Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.1.7 (acetylcholinesterase)
28,390 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Specific antiserum against acetylcholine (ACh) was produced in the rabbit immunized with a choline hemiglutarate-bovine serum albumin conjugate. The antiserum significantly cross-reacted with choline carboxylates, such as butyrylcholine, succinylcholine, and carbamylcholine. However, neither choline itself nor choline phosphates, such as phosphatidylcholine and phosphorylcholine, showed any significant cross-reaction. The antiserum was used to develop a radioimmunoassay for ACh. The assay can reliably determine as little as 170 pg of ACh. Acetylcholine concentrations in two regions of the rat brain were determined directly from an aqueous extract. After inhibition of acetylcholinesterase with physostigmine, ACh increased more in the forebrain than in the brainstem.
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PMID:Radioimmunoassay for acetylcholine in the rat brain. 739 52

To examine bile acid synthesis in chronic liver diseases, serum total 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol level was measured by gas-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry in patients with cirrhosis (n = 23), patients with chronic hepatitis (n = 21), and control subjects (n = 18). The serum 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol levels were significantly lower in patients with cirrhosis than the controls (78 +/- 59 pmol/mL vs. 237 +/- 97 pmol/mL; mean +/- SD). However, in patients with chronic hepatitis, the level was fully retained (262 +/- 102 pmol/mL). Serum 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol levels of 17 patients with cirrhosis classified as Child B and C ranged from 33 to 69 pmol/mL, and all were less than the normal range (between 104 and 466 pmol/mL), however, those levels of some patients classified as Child A were within the normal range. Serum 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol levels significantly correlated with serum albumin, cholinesterase, total bile acid, direct bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, indocyanine green (ICG) retention rate, hepaplastin test, and lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase activities. We conclude that bile acid synthesis is well preserved in patients with chronic hepatitis and that it is decreased in most patients with cirrhosis. Serum 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol may be a new parameter of liver function testing to assess hepatic bile acid synthesis in patients with chronic liver diseases.
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PMID:Serum 7 alpha-hydroxycholesterol as a new parameter of liver function in patients with chronic liver diseases. 755 70

This prospective study was designed to evaluate the ability of single and combined prognostic parameters in predicting postoperative infections in cancer surgical patients. The evaluation was based on multiple logistic analysis and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. The Younden's index (YI) was used to select threshold values of the parameters. This analysis was applied in 398 patients undergoing curative elective surgery for gastric, colorectal, or pancreatic cancer. At admission, the percentage of body weight loss, serum albumin, total lymphocyte count, total iron-binding capacity, and serum cholinesterase activity were evaluated. In all patients, the type and rate of postoperative infection were recorded. Multiple logistic analysis showed weight loss as the most predictive variable (p = 0.02), when taken individually. Its best cutoff value was 10% (YI = 1.27, p = 0.00001, ROC area = 0.62). When serum albumin was added as the second-best variable, with a threshold of 35 g/L, the combined YI was 1.27, and the ROC area was 0.65 (p NS vs. weight loss). Total lymphocyte count dichotomized at 2200 million/L was the third variable added to weight loss and serum albumin (YI = 1.31, ROC area = 0.59). In conclusion, weight loss split at 10% appears as the only index with a moderate prognostic performance that is worth evaluating in the preoperative nutrition assessment. A nonsignificant improvement of predictive ability was obtained by the combination of serum albumin, total lymphocyte count, total iron-binding capacity, or serum cholinesterase activity.
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PMID:Lack of improvement of prognostic performance of weight loss when combined with other parameters. 774 43

A simple and rapid procedure involving papain cleavage of the membrane anchor was used to isolate membrane-bound acetylcholinesterase from bovine erythrocytes. The solubilized enzyme was purified 930-fold by ion exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The properties of the papain-cleaved acetylcholinesterase were compared with those of a commercial acetylcholinesterase, solubilized from the erythrocyte membranes by detergents. Cleavage of the membrane anchor eliminated dimer aggregation, caused a pH shift in thermal stability and resulted in increased stability in organic solvents. Bovine serum albumin, used as stabilizer of the commercial enzyme preparation, increased the thermal stability but concomitantly decreased the activity of acetylcholinesterase at pH 6-8. The improved stability of the cleaved acetylcholinesterase, especially in organic solvents, may enhance the biosensor performance of the enzyme.
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PMID:Improved properties of bovine erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase, isolated by papain cleavage. 776 65

The noninvasive determination of effective hepatic blood flow, intrahepatic shunted blood flow, intrahepatic shunt index, and total hepatic blood flow was investigated by using the sequential single photon emission computed tomography. This method was performed for a period of 10 minutes following an intravenous injection of 99mTc-(Sn)-N-pyridoxyl-5-methyltryptophan and a venous blood sampling. This study comprised 8 healthy volunteers, 16 patients with chronic hepatitis, and 33 patients with liver cirrhosis. The intrahepatic shunt index measured with this method coincided with the intrahepatic shunt index determined by catheterization, indicating the high reliability of this procedure. The effective hepatic blood flow in patients with liver cirrhosis was significantly lower than that in the healthy controls and the chronic hepatitis group. The intrahepatic shunted blood flow was significantly higher in patients with liver cirrhosis compared with the flow in healthy controls. The intrahepatic shunt index was also significantly higher in patients with liver cirrhosis compared with the index of healthy controls and those with chronic hepatitis. No substantial differences were noted in the total hepatic blood flow among the three groups. The effective hepatic blood flow, the intrahepatic shunted blood flow, and the intrahepatic shunt index, correlated with the serum albumin concentration, the serum cholinesterase level, and the plasma indocyanine green attenuation rate. From these results, it was concluded that the present procedure constitutes a reliable and effective method for the noninvasive determination of hepatic blood flows. Consequently, it will be of high clinical value for assessing the functional and the pathological alterations of the liver.
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PMID:Single photon emission computed tomography to determine effective hepatic blood flow and intrahepatic shunting. 784 6

We measured urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) plasma levels in patients with various chronic liver diseases, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), also measuring these levels in healthy volunteers. Plasma u-PA levels in the group of patients with decompensated liver cirrhosis (mean modified Pugh score of 14 points) were markedly elevated and significantly higher than those in the patients with decompensated liver cirrhosis with HCC (modified Pugh score of 10 points), those with compensated liver cirrhosis with HCC, and those with compensated liver cirrhosis. Patients in all these three latter groups had moderately and significantly elevated u-PA levels compared to levels in the chronic hepatitis group and the healthy volunteers, but the levels were not significantly different from each other. There was no relationship between u-PA plasma level and the type of HCC tumor invasion or number or size of tumors. Significant correlations were found between u-PA plasma levels and the results of seven different liver function tests in three groups without associated HCC; u-PA antigen and prothrombin time (%), hepaplastin test (%), serum cholinesterase, serum albumin, serum total cholesterol, and indocyanine green clearance correlated negatively, while u-PA antigen and serum total bilirubin correlated positively. These results suggest that plasma u-PA is associated with deterioration of liver function but not with HCC invasion.
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PMID:Elevated urokinase-type plasminogen activator plasma levels are associated with deterioration of liver function but not with hepatocellular carcinoma. 787 70

1. In diverse tissues, acetylcholinesterase appears to play a critical role in the functional state of cells completely dependent of cholinergic transmission. However, very little is known about the mechanisms and actual molecular structures mediating the fundamental interactions between this protein and the cellular membrane. 2. In this study, peritoneal macrophages were used as a model system to study the possible interaction between acetylcholinesterase, acting in a non-cholinergic capacity, and the cellular membrane. 3. When acetylcholinesterase was incubated with macrophages harvested from rat peritoneum, the rate of oxygen consumption was increased in a concentration-dependent manner that was independent of mitochondrial block with sodium cyanide. Furthermore, heat inactivation of enzymatic activity or application of BW 284C51 at a concentration which totally blocks catalytic activity did not eliminate the effect. 4. In contrast, incubation with bovine serum albumin or butyrylcholinesterase actually retarded oxygen consumption. 5. The effect of acetylcholinesterase depended on the presence of divalent cations and was inhibited by mannan and D-mannose, but not D-galactose. It is concluded that acetylcholinesterase can induce a "respiratory burst" in macrophages independent of its conventional catalytic site but involving either the mannose receptor of the monocyte-derived macrophage or a possible sugar binding site on acetylcholinesterase itself.
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PMID:Acetylcholinesterase activation of peritoneal macrophages is independent of catalytic activity. 795 62

Acetylcholine (ACh) dilates arterioles in skeletal muscle. Neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) are the known source of ACh in this tissue. We hypothesized that microvascular topology is related to the distribution of NMJs. To test this, the spatial relationships between NMJs, arterioles, and capillaries in the hamster cremaster muscle were investigated. Male hamsters (n = 5, 80-100 g) were anesthetized (sodium pentobarbital, 60 mg/kg) and the cremaster was perfused with fluorescein isothiocyanate-bovine serum albumin (FITC-BSA) and Microfil compound. Excised muscles were stained for NMJs (cholinesterase reaction) and cleared in glycerin. Grid overlays divided each cremaster evenly into proximal and distal regions and 40 numbered 3 x 3-mm study fields. Five fields/region (approximately 25% of muscle area) were chosen randomly. Point counting ("counts") on a coherent test grid (component grid dimensions at x 144 magnification: 150 x 150, 300 x 300, and 450 x 450 microns) quantified NMJs, arterioles, and capillaries, respectively. NMJ:arteriole and NMJ:capillary nearest distances were obtained and arterioles nearest NMJs were classified by branch order. Filling with FITC-BSA vs Microfil indicated that all arterioles and approximately 92% of capillaries were perfused with Microfil. Relative counts (i.e., volume fractions) for capillaries were five- to sixfold greater than those for arterioles, which were two- to fivefold greater than those for NMJs. Capillary counts were similar between muscle regions and did not correlate with NMJ counts. In the distal muscle, arteriole and NMJ counts were correlated (r = 0.55, P < 0.05) and counts for both structures were greater than those in proximal regions. NMJ:capillary distances (proximal, 11.9 +/- 0.9 microns; distal, 14.5 +/- 0.6 microns) were less (P < 0.05) than respective NMJ:arteriole distances (111.1 +/- 7.1 and 89.8 +/- 3.2 microns). Fourth- and fifth-order arterioles accounted for 69% of arterioles nearest NMJs. These findings suggest that NMJs may provide a vasoactive stimulus which varies with muscle region and with location in the microvascular network.
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PMID:Spatial relationships between neuromuscular junctions and microvessels in hamster cremaster muscle. 799 Jul 23

To determine whether the blood lidocaine level during the continuous epidural block correlates with the preoperative liver function, i.e. serum albumin level, serum cholinesterase (ChE) activity, glutamic pyruvic transaminase (GPT) and indocyanine green retention rate (ICG R15), we measured the arterial serum lidocaine level in 45 abdominal surgical patients. The epidural catheter was advanced cephalad from Th10-L2 interspace, for a distance of 4 to 5 cm. Anesthesia was induced with thiopental, and maintained with continuous epidural block plus N2O, O2 and low concentration of isoflurane inhalation. We started epidural block with 0.3 ml.kg-1 body weight of 1.5% lidocaine and added half of the initial dose every 30 minutes for 2 hours. Serum lidocaine concentration was measured every 15 minutes after the lidocaine injection into epidural space. The result revealed that the lower the serum albumin level and ChE activity were, the higher the serum lidocaine level was and, that it had no significant correlation with GPT and ICG R15. We conclude that any patient with hypoalbuminemia and low serum ChE activity might have higher blood lidocaine levels during the continuous epidural block.
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PMID:[Effect of preoperative liver function on serum lidocaine level during continuous epidural block]. 801 50

Hepatic cirrhosis is the end stage in chronic liver diseases and this condition cause the patient's death because of hepatic failure. A prognosis of patients with hepatic cirrhosis depend on the liver function, especially the function of mass of residual hepatocytes and this function expressed by level of serum albumin, cholinesterase (Ch E) or ICGR-15. This function is improved a management of nutrition because hepatocytes are regenerate by intake of protein. In compensated hepatic cirrhosis, hepatocytes are regenerate by dietary intake of 100-120 g/day of protein and the function of mass of residual hepatocytes is increased. The prognosis of these patients with compensated hepatic cirrhosis are improved by this management of nutrition.
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PMID:[The managements of nutrition for hepatic cirrhosis]. 811 93


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