Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.5 (RNase)
17,967 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

Fifty sera containing antinucleolar antibodies were o gathered in a routine laboratory during testing for antinuclear antibodies with indirect immun-fluorescence over a five-year period. The patients involved were suffering from sclerodermia (13 cases), rheumatoid arthritis (7 cases), polymyositis (3 cases), lupus (2 cases), various rhumatismal disease (59 cases) and non rhumatismal diseases in 16 cases, including 5 malignant diseases. In 80 per cent of the cases nucleolar fluorescence was combined with nuclear fluorescence of another type. The antibodies were almost always of the IgG category and belonged in 2/3 of cases to several immunoglobulin categories, most often IgG-IgA. Pretreatment of the liver cuttings with RNase always modifies the nucleolar fluorescence, most often making it negative, and pretreatment with DNase using a combination of enzymes 10 times higher also modifies it (more often decreasing it than making it negative), which indicates that the nucleolar antigen, probably an ARN with a low molecular weight, also depends upon the ADN.
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PMID:[Antinuclear antibodies: immunological characteristics and clinical significance]. 31 10

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

Extractable nuclear antigen contains ribo-nuclease-sensitive (ribonucleoprotein) and ribonuclease-resistant (Sm) components. To determine the diagnostic usefulness of antibodies to these antigens, a multicenter study was undertaken in which serums were analyzed for these antibodies and the findings compared with clinical and other laboratory characteristics of the patients. Of 100 patients with hemagglutinating antibodies to ribonuclease-sensitive extractable nuclear antigen, and only the same antibodies by immunodiffusion, 74 per cent had typical features of mixed connective-tissue disease; 12 features of systemic lupus erythematosus, eight those of scleroderma and six an undifferentiated mild connective-tissue disease. Of 27 patients with hemagglutinating antibodies to ribonuclease-resistant extractable nuclear antigen (and Sm antibodies by immunodiffusion), 85 per cent had typical systemic lupus. Thus, antibodies to nuclear ribonucleoprotein and Sm are of diagnostic use; if the serum contains only ribonucleoprotein antibody in high titer, it is likely that the patient has mixed connective-tissue disease.
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PMID:Association of antibodies to ribonucleoprotein and Sm antigens with mixed connective-tissue disease, systematic lupus erythematosus and other rheumatic diseases. 108 29

1. We describe new autoantibodies which recognize two cytoplasmic proteins of 30 and 26 kDa. They were detected by Western blot analysis in the sera of 6 of 79 randomly selected systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients and are denoted anti-JA antibodies. This antibody specificity is different from the previously described lupus autoantibodies, anti-P and anti-S10. 2. The targeted autoantigens are trypsin sensitive, and resistant to RNase and DNase treatment. The binding to the antigens was not modified when reticulocyte ribosomes were prepared with protease inhibitors indicating that these are primary antigens and not degradation products. Several lines of evidence suggest that these proteins are almost certainly part of the ribosome. 3. Anti-JA reactivity was not observed in the sera from 60 patients with other autoimmune diseases or from normal individuals. In contrast, 55% of lupus sera selected for a high titer of anti-dsDNA (double stranded DNA) and LE cells were also anti-JA positive. 4. Anti-JA antibodies may be useful as a specific serological marker for disease activity in SLE. The strong association with anti-dsDNA antibodies and LE cell in the sera of SLE patients requires further study.
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PMID:Antibodies to new cytoplasmic autoantigens: anti-JA, a potential marker for disease activity in systemic lupus erythematosus. 134 36

This study presents 8 dogs of German Shepherd breed (6 males, 2 females, 2-5 years of age at onset of the disease) with a lupus like syndrome characterized by febrile polyarthritis, wasting, nephropathy, cutaneous lesions and high positive titres of ANA (antinuclear antibodies) of speckled type. The serum autoantibodies were further characterized by double immunodiffusion against ENA (extractable nuclear antigen), ELISA for Histone antibodies (Histon fraction H-24A and H-3S), indirect IF on rat-liver sections, non treated and RNase/DNase digested sections for DNP/RNP antibodies, and smears of a hemoflagellate C. luciliae for antibodies vs doubbel strained DNA, (dsDNA). Thus, the high ANA titres in these dogs represent varying types of autoantibodies against nucleoproteins of both DNA and RNA nature, associated histone antigens and non-histone antibodies (RNA and Sm) as well. Rheumatoid Factor titres in serum from these dogs were low or negative. Immunoglobulin deposits at dermo-epidermal junctions were demonstrated in some of the dogs with hyperkeratotic skin lesions. High concentration of serum-IgG was a constant finding in combination with anemia and in most cases leukopenia probably related to the chronic inflammatory process in these animals. Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) or thrombocytopenia was not detected in these dogs.
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PMID:Serum auto antibodies and clinical/pathological features in German shepherd dogs with a lupuslike syndrome. 195 Aug 49

A case of isoniazid (INH)-induced lupus occurring in a 62-year-old man is presented. He visited our hospital in May 1986 and a cavitary lesion was found in the right upper lobe on a chest roentgenogram. He had no previous history of treatment with antituberculotic agents. Though acid-fast bacilli were not found in his sputum, pulmonary tuberculosis was strongly suspected and INH, rifampicin and ethanbutol were administered. Four days after starting the treatment, minimal left pleural effusion was seen on chest X-ray film. Three months later he began to complain polyarthralgia in his digital joints. In a pleural effusion many lymphocytes were found; and the antinuclear antibody (ANA), the anti-extractable nuclear antigens (ENA) antibody, and the RNase resistant anti-ENA antibody were positive, and their titres were 20x, 1000x and 1000x, respectively, and the immune complex (IC) was 16.0 micrograms/ml (LT5). In blood serum, the ANA test the anti-ENA antibody and the RNase resistant anti-ENA antibody were positive with titres 40x, 640x and 640x respectively; and the IC was 14.0 micrograms/ml, and the RA test was positive. The improvement of clinical findings and disappearance of auto-antibodies seen after stopping INH confirmed the diagnosis as INH-induced lupus.
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PMID:[A cases of isoniazid-induced lupus]. 281 Sep 99

The ribonucleoprotein (RNP) particles containing the Epstein-Barr virus-associated small RNAs EBER1 and EBER2 were analyzed to determine their RNA secondary structures and sites of RNA-protein interaction. The secondary structures were probed with nucleases and by chemical modification with single-strand-specific reagents, and the sites of modification or cleavage were mapped by primer extension. These data were used to develop secondary structures for the two RNAs, and likely sites of close RNA-protein contact were identified by comparing modification patterns for naked RNA and RNA in RNP particles. In addition, sites of interaction between each Epstein-Barr virus-encoded RNA (EBER) and the La antigen were identified by analyzing RNA fragments resistant to digestion by RNase A or T1 after immunoprecipitation by an anti-La serum sample from a lupus patient. Our results confirm earlier findings that the La protein binds to the 3' terminus of each molecule. Possible functions for the EBER RNPs are discussed.
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PMID:Structural analyses of EBER1 and EBER2 ribonucleoprotein particles present in Epstein-Barr virus-infected cells. 282 85

The clinical association of lupus anticoagulant antibodies with thrombocytopenia and thrombosis was the rationale for investigating the in vitro reactivity of these human hybridoma lupus anticoagulant antibodies with platelets. Fifty human hybridoma antibodies from 13 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, 2 women with multiple spontaneous abortions, and 4 normal individuals were analyzed for lupus anticoagulant, antiplatelet, anti-DNA, and antiphospholipid reactivities. Of the hybridoma antibodies studied, 25 had lupus anticoagulant activity, 21 had antiplatelet reactivity, and 7 of these antibodies had both lupus anticoagulant and antiplatelet properties. No correlation was found between lupus anticoagulant antibody activity and antiplatelet, anti-denatured DNA, anticardiolipin, anti-egg phosphatidylethanolamine, antiphosphatidylserine, antiphosphatidylinositol, and antiphosphatidylcholine reactions. In contrast, antiplatelet activity was strongly correlated with antiphosphatidylethanolamine (rho = 0.761, p less than 0.001), anticardiolipin (rho = 0.748, p less than 0.001), and anti-dDNA (rho = 0.745, p less than 0.001) reactivities. Pretreatment of platelets with deoxyribonuclease, ribonuclease, trypsin, or phospholipases A2 and C resulted in different effects on the binding of individual hybridoma antibodies to platelets, suggesting that antiplatelet antibodies may recognize different epitopes on the platelet membrane. Our data demonstrate that most hybridoma lupus anticoagulant antibodies did not bind directly to platelets in vitro. This suggests that additional serum factors may be required in vivo to explain the association of these antibodies with thrombocytopenia and thrombosis.
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PMID:Lupus anticoagulant and antiplatelet properties of human hybridoma autoantibodies. 311 88

This report describes the behavior of antigenic small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) in native isofocusing gels. These RNA-protein complexes exhibited true isofocusing characteristics only when in the complexed form. Deproteinized snRNAs migrated to pH ranges which varied according to the pH of the application site. Immunological assays using lupus sera which recognized the La, Sm, and RNP determinants on these snRNPs established that the La and the Sm/RNP antigens segregated to pH 4.7-4.9 and 5.5-7.5, respectively. RNase digestion of these snRNPs did not alter the isofocusing migration of either the Sm or the La determinants. These antigenically active fractions contained the appropriate protein and RNA species shown by immunoprecipitation studies to associate with these antigenic determinants. The isofocusing fractions containing the uridylic acid-snRNPs were fully immunoprecipitable by anti-Sm sera, confirming their particulate integrity after isofocusing.
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PMID:Isofocusing of antigenic small nuclear ribonucleoproteins. I. Compositional analysis. 316 13


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