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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The 2-oxo-acid dehydrogenase family of enzymes have been identified as the major mitochondrial autoantigens of primary biliary cirrhosis. Using immunoblotting, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and enzyme inhibition with both purified mitochondrial proteins and recombinant autoantigens, we have studied family members and spouses of patients with primary biliary cirrhosis for the presence of antimitochondrial antibodies. Antimitochondrial antibodies and other common autoantigens were also tested for by indirect immunofluorescence. This study included 27 index patients with primary biliary cirrhosis, 15 spouses and 48 first- and second-degree relatives. Overall, 7 relatives (11%) were positive for autoantibodies to nuclear and cytoplasmic antigens by indirect immunofluorescence against mouse liver and stomach sections. However, with immunofluorescence, the reactivity strictly paralleled that of antimitochondrial antibodies in only one of these (1:640)--a sibling with mild pruritus and a liver biopsy specimen diagnostic of primary biliary cirrhosis despite normal levels of serum
alkaline phosphatase
. In addition, one of the mothers, who had a history of sarcoidosis, was positive by immunoblotting for antibodies to the E2 subunit of the
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
and protein X. All other relatives were negative for all of the assays. Antibodies to neither the 2-oxo-acid dehydrogenase enzymes nor the recently proposed family of naturally occurring mitochondrial antibodies were found in spouses or healthy relatives. Three other first-degree relatives suffered from liver disease: two died (one from primary biliary cirrhosis and the other from an unknown type of liver disease) and one (a sibling with primary biliary cirrhosis) was unavailable for testing. Our results are consistent with a familial predisposition to primary biliary cirrhosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Antimitochondrial antibodies in kindreds of patients with primary biliary cirrhosis: antimitochondrial antibodies are unique to clinical disease and are absent in asymptomatic family members. 139 96
We report a case of primary biliary cirrhosis with negative anti-mitochondrial antibody which were anteceded by rheumatoid arthritis. The patient was a 46-year-old female who was admitted due to low grade fever and elevated serum
alkaline phosphatase
(
ALP
) and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP) levels. She had been diagnosed as having erythema nodosum and rheumatoid arthritis 6 years before. Her family history disclosed that her mother had rheumatoid arthritis and her sister systemic lupus erythematosus. On admission, she had moderately elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and elevated serum
ALP
, gamma-GTP and IgM levels. Anti-mitochondrial antibody and anti-
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
antibody were negative but anti-nuclear antibody was positive. However, the histology of liver showed chronic non-suppurative destructive cholangitis. AMA was always negative and serum
ALP
and bilirubin levels remained constant during the following two years. The pathogenesis of primary biliary cirrhosis with negative anti-mitochondrial antibody is discussed.
...
PMID:[A case of primary biliary cirrhosis with negative anti-mitochondrial antibody anteceded by rheumatoid arthritis]. 155 53
This study was prompted by the paradox of strong presence of mitochondria in an anaerobic protozoan, recently reclassified from the yeasts. Stemming from publication in 1911 to 1912, Blastocystis hominis has been generally accepted as a harmless intestinal yeast of humans, with short standardized textbook (parasitology) descriptions, even to the present day. Reports since 1967 have changed the classification of B. hominis from yeast to protozoan (Sarcodina), and this has been followed by interest in B. hominis-caused disease, resulting in documentation of disease in humans and other primates. In this study of B. hominis, the basic ultrastructure of the mitochondria was shown by thin-section electron microscopy to be identical to that of an archetypical mitochondrion. There were hundreds of them in large B. hominis cells (100 to 200 microns in diameter). Mitochondria were confined to a peripheral ring of cytoplasm bounded by the outer cell membrane (there is no cell wall) and the membrane of the large, spherical, organelle-free central body that constitutes 75% of the cell's volume. Mitochondria tended to surround the cell's usual two to four nuclei. Rhodamine 123 stained the mitochondria selectively, visualized by fluorescence microscopy. The cell was devoid of cytochromes. Addition of 0.1% cytochrome c to the growth medium increased utilization of glucose by 34% and that of lactate by 17%. Furthermore, it markedly increased the number of mitochondrion-filled cells. At higher concentrations, cytochrome c inhibited the growth of the cells. Despite the presence of large numbers of mitochondria, activities of the mitochondrial enzymes
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex, isocitrate dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase, and cytochrome c oxidase were absent. Thus, the function of the mitochondria in B. hominis remains unknown. Considerable activities of aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase were found. Aldolase activity was prominent. Pyruvate decarboxylase was present. Diaphorase and lactate dehydrogenase were detectable but in suspect quantities. Other missing enzymes were gamma glutamyl transpeptidase,
alkaline phosphatase
(a lysosomal marker), and creatine kinase isoenzymes.
...
PMID:Biochemical and ultrastructural study of Blastocystis hominis. 283 9
In platelets, agonists that stimulate phosphoinositide turnover cause the rapid phosphorylation of a protein of apparent relative molecular mass (Mr) 40-47,000, called P47, by protein kinase C (PKC). Diverse identities have been ascribed to P47 including lipocortin, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate 5-
phosphomonoesterase
, pyruvate dehydrogenase alpha subunit and an actin regulatory protein. We have isolated human P47 clones by immunological screening of a lambda gt11 complementary DNA library from HL-60 cells, a human promyelocytic leukaemia cell line. P47 recombinants thus identified hybridized to a 3.0 kilobase (kb) messenger RNA in mature white blood cell lines; the same mRNA was induced in HL-60 cells during differentiation. A 1,050 base pair (bp) open reading frame that could encode a protein of Mr40,087 was confirmed by comparison with peptide sequences from platelet P47, and by expression of the putative recombinant P47 in E. coli and in vitro. The P47 sequence appears to have been conserved throughout vertebrate evolution, and is not similar to any other known sequence including human lipocortin and the alpha subunit of
pyruvate dehydrogenase
. The P47 protein contains a potential Ca2+-binding 'EF-hand' structure and a region that strongly resembles known PKC phosphorylation sites.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and expression of the major protein kinase C substrate of platelets. 289 30
The polar head group that was released by treating an insulin-sensitive glycophospholipid with a phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) stimulated
pyruvate dehydrogenase
(
PDH
) in both subcellular and whole cell assays. Stimulation of
PDH
activity in the subcellular assay was detected after gel filtration chromatography of the polar head group. This stimulation was not due to the presence of contaminating calcium and magnesium. The
PDH
-stimulating activity was proportional to the amount of polar head group added to the assay. The effect of the polar head group on
PDH
in the subcellular assay was blocked by sodium fluoride, suggesting that the polar head group activated the
PDH
phosphatase. In the whole cell assay, the polar head group stimulated
PDH
activity to an equal or greater extent as a physiological concentration of insulin. The effect of the polar head group was detected at 5 min, peaked at 10 min, and declined thereafter. In contrast, insulin stimulated
PDH
activity more slowly, but consistently. The
PDH
-stimulating activity eluted after bacitracin but ahead of ATP during gel filtration chromatography, and it was destroyed by exposure to NH4OH or
alkaline phosphatase
and by boiling in water. These data support the proposal that an early step in insulin action is the release of insulinomimetic polar head group from the insulin-sensitive glycophospholipid.
...
PMID:The insulinomimetic effects of the polar head group of an insulin-sensitive glycophospholipid on pyruvate dehydrogenase in both subcellular and whole cell assays. 327 39
Alterations in the activities of
alkaline phosphatase
, acid phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphatase, succinic dehydrogenase,
pyruvic dehydrogenase
and lactic dehydrogenase in liver a teleost fish, Channa punctatus were examined after 7, 15 and 30 days treatments with 5 micrograms/l mercuric chloride. Observations have shown specific effects of Hg on these enzymes for a particular period. However,
alkaline phosphatase
, acid phosphatase, glucose-6-phosphatase were progressively inhibited by this element. Greater accumulation of Hg in liver after a longer treatment and the respective change in enzyme activity clearly showed a dose-response relationship.
...
PMID:Mercurial toxicity in the liver of a freshwater teleost Channa punctatus. 709 18
Cefazolin given sc to male rats in daily doses of 0.5-2 g per kilogram of body weight significantly decreased alanine aminotranferase activity in serum, liver, kidney, heart, and brain 2-4 wk from the beginning of the treatment. Serum aspartate aminotransferase was also reduced, but serum
alkaline phosphatase
and tissue
pyruvate decarboxylase
activities remained unaltered. In female rats, daily sc administration of cefazolin at 0.1-1 g/kg also brought about a dose-related reduction of alanine and aspartate aminotransferase activities, which reached statistical significance at high dose levels. The effect of cefazolin at low concentrations was partly reversed by administration of pyridoxal in vivo. Paradoxically, at higher dose levels pyridoxal potentiated the action of cefazolin on serum aminotranferases. The low enzyme activities were elevated by subsequent addition of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate in vitro. Similar results were obtained when rats were treated with isoniazid at daily oral doses of 200 mg/kg; administration of pyridoxal completely restored alanine aminotransferase activity to the normal level within 2 wk. Cefazolin was metabolized in vivo, resulting in some metabolites that probably possessed a hydrazine group, since positive reactions were obtained with p-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde and Fast Blue B salt. The potentiation of decreased aminotransferase activity by pyridoxal indicated, however, some dissimilarity in the effect between isoniazid and cefazolin.
...
PMID:Effect of cefazolin on aminotransferase activity in the rat. 728 5
A case of chronic hepatitis C at the pre-cirrhotic stage complicated with hepatocellular carcinoma is reported. The patient, a 64 year old female, showed elevated levels of serum
alkaline phosphatase
and immunoglobulin M. Antimitochondrial antibodies were negative by indirect immunofluorescence. Western blotting using beef heart mitochondria and recombinant polypeptides coding for mitochondrial antigens revealed that the patient's serum was positive only for the E2-subunit of the branched chain ketoacid dehydrogenase complex. In the non-neoplastic liver, chronic non-suppurative cholangitis surrounded by epithelioid granuloma, resembling the granulomatous destructive cholangitis of primary biliary cirrhosis, was found. The damaged bile ducts were immunohistochemically minimally positive or ambiguous for HLA-DR, and their expression of the E2-subunit of the
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
E2 (PDC-E2) was diffuse or granular, and not typical of primary biliary cirrhosis. There was no bile duct loss, and orcein-positive copper binding granules reflecting chronic cholestasis were negative in periportal hepatocytes. The overall features in this case were consistent with primary biliary cirrhosis presenting an infrequent profile of antimitochondrial antibodies and atypical expression of HLA-DR and PDC-E2 on biliary epithelial cells, with late superimposition on chronic hepatitis C. However, it is also possible that this is a case of chronic hepatitis C with hepatitis-associated bile duct damage accompanied by granulomatous reaction. Either way, this case raises new diagnostic issues in the differential diagnosis of chronic liver diseases presented with granulomatous cholangitis.
...
PMID:Granulomatous cholangitis in chronic hepatitis C: a new diagnostic problem in liver pathology. 872 56
The detection of antimitochondrial antibodies (AMAs) is an important criterion for the diagnosis of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). During the last decade, the mitochondrial autoantigens have been cloned, sequenced, and identified as members of the 2-oxo-acid dehydrogenase pathway, including the E2 subunits of
pyruvate dehydrogenase
(PDC-E2), branched-chain 2-oxo-acid dehydrogenase (BCOADC-E2), and 2-oxo-glutarate dehydrogenase (OGDC-E2). We have developed a rapid and sensitive diagnostic test for use in PBC based on a triple hybrid recombinant molecule (r-MIT3) that contains the autoepitopes of PDC-E2, BCOADC-E2, and OGDC-E2. To help understand the frequency and antigen specificity of AMAs in an asymptomatic population and to identify patients with early disease, we investigated the prevalence of AMA, by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), in a cohort of 1,530 people from northern Italy. Positive sera were further analyzed for immunoglobulin (Ig) isotypes, subclasses, and epitopes of AMA by a combination of ELISA and immunoblotting. In this cohort of 1,530 people, 9 (0.5%) reacted to r-MIT3 by ELISA. Of the 9 reactive sera, 2 recognized PDC-E2, 2 of 9 recognized BCOADC-E2, 1 of 9 recognized OGDC-E2, 2 of 9 recognized both PDC-E2 and BCOADC-E2, and 1 of 9 recognized PDC-E2 and OGDC-E2. AMA reactivity was primarily IgM and IgA. Epitope mapping revealed an AMA pattern of reactivity to PDC-E2 that differed from that found in patients with histologically proven PBC in most of the sera. However, 1 sera of a 72-year-old female with a normal
alkaline phosphatase
had an AMA profile identical to typical PBC. After a variable follow-up period (8-14 months), sera from 8 of 9 of these people were re-obtained for AMA and relative epitope mapping. Interestingly, the reactivity had a wider AMA pattern than before.
...
PMID:Characterization of antimitochondrial antibodies in health adults. 950 Jun 90
To assess the usefulness of enzyme inhibition assay for the diagnosis of primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), we determined the serial changes in enzymatic inhibitory antibody to
pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
(
PDC
) in patients with PBC, and compared the results to those of immunofluorescence and immunoblotting. Forty-nine sera from 19 patients with PBC who were followed-up for at least 16 months were tested for antimitochondrial antibodies (AMA) by indirect immunofluorescence, immunoblotting on bovine heart mitochondria, and enzyme inhibition assay using commercially available TRACE Enzymatic Mitochondrial Antibody (M2) Assay (EMA) kit. Of the 49 sera, 39 (80%), 35 (71%), 38 (78%), 31 (63%), and 36 (73%) were positive for AMA by immunofluorescence, for immunoglobulin G (IgG), IgM, and IgA class antibody against E2 subunit of
PDC
(PDC-E2) by immunoblotting, and for enzymatic inhibitory antibody to
PDC
by EMA, respectively. AMA titers determined by immunofluorescence did not change in 9 patients (47%), increased in 4 (21%), decreased in 3 (16%), and fluctuated in 3 (16%) during follow-up. The number of anti-M2 bands by immunoblotting did not change in 9 (47%), increased in 6 (32%), decreased in 2 (11%), and fluctuated in 2 (11%). Units of
PDC
activity by EMA did not change markedly in 16 (84%), increased in 2 (11%), and fluctuated in 1 (5%). Positive EMA results were common in cases with high levels of serum
alkaline phosphatase
and IgM, and the units of
PDC
activity by EMA correlated significantly and inversely with AMA titers by immunofluorescence, and serum reactivity to PDC-E2 by immunoblotting, respectively. There was no correlation between serial changes in biochemical data and units of
PDC
activity by EMA. In three patients who showed a decrease in AMA titers, AMA titers correlated more with EMA results than immunoblotting. Moreover, in a patient with fluctuating AMA titers, the units of
PDC
activity by EMA paralleled AMA titers. Our results suggest that EMA is useful for the diagnosis of AMA-positive PBC, and also could be used for monitoring the disease course in PBC.
...
PMID:Serial changes in enzyme inhibitory antibody to pyruvate dehydrogenase complex during the course of primary biliary cirrhosis. 1101 98
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