Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (alanine aminotransferase)
26,722 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To identify the serum factors that affect circulating leptin levels, we measured the serum concentrations of leptin, testosterone (T), estradiol (E), serum alanine aminotransferase, total cholesterol and uric acid (UA) in healthy male adolescents (age, 18.3 +/- 0.1 years, n=96). We also measured body mass index (BMI), percent body fat and thickness of skin fold to assess the effect of body constitution on serum leptin level. Since serum concentration of leptin significantly correlated with BMI (r=0.820, p<0.001), we analyzed the relation-ship between leptin/BMI ratio (L/BMI) and serum parameters. Analysis of data of subjects with normal serum T level showed a significant inverse correlation between L/BMI and serum T levels (n=96, r=-0.294, p<0.005), but no such correlation was present among non-obese subjects (n=70) with BMI of +/-20% of normal (22 kg/m2). There was no correlation between L/BMI and serum E level. Serum UA level significantly correlated with L/BMI in both the test group (n=96, r=0.520, p<0.001) and non-obese subjects (r=0.369, p<0.005). Stepwise multiple regression analysis showed that UA independently and significantly influenced serum leptin levels in both the test and control groups. Our results demonstrate that T weakly influences serum leptin concentration, and that UA concentrations strongly influences serum leptin in healthy male adolescents independent of their obesity level.
...
PMID:Serum leptin correlates with serum uric acid but not serum testosterone in non-obese male adolescents. 1133 71

Fatty livers are sensitive to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) damage. This study tests the hypothesis that this vulnerability occurs because protective, antiapoptotic mechanisms are not upregulated appropriately. Genetically obese, leptin-deficient ob/ob mice, a model for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, and their lean litter mates were treated with a small dose of LPS. General measures of liver injury, early (i.e., cytochrome c release) and late (i.e., activation of caspase 3) events that occur during hepatocyte apoptosis, and various aspects of the signal transduction pathways that induce nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) and several of its antiapoptotic transcriptional targets (e.g., inducible nitric oxide synthase, bfl-1, and bcl-xL) were compared. Within 0.5-6 h after LPS exposure, cytochrome c begins to accumulate in the cytosol of normal livers, and procaspase 3 cleavage increases. Coincident with these events, kinases (e.g., AKT and Erk-1 and -2) that result in the degradation of inhibitor kappa-B are activated; NF-kappaB activity is induced, and NF-kappaB-regulated gene products accumulate. Throughout this period, there is negligible histological evidence of liver damage, and serum alanine aminotransferase values barely increase over baseline values. Although ob/ob livers have significant histological liver injury and 11-fold greater serum alanine aminotransferase values than those of lean mice by 6 h post-LPS, they exhibit greater activation of AKT and Erk, more profound reductions in inhibitor kappa-B, enhanced activation of NF-kappaB, and greater induction of NF-kappaB-regulated genes. Consistent with this heightened antiapoptotic response, increases in cytochrome c and procaspase 3 cleavage products are inhibited. Together with evidence that ob/ob hepatocytes have a reduced ATP content and undergo increased lysis after in vitro exposure to tumor necrosis factor-alpha, these findings suggest that fatty livers are sensitive to LPS damage because of vulnerability to necrosis, rather than because of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Fatty liver vulnerability to endotoxin-induced damage despite NF-kappaB induction and inhibited caspase 3 activation. 1144 19

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), a prevalent condition associated with obesity, has the potential of evolving into end-stage liver disease. The biochemical mechanisms that define the progression of NAFLD are not well known, but reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been implicated in this process. Uncoupling protein (UCP) 2 is a mitochondrial inner-membrane protein that mediates proton leak, uncouples adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesis, and negatively regulates ROS production. UCP2 expression is increased in various animal models of NAFLD. Up-regulation of UCP2 may compromise cellular ATP levels and worsen liver damage, or it may be protective by ROS reduction in NAFLD. This study aimed to obtain a definitive answer as to whether increased UCP2 expression contributes to NAFLD. UCP2-/- mice were exposed to obesity by crossbreeding with ob/ob mice and by long-term high-fat feeding to study the effect of UCP2 deficiency on the outcome of NAFLD. Steatohepatitis score of crossbred mice (ob/ob/ko) was similar to that of ob/ob mice at 25 weeks. No compensatory increase was observed in the expression of UCP5 in ob/ob/ko livers. To unmask the effects of absent leptin and its potential proinflammatory actions, steatosis was also induced in UCP2-/- mice by a high-fat diet continued for 6 months. Serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels remained normal, and the steatohepatitis score in UCP2-/- mice was the same as in wild-type controls. We conclude that increased expression of UCP2 in the livers of mice with genetically or diet-induced obesity exerts neither protective nor deleterious effects on the severity of fatty liver disease.
...
PMID:Obesity-related fatty liver is unchanged in mice deficient for mitochondrial uncoupling protein 2. 1191 20

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a disorder characterized by hepatic steatosis, inflammation, and fibrosis. Leptin is an adipocyte-derived antiobesity hormone that in rodents prevents "lipotoxicity" by limiting triglyceride accumulation and also regulates matrix deposition (fibrosis) during wound healing. We therefore determined serum leptin levels in patients with NASH to determine whether relationships existed between leptin levels and severity of hepatic steatosis or fibrosis. We used a radioimmunoassay to determine serum [total] leptin concentrations in 27 men and 20 women with NASH and 47 controls matched for gender and body mass index (BMI; and partly for age). Serum leptin values were correlated with hepatic steatosis, fibrosis, and inflammation (each categorized semiquantitatively on liver histology), and with anthropometric indices, serum lipids, glucose, insulin, c-peptide, and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels. Compared with the controls, mean serum leptin levels were raised in both men and women with NASH (men 14 +/- 11 ng/mL vs. 7.2 +/- 4.1 ng/mL, P =.003; women 35 +/- 16 ng/mL vs. 15 +/- 8.2 ng/mL, P <.001). Leptin values correlated with serum c-peptide levels but not with BMI. In a multivariate analysis, serum leptin (P =.027), serum c-peptide (P =.001), and age (P =.027) were selected as independent predictors of the severity of hepatic steatosis. However, serum leptin was not an independent predictor of hepatic inflammation or fibrotic severity. In conclusion, hyperleptinemia occurs in NASH and is not explained simply by gender, obesity, or the presence of type 2 diabetes. Furthermore, leptin levels correlate directly with the severity of hepatic steatosis but not with inflammation or fibrosis. We propose that the relationship between leptin and steatosis reflects a pathogenic role of leptin in hepatic insulin resistance and/or a failure of the antisteatotic actions of leptin ("peripheral leptin resistance").
...
PMID:Serum leptin in NASH correlates with hepatic steatosis but not fibrosis: a manifestation of lipotoxicity? 1214 49

Leptin is a 16-kDa hormone with an array of biologic actions. We, and others, have demonstrated that leptin is critical to the development of liver fibrogenesis both in vitro and in the lean littermates of ob/ob mice exposed to carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4)). Controversy exists as to whether leptin can act as a direct cytokine in the development of increased collagen expression, and whether ob/ob mice are resistant to potential injury from CCl(4). Here, we provide evidence that strongly suggests that leptin acts to increase nascent production of mRNA for the alpha2(I) collagen gene based upon ribonuclease protection analysis (RPA). Actinomycin D, but not cyclohexamide, or the pan-neutralizing antibody to transforming growth factor beta one (TGFbeta1), significantly diminished the effect of leptin on total alpha2(I) collagen mRNA levels. Further evidence that leptin acts directly on HSCs to alter gene expression in liver wounding is demonstrated by enhanced binding of phosphorylated signal transduction and activator of transcription factor 3 (pStat3) to a cis-inducible element (SIE) oligonucleotide by electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA). This consensus sequence is responsible for production of a critical collagen transcription factor, AP-1. Finally, we have demonstrated from the ob/ob mouse model that these animals are at least as sensitive to CCl(4) as their respective lean animals as assessed by serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) measurements. Taken together, the current data provide a continued framework that leptin is a profibrogenic cytokine and plays a key role in liver fibrosis.
...
PMID:Leptin induces increased alpha2(I) collagen gene expression in cultured rat hepatic stellate cells. 1270 94

Animal studies have suggested that CLA, a natural component of meat and dairy products, may confer beneficial effects on health. However, human studies using supplementation with CLA have produced contradictory results. The aim of the present study was to further investigate the effect of CLA supplementation on human body fat, serum leptin, and serum lipids, as well as the incorporation of CLA isomers into serum lipids classes. Sixteen young healthy nonobese sedentary women received 2.1 g of CLA (divided equally between the cis,trans-9,11 and trans,cis-10,12 isomers) daily for 45 d and placebo for 45 d in a randomized double-blind crossover design. Body fat was estimated (by measurement of skinfold thickness at 10 sites), and blood was sampled at the beginning, middle, and end of the entire intervention period; an additional blood sample was obtained 2 wk thereafter. No significant differences in energy, carbohydrate, lipid, or protein intake existed between the CLA and placebo intake periods. No significant differences were found in body fat or serum leptin, TAG, total cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, and alanine aminotransferase between CLA and placebo. The CLA isomer content of serum TAG, phospholipids, and total lipids increased 2-5 times with CLA supplementation (P < 0.05). In contrast, the CLA content of cholesteryl esters did not change significantly. The period of 2 wk after the end of CLA supplementation was sufficient for its washout from serum lipids. These data indicate that supplementation with 2.1 g of CLA daily for 45 d increased its levels in blood but had no effect on body composition or the lipidemic profile of nonobese women.
...
PMID:Supplementation with CLA: isomer incorporation into serum lipids and effect on body fat of women. 1457 58

Hepatic steatosis may have a generally benign prognosis, either because most hepatocytes are not significantly injured or mechanisms to replace damaged hepatocytes are induced. To determine the relative importance of these mechanisms, we compared hepatocyte damage and replication in ethanol-fed and ob/ob mice with very indolent fatty liver disease to that of healthy control mice and PARP-1(-/-) mice with targeted disruption of the DNA repair enzyme, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. Compared to the healthy controls, both groups with fatty livers had significantly higher serum alanine aminotransferase values, hepatic mitochondrial H(2)O(2) production, and hepatocyte oxidative DNA damage. A significantly smaller proportion of the hepatocytes from fatty livers entered S phase when cultured with mitogens. Moreover, this replicative senescence was not reversed by treating cultured hepatocytes with agents (i.e., betaine or leptin) that improve liver disease in intact ethanol-fed or leptin-deficient mice. Hepatocytes from PARP1(-/-) mice also had more DNA damage and reduced DNA synthesis in response to mitogens. However, neither mice with fatty livers nor PARP-1-deficient mice had atrophic livers. All of the mice with senescent mature hepatocytes exhibited hepatic accumulation of liver progenitor (oval) cells and oval cell numbers increased with the demand for hepatocyte replacement. Therefore, although hepatic oxidant production and damage are generally increased in fatty livers, expansion of hepatic progenitor cell populations helps to compensate for the increased turnover of damaged mature hepatocytes. In conclusion, these results demonstrate that induction of mechanisms to replace damaged hepatocytes is important for limiting the progression of fatty liver disease.
...
PMID:Oval cells compensate for damage and replicative senescence of mature hepatocytes in mice with fatty liver disease. 1476 93

Obesity and type 2 diabetes are associated with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), but an obese/diabetic animal model that mimics human NASH remains undefined. We examined the induction of steatohepatitis and liver fibrosis in obese and type 2 diabetic db/db mice in a nutritional model of NASH and determined the relationship of the expressions of osteopontin (OPN) and leptin receptors to the pathogenesis of NASH. db/db mice and the corresponding lean and nondiabetic db/m mice were fed a diet deficient in methionine and choline (MCD diet) or control diet for 4 wk. Leptin-deficient obese and diabetic ob/ob mice fed similar diets were used for comparison. MCD diet-fed db/db mice exhibited significantly greater histological inflammation and higher serum alanine aminotransferase levels than db/m and ob/ob mice. Trichrome staining showed marked pericellular fibrosis in MCD diet-fed db/db mice but no significant fibrosis in db/m or ob/ob mice. Collagen I mRNA expression was increased 10-fold in db/db mice, 4-fold in db/m mice, and was unchanged in ob/ob mice. mRNA expressions of OPN, TNF-alpha, TGF-beta, and short-form leptin receptors (Ob-Ra) were significantly increased in db/db mice compared with db/m or ob/ob mice. Parallel increases in OPN and Ob-Ra protein levels were observed in db/db mice. Cultured hepatocytes expressed only Ob-Ra, and leptin stimulated OPN mRNA and protein expression in these cells. In conclusion, our results demonstrate the development of an obese/diabetic experimental model for NASH in db/db mice and suggest an important role for Ob-Ra and OPN in the pathogenesis of NASH.
...
PMID:Obese and diabetic db/db mice develop marked liver fibrosis in a model of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis: role of short-form leptin receptors and osteopontin. 1525 62

We investigated the relationship between serum leptin concentration, serum lipid profile and other blood biochemistry parameters in healthy post-menopausal women. Blood samples for analysis of serum leptin concentration, blood biochemistry and hormonal status, and urine samples for calcium measurement were taken from 122 women. No significant correlation was found between serum leptin concentration and serum lipid profile. The concentration of serum leptin was significantly associated with body mass index (BMI), luteinizing hormone (LH) and alanine transaminase (ALT). BMI was found to be a statistically significant independent factor for serum leptin concentration. We conclude that leptin was not associated with serum lipids and lipoproteins in post-menopausal women. Leptin was associated with BMI, ALT and LH, however, with BMI being an independent predictor of leptin concentration. There was a relationship between LH and serum leptin concentration even after menopause, and ALT correlated with serum leptin concentration through BMI.
...
PMID:Is leptin associated with serum lipid profile or any other parameters of blood biochemistry in post-menopausal women with osteoporosis? 1530 4

Steatotic mice are particularly susceptible to hepatic ischemia/reperfusion injury compared with their lean littermates. We have previously demonstrated that livers of mice having a spontaneous mutation in the leptin gene (ob/ob), resulting in global obesity and liver steatosis, are ATP depleted, are endotoxin sensitive, and do not survive (I/R) injury. We hypothesize that administration of an anti-LPS monoclonal antibody (mAb) prior to initiation of I/R would be protective from that insult. Steatotic mice (ob/ob) were subjected to 15 min of ischemia via complete porta-hepatis occlusion and varying lengths of reperfusion with or without pre-treatment with an anti-LPS mAb. There was 14-31% survival of isotype matched control mAb treated ob/ob mice after 15 min of ischemia and 24 h of reperfusion. In contrast, 75-83% of ob/ob mice pre-treated with an anti-LPS mAb prior to initiation of I/R survived both ischemia and 24 h of reperfusion. Furthermore, there was a decrease in ALT and circulating endotoxin levels when treated with an anti-LPS mAb compared with control antibodies. Attenuation of the endotoxin load with anti-LPS mAb, prior to initiation of I/R, was cytoprotective and improved survival. Consequently, these studies might offer a solution to the problems associated with using steatotic livers in clinical transplantation.
...
PMID:Anti-endotoxin monoclonal antibodies are protective against hepatic ischemia/reperfusion injury in steatotic mice. 1536 11


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>