Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.16.3.1 (ceruloplasmin)
5,074 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A literature review of the effect of oral contraceptive (o.c.) use on various metabolic processes is presented. Several studies show an adverse effect of o.c. use on subclinical diabetes and on patients with manifest insulin-independent diabetes. Some researchers have found a beneficial effect of o.c. use on older diabetics. It has not been determined whether the estrogen or gestagen component of o.c.s is responsible for this decrease in glucose tolerance, nor has the mechanism for this effect been discovered. Changes in various plasma protein concentrations have been observed during o.c. use, which affect the blood coagulation and the blood pressure regulation systems. The estrogen component appears to be responsible for the increase in the serum triglyceride concentration during o.c. use; the mechanism is still unknown. Some studies indicate that o.c. use causes an increase in serum cholesterol levels, which could promote gall stone formation. An increase in Vitamin A concentration has been observed during o.c. use. Riboflavin, folic acid, vitamin B 12, and ascorbic acid levels have been shown to decrease during o.c. use. A decrease in pyridoxin levels during o.c. use indicates an increased metabolism of tryptophan to nicotinic acid robosyl-5-phosphate. This would cause a decrease in serotonin production, which could be a cause of the depression experienced by some o.c. users. An increase in the plasma copper and caeruloplasmin levels during o.c. use is apparently due to the estrogen component. An increase in transferrin and the serum iron levels have been observed during o.c. use. Contradictory findings are reported concerning the plasma concentration of zinc.
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PMID:[Metabolic studies under administration of oral contraceptives. A review]. 34 1

Recently, a few reports have shown that severe depression may be associated with higher levels of positive acute phase proteins (APPs), such as haptoglobin (Hp), alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (alpha 1S) and lower levels of negative APPs (visceral proteins), such as albumin (Alb) and transferrin (Tf). In order to reassess whether depression is related to alterations in the expression of plasma APP concentrations, we measured in 84 normal controls and depressed inpatients positive APPs such as Hp, alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1AT), hemopexin (Hpx), ceruloplasmin (Cp), complement component C3C and one visceral protein, i.e., retinol binding protein (RBP). We found increased plasma concentrations of Hp, alpha 1AT, and Cp in major depressed subjects as compared with healthy controls, with minor depressives exhibiting an intermediate position. RBP was significantly lower in minor and major depressives than in normal controls. The disorders in these proteins were rather sensitive (62%) for major depression, with a specificity equalling 96%. Our findings are compatible with the hypothesis that major depression may be accompanied by inflammatory changes with higher levels of positive APPs (i.e., alpha 1AT, Hp, Cp, alpha 1S) and lower levels of visceral proteins (i.e., RBP, Tf, Alb).
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PMID:Higher alpha 1-antitrypsin, haptoglobin, ceruloplasmin and lower retinol binding protein plasma levels during depression: further evidence for the existence of an inflammatory response during that illness. 157 27

Sera were sampled from 83 people (pre- and post-menopausal women and men). Climacteric symptoms of 23 women were treated with conjugated estrogen. Sera were sampled serially until the 21st day of estrogen administration. Serum concentrations of 40 protein components were measured by micro single radial immunodiffusion. The serum proteins were classified into 5 types according to changes after menopause and estrogen therapy, respectively. Type 1 (decreased after menopause and increased by estrogen; alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 2-HS - glycoprotein, beta 2-glycoprotein III, Gc-globulin, alpha 1-lipoprotein and alpha 2-AP-glycoprotein), type 2 (unchanged and increased; ceruloplasmin), type 3 (increased and decreased; alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, haptoglobin, serum amyloid P-component, Zn-alpha 2-glycoprotein, beta-lipoprotein and C1-components), type 4 (unchanged and decreased; hemopexin, antithrombin III, beta 2-glycoprotein I, prealbumin and retinol-binding-protein), type 5 (unchanged by estrogen; immunoglobulin M (IgM), IgG and others). Estrogen replacement therapy restored pre-menopausal levels of serum proteins, types 1 and 3. However, estrogen therapy was associated with significantly abnormal levels of proteins, types 2 and 4 in post-menopausal women. Serum levels of type 1 proteins and some type 5 proteins (IgM, alpha 1B-glycoprotein, C9-component and alpha 2-macroglobulin) were higher in pre-menopausal women than in men, whereas type 3 proteins were the opposite.
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PMID:Changes in 40 serum proteins of post-menopausal women. 186 40

Serum concentrations of sex hormone binding globulin, transcortin, thyroxine binding globulin, transthyretin together with retinol binding protein, ceruloplasmin, transferrin and albumin were measured sequentially in pregnant women in order to derive more definite suppositions relating to the prime function of hormone binding proteins. Thus, the fact that except for transthyretin all other specific hormone binding proteins exhibited appreciable but significantly variable increases would suggest: a) the apparent existence of more complex mechanisms regulating protein metabolism during pregnancy than hitherto postulated (i.e. the general notion of an integrated estrogen influence); b) a major and distinctive role for each of the hormone binding proteins is plausible since alterations in hormonal requirements by the fetus as pregnancy progresses can not be provided by the almost constant transplacental transfer rate of the "free" hormone moiety.
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PMID:Consideration on some hormone binding proteins patterns during pregnancy. 204 64

Measurement of peroxyl-radical trapping capacity (TRAP) were made in plasma from patients with malaria from a rural and an urban Thai community. The results were compared with those from control subjects living in the same areas and chosen to match the patients closely. Measurements were also made of various antioxidants including nutritional indices vitamin C and alpha-tocopherol and the non-nutritional indices urate and protein-sulphydryl. Parasite counts, temperature on examination and the duration of illness were recorded together with measurements of plasma caeruloplasmin (EC 1.16.3.1), retinol and malondialdehyde (MDA). In general, most measurements made in the villagers were lower than those in the comparable urban groups. The exceptions were caeruloplasmin and MDA when the latter was expressed as MDA:cholesterol ratio. TRAP values were extremely low in 50% of the villagers and 25% of the urban patients with malaria and these results correlated with retinol and vitamin C and inversely with malonaldehyde. The results suggested that low TRAP values are associated with lipid peroxidation and that vitamin C and possibly retinol may be destroyed by the oxidative conditions present in the plasma in this disease.
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PMID:Influence of malaria infection on peroxyl-radical trapping capacity in plasma from rural and urban Thai adults. 220 93

Retinol-binding protein, haptoglobin and ceruloplasmin were determined in the plasma of patients with colorectal carcinoma. The comparison with a control group shows that retinol-binding is significantly decreased in colorectal carcinoma and that haptoglobin and ceruloplasmin are significantly elevated. The ROC-curves of the three parameters, however, display a sensitivity distinctly lower than that of CEA, so that any use in the clinical treatment of colorectal carcinoma cannot be expected from the determination of these substances.
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PMID:[Retinol-binding protein, haptoglobin and ceruloplasmin--tumor markers in colorectal cancer?]. 232 34

The serum concentrations of selected trace elements and proteins in cord blood from 17 newborn infants whose mothers were habitual smokers were compared with values from 22 infants of non-smoking mothers. All the mothers were healthy with normal pregnancies and deliveries. Cigarette smoke exposure was verified by determinations of nicotine, cotinine and thiocyanate concentrations in cord blood. Infants of smoking mothers had a slightly lower mean birth weight (3490 +/- 430 g) than control infants (3780 +/- 460 g). Infants of smokers had lower serum iron (p = 0.05) and prealbumin (p less than 0.05), but higher serum copper (p less than 0.05) and ceruloplasmin (p less than 0.01) levels than the controls. Infants of smoking mothers tended to have higher levels of the acute-phase reactants alpha-2-macroglobulin and orosomucoid, but lower levels of albumin, transferrin and retinol-binding-protein, although differences were not statistically significant.
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PMID:Selected trace elements and proteins in serum of apparently healthy newborn infants of mothers who smoked during pregnancy. 259 72

The vacuoles occurring in rat hepatocytes after intraportal injection of retinol (33 or 67 micrograms) were examined immunohistochemically using respective antibodies against rat albumin, human retinol-binding protein, human ceruloplasmin, human alpha 1-antitrypsin, human transferrin, and human prealbumin as representative plasma proteins. The occurrence of the vacuoles reached a numerical maximum 30 min after injection of 67 micrograms retinol, followed by a temporal decrease. Hepatocytes from control rats, which had been intraportally injected with either blood plasma diluted to 2/3 concentration or with retinol palmitate solvent (castor oil) dissolved in blood plasma, showed immunoreactive fine granules without the occurrence of vacuoles in the cytoplasm. Identical vacuoles in serial sections appeared immunohistochemically either immunoreactive or non-immunoreactive for all the antibodies used, with rare exceptions. The occurrence of several rare exceptions suggested that 2 kinds of vacuoles might be formed in different cytoplasmic compartments. A zonal distribution of vacuoles was apparent in the hepatic laminae (or acini) within the liver lobules. The vacuoles were predominantly distributed in zone 2, and to a lesser extent in zone 3 and zone 1 in that order.
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PMID:Immunohistochemistry of vacuoles occurring in rat hepatocytes after retinol administration. 278

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.
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PMID:The effect of different dietary levels of vitamin A on metabolism of copper iron and zinc in the chick. 303 14

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.
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PMID:The short and long term effect of gastric partitioning surgery on serum protein levels. 359 25


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