Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Estrogen effects on plasma iron and ferroxidase activity in some mammals and domestic fowl are studied, to investigate a possible estrogen mechanism on iron through its action on the ferroxidase system. Although estrogen generally induces ceruloplasmin, iron mobilization, characterized by a rise in plasma iron, was evident only in rats and chickens. Gonadotrophin treatment confirmed these results. A decreasing affect on plasma iron was noted in rabbits and guinea-pigs, substantiated by some bibliographical data. Ferroxidase activity increased and a copper-dependent factor was evident in copper injected species. Iron mobilization, however, was produced only in rats and chickens. D-penicillamine treatment considerably lowered ferroxidase activity in rats and suppressed the estradiol increasing plasma iron effect. This response to the copper-chelating drug did not take place in the other species. This phenomenon could be explained by the presence of two copper-dependent ferroxidases (ferroxidase I or ceruloplasmin and ferroxidase II) in rat plasma, as recently published.
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PMID:The serum ferroxidase system and the effect of estrogen on plasma iron. 93 20

Activated thiol-Sepharose [agarose-(glutathione-2-pyridyl disulfide) conjugate] has been used to immobilize proteins with a single or a few thiol groups via disulfide bridges. The immobilized proteins were subsequently proteolytically degraded. After washing, the thiol-containing peptides were eluted with a reducing agent. A single preparative paper electrophoresis, occasionally after a modification such as oxidation, was sufficient to obtain pure peptides in good yields. The method was applied to the major parvalbumin from hake muscle (a protein with 108 amino acid residues and one cysteine residue), to mercaptalbumin from bovine serum (565 residues and one cysteine), and to human serum ferroxidase [EC 1.16.3.1; iron (II):oxygen oxidoreductase] (ceruloplasmin) (1065 residues and three cysteines). The use of the technique, e.g., as a simple means of obtaining homologous peptides in related proteins, is discussed.
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PMID:A rapid and specific method for isolation of thiol-containing peptides from large proteins by thiol-disulfide exchange on a solid support. 105 90

Fourty two patients with uterine fibromyoma aged from 21 to 68 years have been investigated prior to surgery and after it. The iron content and ceruloplasmin activity in blood serum are considerably higher than normal before the operation and markedly decreased after it. The iron content in blood serum and leucocytes pre- and postoperatively is lower while in erythrocytes higher than normal. There is some parellelism in redistribution of iron between serum and the formed elements of blood in the postoperative period.
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PMID:Copper and iron content and the ceruloplasmin activity in the leukocytes, erythrocytes and blood serum in uterin fibromyoam before after surgery. 113 19

In an attempt to understand the variability of the hematologic response to oral sodium cyanate, iron metabolism was studied in a group of 39 patients with sickel cell disease. Eleven of the 39 patients were found to have no stainable iron in the marrow despite the fact that patients with sickle cell disease are generally considered to have hemosiderosis. The mean per cent saturation and total iron-binding capacity were in the low-normal range in sickle cell patients whether or not stainable iron was present in the bone marrow aspirate. Serum ferritin concentrations, on the other hand, were found to be high in both groups (greater than 500 mu g/liter) when compared to controls (60 mu g/liter). The high serum ferritin levels denoted significant total-body iron deposition which may be unavailable for normal metabolic processes. One patient with no stainable iron in the bone marrow aspirate did respond to iron therapy alone with an increase in hemoglobin concentration. Serum ceruloplasmin levels were also found to be high in sickle cell disease patients. The ability to respond to oral cyanate therapy was correlated with the amount of stainable iron in the bone marrow aspirate. These studies emphasize the necessity of a reevaluation of iron metabolism in the pathophysiology and treatment of sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Iron metabolism, sickle cell disease, and response to cyanate. 117 92

The oxidation of reduced human ferroxidase by molecular O2 was studied in a stopped-flow spectrophotometer. It was shown that the two type 1 copper atoms behave differently in the absence of iron. The effect of iron on the kinetic parameters was investiagted. A working model for intramolecular electron transport in the enzyme is proposed.
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PMID:Intramolecular electron transport in human ferroxidase (caeruloplasmin). 121 91

Insufficiencies of the circulatory system and increasing transport losses in pigs as well as analogies with respect to atherosclerosis of men and swine were the motives for a broad statistical investigation of important characteristics of the circulatory system in a big population of female German landrace pigs, fattened as progeny groups under identical conditions in a testing station and slaughtered at 100 kg weight. As the most essential results, highly significant seasonal and genetical influences on several traits are to be mentioned, and some meaningful correlations between them: Plasma cholesterol, ceruloplasmin and hematocrit showed markedly lower levels in the summer and increased values in the cold season; the thickness of the intima (aorta and arteria pulmonalis) was quite distinctly greatest in the spring, this phenomenon being almost exactly paralleled by augmented amounts of copper and iron in the aortic wall. Increased heart weights were again found in the cold, decreased ones in the warm seasons. On average, bigger hearts and vessels were accompanied by higher elastin contents of the aorta, but these contents stood in very significant negative correlation to the ash content and the amounts of certain mineral components (Ca, Mg and P) of the vessel wall, especially to the ash percentage of the elastic fibers. This indicates that calcifying and mineralizing processes in the wall obviously take place at the cost of the elastic components. The estimation of heritabilities in half and full sibs revealed with h2 = 60% high henetic influences on the elastin content of the aorta and equally so on the ash percentage of elastic fibers. Future investigations must correlate these findings with direct measurements of biomechanical and rheological properties of the vessels.
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PMID:[The exogenous and genetic components of some vessel wall characteristics in the pig (author's transl)]. 122 Jun 64

Fifteen male swimmers (mean age 19.3 +/- 2.1 years) were subjected to a standard 120 min swimming exercise test: a) before, and b) after 5 weeks of intensive training at middle altitude (2000 m). At rest, serum levels of alpha2-macroglobulin, transferrin and copper were elevated in swimmers as compared to untrained subjects. After the altitude training program, significant increases of the parameters of iron and copper metabolism, as well as of alpha2HS-glycoprotein and beta1A-globulin were observed. After the first exercise test (a), a significant rise in serum alpha1-acid glycoprotein, alpha1-antitrypsin, hemopexin, alpha2-macroglobulin, ceruloplasmin, transferrin, iron, copper and alpha2-HS-glycoprotein was noted. The same 120 min-exercise test after the altitude training (b) led to only small changes, especially as concerns the parameters of iron metabolism. The characteristic immediate and long-lasting changes in serum proteins and heavy metals in swimmers and the effects of training in middle altitude on the answer of the organism to swimming exercise with respect to the mentioned biochemical parameters are discussed.
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PMID:[Changes in serum proteins,-iron and -copper in swimmers before and after altitude training (author's transl)]. 125 81

A study was made of the interaction of plasma ascorbate and ascorbate free radical (AFR) with exogenously added iron. The quantitative determination of AFR has the advantage that transient increases in ascorbate oxidation can be directly monitored by e.p.r. spectroscopy. An AFR signal was found in the plasma of all donors and was unaffected by superoxide dismutase, catalase and the strong iron chelator deferoxamine. These findings and the rapid decrease in AFR under a nitrogen atmosphere suggest that plasma AFR is probably a result of air auto-oxidation. Iron loading of plasma did not affect the intensity of the AFR signal until the iron concentration approached or exceeded the plasma latent iron-binding capacity. In iron-overloaded plasma, the intensity of the AFR signal increased to about 10 times the normal level before decreasing rapidly to undetectable levels after 15-20 min. Determination of plasma ascorbate showed that the disappearance of AFR was due to a complete loss of the vitamin. When 50 microM-ascorbate was loaded with iron in iso-osmotic phosphate buffer there was an increase in the AFR signal, independent of the iron concentration, which was stable at least for 15 min. Thus the rate of ascorbate loss in the iso-osmotic phosphate buffer was considerably lower than in iron-overloaded plasma. The addition of different iron chelators produced comparable effects on the intensity of the AFR signal in both iron-overloaded plasma and ascorbate solution. These results suggest that the characteristic behaviour of plasma AFR after iron loading is due to its specific iron-binding capacity and to plasma ferroxidase activity. The ferroxidase activity of plasma is important to promote the transfer of Fe2+ into transferrin without a transient ascorbate oxidation. Spin-trapping studies with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide and N-t-butyl-alpha-phenylnitrone revealed that iron-overloaded plasma was unable to produce spin-trap adducts even in the presence of 50-300 microM-hydrogen peroxide or 100 microM-azide. Evidence of OH. radical formation was obtained only after the addition of EDTA. Therefore, iron-overloaded plasma itself does not produce a Fenton reaction and, if ascorbate does indeed have a free-radical-mediated pro-oxidant role, it is not detectable in plasma by spin-trapping experiments.
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PMID:Iron-induced ascorbate oxidation in plasma as monitored by ascorbate free radical formation. No spin-trapping evidence for the hydroxyl radical in iron-overloaded plasma. 131 30

The respiratory burst of neutrophils generates oxygen radicals that can result in lipid peroxidation and may contribute to acute lung injury in the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Because ceruloplasmin and transferrin are inhibitors of lipid peroxidation and may play a role in regulating tissue injury, antigen levels of ceruloplasmin and transferrin and ceruloplasmin oxidase levels were measured in the serum and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) of ARDS patients (n = 28), patients at risk for ARDS (n = 22), and normal control subjects (n = 45). Serum ceruloplasmin levels were similar in ARDS (mean +/- SEM) (3.8 +/- 0.3 microM) and at-risk (3.3 +/- 0.4 microM) patients compared with control subjects (3.2 +/- 0.2 microM). Serum transferrin levels were decreased in ARDS (14.9 +/- 1.7 microM) and at-risk (20.4 +/- 1.7 microM) patients compared with normal control subjects (32.9 +/- 1.2 microM), and serum transferrin levels correlated with serum unsaturated iron binding capacity (UIBC). Ceruloplasmin was detected in only one of 38 normal BALF samples (0.002 +/- 0.002 microM) and two of 13 at-risk BALF samples (0.15 +/- 0.1 microM), yet it was present in 17 of 23 ARDS BALF samples (0.9 +/- 0.2 microM). Transferrin was also increased in ARDS BALF (5.4 +/- 1.1 microM) compared with at-risk (0.7 +/- 0.5 microM) and normal (0.4 +/- 0.1 microM) samples. Ceruloplasmin that was present in the BALF and serum samples had functional oxidase activity, and purified human ceruloplasmin inhibited hydroxyl radical formation by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-stimulated neutrophils.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Ceruloplasmin and transferrin levels are altered in serum and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid of patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 131 27

Normal human plasma contains numerous high- and low-molecular-mass redox-active molecules that are able to react rapidly with organic and inorganic oxygen radicals. The ability of such plasma molecules to substantially inhibit, or delay, free-radical mediated oxidation of added substrates has led to their classification as important biological antioxidants. Using phospholipids to detect organic oxygen radicals and deoxyribose to detect inorganic oxygen radicals, we here show that the primary antioxidants of normal human plasma reside mainly in two plasma proteins representing no more than 4% of the total proteins present. The iron-binding properties of transferrin and the iron-oxidising properties of caeruloplasmin, at a reaction dilution of 1:50, offer considerable protection against organic and inorganic oxygen radicals generated by iron and ascorbate. Plasma thiol-group-containing molecules, at concentrations well below those that would be required to compete with the detector molecule (based on known second-order rate constants for reaction with hydroxyl radicals) inhibited damage to deoxyribose, but stimulated damage to phospholipids.
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PMID:Antioxidant protection against organic and inorganic oxygen radicals by normal human plasma: the important primary role for iron-binding and iron-oxidising proteins. 132 59


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