Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (RNase)
16,360 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fifteen patients with epidermal nuclear staining on direct immunofluorescence of normal skin and high titer serum antibody to ribonuclease-sensitive extractable nuclear antigen (ENA) had diffuse nonscarring and focal alopecia, abnormal pigmentation, swollen hands with sclerodactyly, and chronic cutaneous lupus erythematosus (LE) as the most common dermatologic features. Direct immunofluorescence of normal, unexposed skin revealed a particulate ('speckled') epidermal nuclear staining pattern in all 15 patients and subepidermal immunoglobulin deposits in 5. Ribonucleoprotein antibodies in high titer are associated with this characteristic type of epidermal nuclear staining. These findings provide easily detectable markers for a less aggressive subset of LE characterized by distinctive clinical and laboratory features consistent with mixed connective tissue disease.
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PMID:Mixed connective tissue disease syndrome. 6 24

Clinical and laboratory findings were correlated from 46 patients with IgG localization in epidermal nuclei in a speckled (particulate) pattern on direct immunofluorescence of normal skin. Cutaneous manifestations included lupus erythematosus (LE), swollen hands or sclerodactyly, alopecia, vasculitis, and dyspigmentation. Systemic manifestations included arthritis or arthralgia, Raynaud's phenomenon, serositis, vascular headaches, mild renal disease, myositis, and sicca syndrome. High titer (mean = 1:142, 800) serum antibody to extractable nuclear antigen (ENA) was found in 81%. Eighty-six percent had antibody to an RNase-sensitive antigenic component of ENA (ribonucleoprotein or RNP); 14% had antibody to an RNase-resistant ENA termed Sm. Deposition of IgG in a speckled pattern in epidermal nuclei is an immunopathologic marker for a subset of connective tissue disease characterized by antibody to ENA. Those with Sm specificity had systemic LE (SLE); Those with RNP specificity had Raynaud's phenomenon usually associated with overlapping features of SLE, scleroderma, and/or dermatomyositis.
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PMID:Speckled (particulate) epidermal nuclear IgG deposition in normal skin. Correlation of clinical features and laboratory findings in 46 patients with a subset of connective tissue disease characterized by antibody to extractable nuclear antigen. 34 15

Antinuclear and/or antinucleolar antibodies were demonstrated in the sera of 74 of 76 patients (97%) with progressive systemic sclerosis, using tissue culture cells (HEp-2) as substrate in the indirect immunofluorescent method. Six patterns of nuclear staining and three nucleolar patterns were recognized. The nuclear patterns were centromere, fine speckles, coarse speckles, diffusely grainy, homogeneous and nuclear dots. The nucleolar patterns were speckled, homogeneous and clumpy. The results of digestion studies with ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease and trypsin suggested that the nuclear antigens are proteins, some of which may be associated with chromatin. The nucleolar antigens appeared to be nucleic acid in nature. Certain characteristic serologic and clinical features associated with staining patterns were observed. The diffusely grainy pattern was seen only in sera containing antibody to Scl-70 antigen. Centromere staining was confirmed to be highly selective for the CREST (Calcinosis, Raynaud's phenomenon, esophageal involvement, sclerodactyly and telangiectasis) variant of progressive systemic sclerosis with rheumatoid factor titres higher in these patients with anti-centromere antibodies.
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PMID:Association of antinuclear and antinucleolar antibodies in progressive systemic sclerosis. 704 33