematode burdens.
...
PMID:Effects of concurrent copper deficiency and gastro-intestinal nematodiasis on circulating copper and protein levels, liver copper and bodyweight in sheep. 396 64
Binding curves for the adsorption of plasma fibronectin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, alpha-2-macroglobulin,
ceruloplasmin
, transferrin and bovine
serum albumin
to plain and to hydroxylated polystyrene surfaces were measured. These curves were correlated with the adhesion of BHK cells and leucocytes to these adsorbed protein surfaces in protein-free culture media. Hydroxylated polystyrene adsorbed less of alpha-1-antitrypsin, alpha-2-macroglobulin and albumin than the plain polystyrene. On the other hand the hydroxylated surfaces bound more fibronectin than the plain polystyrene surfaces. Hydroxylated polystyrene surfaces were also more adhesive for both BHK cells and leucocytes than plain polystyrene: a result confirming earlier work. The competition of fibronectin for adsorption to plain polystyrene with alpha-1-antitrypsin, alpha-2-macroglobulin and
ceruloplasmin
was measured and correlated with effects on cell adhesion. The results suggest that the low adhesiveness of BHK cells and leucocytes on plain polystyrene in sera-containing media is due both to the low binding of fibronectin and to the binding of
serum albumin
, alpha-1-antitrypsin and alpha-2-macroglobulin. The relative unimportance of fibronectin in adhesion to these surfaces is shown by the finding that cell attachment will not occur to polystyrene surfaces that have bound high levels of the antiadhesive proteins in the presence of fibronectin, even though attachment will occur in the absence of fibronectin provided that the antiadhesive proteins are lacking.
...
PMID:The competitive effects of serum proteins on cell adhesion. 608 6
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