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)

After borohydride reduction, carboxymethylation, and tryptic digestion of the holoenzyme of pig heart alanine aminotransferase, a single icosapeptide containing the N6-(phosphopyridoxyl)lysine residue was isolated by a combination of gel filtration and ion-exchange chromatogrpahy. Its primary structure was determined as Gln-Glu-Leu-Ala-Ser-Phe-His-Ser-Val-Ser-Lsy(Pxy)-Gly-Phe-Met-Gly-Glu-Cys-Gly-Phe-Arg.
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PMID:Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate binding site of pig heart alanine aminotransferase. 46 50

Gene frequencies of common and rare GPT alleles derived from an investigation of 1139 unrelated, healthy individuals from southwestern Germany are given. GPT typing was performed by means of horizontal starch gel electrophoresis in a Tris-histidine x HCl buffer system. In addition, a new electrophoretic variant, GPT9, is described. The frequencies of the GPT alleles observed were calculated as: GPT1, 0.4987; GPT2, 0.4686; GPT1M, 0.022; GPT0, 0.005; GPT3, 0.0022; GPT4, 0.0025; GPT8, 0.0005; GPT9, 0.0005.
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PMID:Polymorphism of alanine aminotransferase (E.C.2.7.6.1): common and rare alleles. 51 Nov 57

Changes in serum amino acid levels and time course of hepatic function derangements were studied in mongrel dogs with choledochus ligature and subsequent biliarly reconstruction through cholecysto-duodenostomy. In the second week after choledochus ligature, serum ammonium level increased along with intensification of jaundice. After four weeks, GPT activity was higher than GOT and plasma albumin level markedly decreased with similar reduction in serum amino acid levels. Biliary reconstruction, when performed during three or four weeks after the ligature, restored the hepatic function as well as serum amino acid levels toward normal. When it was performed in the fifth or sixth week after the ligation, the liver function did not restore and serum levels of total amino acids, essential and non-essential amino acids increased even 4 weeks lapse after reconstruction. Among the changes observed, His., Val., Ser., Arg., Leu., Ileu, Phe, and Lys. were increased, whereas Pro. and Cys. disappeared from the serum. These results suggest that recovery from metabolic changes of amino acids due to choledochus ligature depends upon the duration of obstructive jaundice, i.e., it appears necessary to perform the biliary reconstruction within four weeks after the initiation of obstruction.
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PMID:[Experimental study on changes in serum amino acid levels following choledochus ligature and subsequent biliary reconstruction (author's transl)]. 82 88

Gyrocotyle fimbriata isolated from the spiral valve of Hydrolagus colliei were washed, then held in a filtered seawater-penicillin-Tris buffer medium. Ammonia and urea release to the medium declined together and ammonia production was minimal when the urea concentration was below detectable limits. Alanine and smaller amounts of glycine were released to the medium at a more constant rate. After 12 hr the alanine-glycine excretion was more than 20 times the ammonia excretion. L-arginine, L-serine, L-histidine, and urea were most effective in stimulating ammonia production by whole worms; other L-amino acids were essentially ineffective. L-glutamate dehydrogenase, L-amino acid oxidase, uricase, and ornithine transcarbamylase were below detectable levels. L-serine dehydrase, L-arginase, L-histidase, and urease were detected in tissue homogenates and probably account for most of the endogenous ammonia production. L-arginase has a molecular weight of 28,000 by Sehpadex gel filtration. The high levels of glutamate-pyruvate transaminase and lower levels of glutamate-oxalacetate transaminase correlate with the high level of alanine excretion. It is concluded that (1) ammonia production is not strongly linked to the overall energy metabolism of Gyrocotyle and is probably a result of a series of unrelated enzymatic reactions such as the action of urease of urea from the tissue of the rat fish, and (2) alanine and glycine are the major nitrogen excretory products and their production is linked to the energy metabolism of Gyrocotyle.
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PMID:Ammonia formation and amino acid excretion by Gyrocotyle fimbriata (Cestoidea). 111 78

A 42-year-old male was admitted with subarachnoidal hemorrhage. Dexamethasone 224 mg was used to reduce brain edema. His operation was successful without blood transfusion. No remarkable signs and symptoms were found except HBsAg positive and mild GPT elevation during his admission. He was discharged on the 33rd day. But 2 weeks later, he felt general fatigue and became worse day by day. He was re-admitted on the 75th day. Several therapies were given but he died of hepatic failure on the 85th day. The autopsy showed liver cirrhosis with massive necrosis. We believed that the steroid-withdrawal-phenomenon caused excessive immunological response and this process caused his hepatic failure leading to death.
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PMID:[A case of HBsAg positive liver cirrhosis who died after withdrawal of steroid]. 140 69

Many modifications of the UW solution have been reported to yield successful results in rat liver preservation and transplantation. One solution used histidine, in combination with lactobionate (HL-I), and gave superior preservation of the rat liver when compared with the UW solution. In this study we have compared the HL-I solution with 90 mM histidine, HL-II solution with 30 mM histidine, and the UW solution in dog liver preservation and transplantation. Dog livers were preserved for 48 hr in one of the three solutions and transplanted. The peak AST and ALT values were highest in livers preserved in HL-I, intermediate in UW solution, and lowest in HL-II. However, there were no significant differences among survival rates (average 5-7 days per group), posttransplant serum concentration of liver enzymes (AST, ALT, LDH, and alk-phos), clotting factors (PT and PTT), bilirubin, and fibrinogen concentration for each group. Dogs were sacrificed or died within 5-7 days due to rejection in nonimmunosuppressed dogs. Also, rat livers were preserved in the HL-II solution or in a solution in which histidine was replaced by isoleucine (IL-I). Isoleucine is an amino acid with a molecular mass similar to that of histidine, but is not as good a hydrogen ion buffer as histidine at the pH used for liver preservation (7.4). The buffer capacity of the IL-I solution was similar to the UW solution, but about one-half as much as the HL-II solution. Rats receiving a liver preserved for 30 hr in HL-II or IL-I were 100% viable. Rats receiving a liver preserved for 40-44 hr in HL-II or IL-I showed less survival (33% and 25%, respectively). This shows that histidine can be effectively replaced by isoleucine in a preservation solution and gives equivalent preservation results. Thus, the mechanism of improvement of liver preservation with histidine is not due to its action as a hydrogen ion buffer. These studies show that, although the HL solutions are superior for preservation of the rat liver, they are not superior to the UW solution for preservation of the dog liver. However, as others have shown in the rat liver transplant model, a simplified UW solution (HL-II) appears effective in dog liver preservation. The dog liver transplant model remains a more appropriate model for testing new preservation solutions prior to initiation of clinical trials.
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PMID:A comparison of histidine-lactobionate and UW solution in 48-hour dog liver preservation. 141 52

A 63 year old man underwent MCA aneurysmal neck clipping under O2-N2O-enflurane anesthesia. On the 46th postoperative day after the first operation, he had cranioplasty under O2-N2O-sevoflurane anesthesia. Hepatic injury occurred after the operation, and GOT, GPT and bilirubin increased above 700 IU.l-1, 800 IU.l-1 and 15.0 mg.dl-1 respectively but consciousness disturbance, hyperammonemia and DIC did not appear. His hepatic injury improved on conservative therapy. It seems that his hepatic injury was not caused by hepatitis viruses or hepatotoxicity of any drugs, but caused by cross sensitization between halogenated inhalation anesthetics, especially enflurane and sevoflurane, judging from drug induced lymphocyte stimulating test (DLST). We have to select an anesthetic method considering potential hepatic injury by halogenated anesthetics in a case of repeated anesthesia and operations during a short-term.
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PMID:[A case of postoperative hepatic injury after sevoflurane anesthesia]. 146 Jul 59

Viral sequence and host immune response were investigated in an unusual, asymptomatic chronic hepatitis B virus carrier (human leukocyte antigen type A24, Bw61, Bw62, Bw6, DRw11, DRw52, DQw7) who was consistently nonreactive for antibody to HBc and had a normal ALT level over a 5-yr study period. The precore and core region DNA sequences of virus isolated from his serum had seven silent mutations that resulted in no changes in the amino acid sequence of the adr HBsAg subtype. He had no abnormalities in the number of peripheral blood T or B cells and no HBcAg-specific suppressor T cells. His lymphocytes proliferated in vitro in response to phytohemagglutinin, pokeweed mitogen, Staphylococcus aureus and tetanus toxoid but not to recombinant HBcAg. Unlike other HBsAg carriers and hepatitis B virus-immune individuals, his monocytes did not ingest beads coated with HBcAg. Failure to produce antibody to HBc was not due to an hepatitis B virus variant but to a selective immune system defect in this asymptomatic HBsAg carrier.
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PMID:Chronic hepatitis B virus infection in an anti-HBc-nonreactive blood donor: variant virus or defective immune response? 153 7

Hepatic microabscesses have been described in immunosuppressed patients. However, there has been no previous report concerning hepatic microabscesses caused by Escherichia coli (E. coli). Recently, we experienced a 75-year-old male patient who had suffered from fever and upper abdominal pain for 4 days. His laboratory tests revealed an increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (55 mm/hr), the white cell count was 7500/cumm with 82% segmented leukocytes, minimally elevated serum alkaline phosphatase and serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase. Ultrasonography (US) showed multiple tiny hypo- or nearly anechoic lesions (3-8mm) diffusely scattered in both hepatic lobes. Some lesions were too small to be demonstrated and only distal acoustic enhancement posterior to the lesions could be noted. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan subsequently demonstrated the tiny hypodense and cystic lesions and confirmed the US diagnosis of microabscesses. Cultures of blood and liver aspirates showed E. coli. Although US and CT appearance of hepatic microabscesses caused by E. coli may be characteristic, it is not specific. Differential diagnosis should include multiple biliary hamartomas, and definite diagnosis should be made by needle aspiration.
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PMID:Hepatic microabscesses caused by Escherichia coli--US and CT appearance. 164 78

To see whether the introduction of screening tests for post-transfusion non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANBH) in the UK would be worth while, the incidence of such hepatitis was assessed among patients receiving blood during operations at five hospitals served by the North London Blood Transfusion Centre. 387 patients, who each received blood or blood components from an average of 3 donors were followed up prospectively and blood samples were taken every 2 weeks for 3 months and then each month for a further 3 months. 229 patients also provided a sample at 12 months. All available patient and donor samples were tested for alanine aminotransferase concentrations and for antibody to hepatitis C virus (anti-HCV) by ELISA. Repeatedly anti-HCV positive samples were submitted to supplementary HCV assays. 1 of the 387 patients showed biochemical evidence of acute post-transfusion NANBH after exclusion of non-viral causes. Anti-HCV developed in this patient and the seroconversion was confirmed by recombinant immunoblot assay and polymerase chain reaction. Serum from 1 of the 8 donors whose blood he received was positive for anti-HCV by all three methods. In another patient HCV seroconversion was shown by ELISA but alanine aminotransferase concentrations remained normal throughout follow-up. His samples and those of his 2 donors were negative for HCV by the polymerase chain reaction. A third patient showed rises in alanine aminotransferase compatible with post-transfusion NANBH, but serology and polymerase chain reaction assays for HCV were negative for her samples and those of her donors. Anti-HCV reactivity likely to be false positive (negative by both confirmatory tests and no adverse effects in recipients) was seen in 6 of 1283 donors. This study, despite its being carried out in the part of the UK with the highest frequency of infectious markers in blood donations, has shown a very low incidence of post-transfusion NANBH.
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PMID:Low incidence of non-A, non-B post-transfusion hepatitis in London confirmed by hepatitis C virus serology. 170 35


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