Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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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)
Radio gel and affin chromatography were used to study big gastrin interaction with blood proteins of man and animals. The experiments showed that big gastrin interacts with serum proteins in vitro. The gastrin-blood protein complex is labile and readily dissociates (
T 1
/2 = 8--14 min). A more stable complex is found in acidic medium. Ceruloplasmin is one of the blood serum proteins able to interact with big gastrin. The stability of hormone-protein complex, formed by gastrin and
ceruloplasmin
, is dependent upon hormone concentration. With the addition of C-terminal penta--and octapeptides to labelled hormone, binding increased. It is speculated that formation of labile gastrin-blood protein complexes is necessary for selective gastrin transport from hormone-producing cells to target cells.
...
PMID:Interaction of synthetic human big gastrin with blood proteins of man and animals. 46 90
To explore the possibility that the behavior of immune complexes can, under some circumstances, be directed by the antigen, we have studied the behavior of complexes of identical size made with the glycoproteins, orosomucoid (OR), and
ceruloplasmin
: or with their desialylated derivatives, asialo-orosomucoid (ASOR) and asialo-
ceruloplasmin
. Such desialylated proteins are rapidly removed from the circulation by a hepatic cell receptor for galactose, the sugar exposed upon removal of sialic acid. Mixtures of 125I-goat anti-ASOR with either ASOR or OR and mixtures of 125I-rabbit anti-OR with either ASOR or OR form complexes identically. The complexes were separated by density gradient centrifugation and injected intravenously into C3H mice. Blood clearance and hepatic uptake of the OR complexes and ASOR complexes were markedly different.
T 1
/2 for the goat OR complexes exceeded 300 min, whereas that for the ASOR complexes was 15 min. More detailed studies using rabbit complexes of various sizes revealed that light rabbit complexes behaved similarly to the goat complexes. The light rabbit OR complexes were cleared slowly, with only 18% found in the liver at 60 min, whereas the light rabbit ASOR complexes were cleared much more rapidly, with 62% found within the liver by 30 min. This rapid clearance was completely suppressed by a prior injection of a blocking dose of ASOR, which implies uptake by a galactose-mediated mechanism on hepatocytes. As the size of the rabbit complexes increased, so did the rate of Fc receptor-mediated clearance. Heavy rabbit OR complexes were cleared more rapidly than light OR complexes but not so rapidly as heavy ASOR complexes. The clearance and hepatic uptake of the heavy OR complexes were markedly suppressed by a prior injection of heat-aggregated gamma globulin, a known Fc receptor-blocking agent (45% hepatic uptake without and 6% with aggregated gamma globulin). The heavy rabbit ASOR complexes exhibited inhibition of blood clearance and hepatic uptake by both galactose receptor-blocking and Fc receptor-blocking agents. A blocking dose of ASOR reduced the hepatic uptake at 30 min from 75 to 49%, and heat-aggregated gamma globulin reduced it from 75 to 39%, which suggests that these heavy complexes were removed from the circulation by receptors both for the immunoglobulin and for the antigen. Cell separation studies and autoradiographs confirmed that those complexes cleared primarily by galactose-mediated mechanism were within hepatocytes, and those cleared by Fc receptors were within the nonparenchymal cells of the liver. It seems probable, therefore, the some antigen-antibody complexes may be removed from the circulation via receptors not only for immunoglobulin but also for antigen.
...
PMID:Influence of antigen on immune complex behavior in mice. 616 33