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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)
This study examined the effect of diet-induced, marginal zinc deficiency for 7 wks in 15 men (aged 25.3 +/- 3.3 yrs; mean +/- SD) on selected indices of iron and
copper
status. The regimen involved low-zinc diets based on egg albumin and soy protein with added phytate and calcium such that mean [phytate]/[Zn] and [phytate] X [Ca]/[Zn] molar ratios were 209 and 4116, respectively, for 1 wk, followed by 70 and 2000, respectively, for 6 wks. Subjects were then repleted with 30 mg Zn/d for 2 wks. Plasma
copper
, Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn-SOD) activity in plasma and red blood cells (RBC), hemoglobin, hematocrit, and serum ferritin were determined weekly on fasting blood samples. Significant reductions (p less than 0.05) after 7 wks in RBC Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (49.5 +/- 7.2 vs 33.6 +/- 6.3 U/mg Hb) and serum ferritin (69.2 +/- 38.7 vs 53.8 +/- 33.7 micrograms/L) occurred; no comparable decline was noted for plasma Cu, hemoglobin, or hematocrit. Significant (p less than 0.05) but less consistent changes were also observed in plasma superoxide dismutase activity. None of the changes were associated with the decreases in plasma, urinary and hair zinc concentrations, and
alkaline phosphatase
activity in RBC membranes. Results indicate that the biochemical iron and
copper
status of the subjects was marginally impaired, probably from the dietary regimen that induced marginal zinc deficiency.
...
PMID:Indices of iron and copper status during experimentally induced, marginal zinc deficiency in humans. 138 39
We recently purified a 16-kDa cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (CT Cu/Zn-SOD) from Schistosoma mansoni, a human parasite. Three peptide sequences were obtained, one from the unblocked N-terminal and two from internal peptides which were generated by digestions with trypsin and cyanogen bromide. These sequences were aligned to the corresponding sequences of 19 cytosolic Cu/Zn-SODs from various species. Degenerate oligonucleotides were then designed according to the sequence and the position of each peptide. The oligonucleotides were used to amplify a complete cDNA using the polymerase chain reaction with either adult schistosome total RNA or a cercariae lambda gt11 phage cDNA library as the template. The protein encoded by the cDNA has 153 amino acids with a calculated molecular weight of 15,693. It also has 60-65% homology to 19 cytosolic Cu/Zn-SOD from various species. All of the
copper
/zinc binding sites and SOD activity sites are conserved. Computer analysis predicts that the Cu/Zn-SOD has a pI value of 6.6, which is very close to the experimental results of IEF analysis (6.0 and 6.3). The entire coding sequence from the cDNA was cloned into a bacterial
alkaline phosphatase
cytosolic expression vector and a large amount of soluble product was expressed and purified to homogeneity. We compared the bacterially expressed Cu/Zn-SOD with the native enzyme derived from schistosomes and found that they are identical by the following criteria: (1) They focus at the same positions on IEF gels; (2) they form dimers in solution as measured by gel filtration; (3) they have the same unblocked N-terminal sequence; (4) they both are enzymatically active with comparable specific activities. The specific activity of the bacterially derived enzyme was increased somewhat (approximately 10%) by incubation with
copper
and zinc ions.
...
PMID:Schistosoma mansoni: cloning of a complementary DNA encoding a cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase and high-yield expression of the enzymatically active gene product in Escherichia coli. 142 33
Serum, urine and tissue biochemical findings were studied in 21 cases of fulminant Wilson's disease with respect to the value of a recently described biochemical index based on serum
alkaline phosphatase
and total serum bilirubin levels, and these cases were compared with 193 other cases of fulminant liver failure. Serum bilirubin,
alkaline phosphatase
and AST levels found in fulminant Wilson's disease were significantly different from those found in other cases of fulminant liver failure, but differentiation from other causes of fulminant liver failure on the basis of these biochemical parameters was not possible. The
alkaline phosphatase
/bilirubin and aspartate AST/bilirubin ratios derived from the above parameters were also significantly lower in fulminant Wilson's disease than in other categories of fulminant liver failure, but distinction between diagnostic categories on this basis was not possible. When ratios that correctly identified all cases of fulminant Wilson's disease were selected, 59/190 (31%) and 84/190 (44%) cases of non-Wilsonian fulminant liver failure would erroneously be assigned a diagnosis of fulminant Wilson's disease, by
alkaline phosphatase
/bilirubin and AST/bilirubin ratios, respectively. A low
alkaline phosphatase
-to-bilirubin ratio (< 0.57) in any category of fulminant liver failure suggested a significantly worse prognosis than in cases with higher ratios (chi 2, Yates' corrected = 5.37, p = 0.02). In the Wilson's disease group, serum and hepatic
copper
and ceruloplasmin concentrations were normal in 4/21, 2/15 and 2/19, respectively, whereas urinary
copper
level was elevated in 18/18 and was the most valuable test in diagnosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Failure of simple biochemical indexes to reliably differentiate fulminant Wilson's disease from other causes of fulminant liver failure. 142 59
TE-5 is an essential trace element agent containing iron, zinc,
copper
, manganese and iodine for total parenteral nutrition (TPN). We have already reported that TE-5 improved the reduction of trace element concentrations induced by TPN. However, effects of TE-5 on the changes in biological function relating to trace elements are poorly understood. The present study was designed to clarify the effects of TE-5 on these functions. Rats fed a trace element (iron, zinc,
copper
, manganese and iodine)-deficient diet for 7 weeks showed reductions in the following parameters: plasma and various tissue concentrations of iron, zinc,
copper
, manganese and iodine, growth rate, erythrocyte (iron), hemoglobin (iron), hematocrit (iron), mean corpuscular constants (iron), plasma
alkaline phosphatase
activity (zinc), serum ceruloplasmin concentration (
copper
), liver pyruvate carboxylase activity (manganese) and serum thyroxine concentration (iodine). On the other hand, when TE-5 (0.008, 0.04 and 0.2ml/kg: x 0.2, x 1 and x 5 the usual clinical dose, respectively) was intravenously administered once a day for 7 weeks under the conditions described above, there was a tendency to prevent the reductions of plasma and various tissue concentrations of iron, zinc and manganese. In addition, TE-5 prevented the reductions of growth rate, iron metabolism functions, plasma
alkaline phosphatase
activity, serum ceruloplasmin concentration and liver pyruvate carboxylase activity. The present study shows that TE-5 prevents both reductions of trace element contents and trace element-related functions, and suggests that TE-5 is useful for treatment of trace element deficiency in TPN.
...
PMID:[Effects of an essential trace element agent (TE-5) for total parenteral nutrition on the mineral nutrition in rats fed a trace element-deficient diet]. 144 33
The effect of low dietary zinc on the survival of an intestinal nematode (Heligmosomoides polygyrus) was investigated in two experiments. In experiment 1 (primary infection), outbred CD1 mice were infected once only with 100 H. polygyrus larvae. In Experiment 2 (challenge infection), mice were given a primary infection that was terminated after 9 d using an anthelmintic drug; the mice were reinfected 5 d later. This protocol stimulates host immunity to the second parasitic infection. Three dietary treatments (control, 60 mg Zn/kg diet; zinc-restricted, 5 mg Zn/kg diet; and energy-restricted, 60 mg Zn/kg diet) were used for both experiments. Both infected and uninfected mice were included within each dietary treatment to control for the effect of parasitic infection on host nutritional status. Plasma zinc concentrations were significantly lower in mice fed the zinc-restricted diet, compared with mice fed the control or energy-restricted diets in both experiments; there were no significant differences in plasma
alkaline phosphatase
activity or tissue zinc concentration. The significant reduction in plasma zinc had no significant effect on worm burden or egg production of H. polygyrus in either experiment, indicating that the 30-40% reduction in plasma zinc was not sufficient to modify parasite numbers. However, the parasite did affect host nutritional status. Spleen weight was significantly higher in infected mice in both experiments. Following the challenge infection, both liver and spleen
copper
concentrations were significantly higher, and spleen iron concentration significantly lower, in the infected compared with the noninfected mice.
...
PMID:Marginal zinc deficiency has no effect on primary or challenge infections in mice with Heligmosomoides polygyrus (Nematoda). 154 14
The mineral status in phenylketonuria (PKU) was measured by single-photon densitometry of the distal radius and plasma concentrations in 26 subjects. Bone mineral content increased normally with age in the younger children despite strict dietary restrictions. Subjects aged greater than 8 y, however, were frequently below the normal curve for bone mineral content. Blood phenylalanine concentrations were significantly higher in the older group of subjects and this correlated with decreased compliance with dietary prescriptions. PKU children had significantly decreased plasma concentrations of
alkaline phosphatase
, magnesium, and parathyroid hormone. Subnormal concentrations of plasma zinc and plasma and red blood cell (RBC)
copper
were common, but RBC zinc was normal. We conclude that compliance with dietary therapy for PKU is associated with normal bone mineral development in young children. Older patients with PKU who follow the diet less carefully are at risk for low bone mineral content.
...
PMID:Bone mineral status in children with phenylketonuria--relationship to nutritional intake and phenylalanine control. 157 Aug 11
We determined approximately 15,000 laboratory values in 236 individuals between the ages of 60 and 90 y, 22 individuals between 90 and 99 y, and 69 individuals greater than or equal to 100 y, and compared these with values in young adults. We tested 47 different analytes in the 60-90-y group and 93 analytes in the greater than or equal to 90-y group. Na, K, Cl, and CO2 values were either identical or showed minimal change with age; pH decreased slightly. Differences in Ca values were only minor, but ionized Ca increased slightly. Phosphate decreased in men, but changed only minimally in women; parathyroid hormone increased with age. Increases with age were also observed for glucose, insulin, and C-peptide. Among the enzymes,
alkaline phosphatase
increased in women, but in men only greater than 90 y; gamma-glutamyltransferase increased in both sexes. Creatine kinase (CK) decreased slightly in individuals greater than 70 y and markedly in those greater than 90 y of age, whereas CK-MB decreased markedly greater than 70 y, reaching the detection limit in individuals greater than 90 y. Lactate dehydrogenase isoenzyme 5 decreased slightly with age. Urea nitrogen increased gradually with age, but creatinine increased only in individuals greater than or equal to 90 y. The increase in urea is not paralleled by a loss of protein in urine, suggesting that the possible cause of azotemia may not always be renal pathology. Urate increased in women but not in men. Liver function, as measured by total bilirubin and liver enzymes, was exceedingly well maintained. Concentrations of most proteins show little change, except for slight decreases in prealbumin, albumin, and transferrin, proteins used as an index of nutritional status. IgA values increased, IgG ranges were wider, IgM and IgD decreased, and the range for IgE was narrower than in young adults. Cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglyceride values increased with age, but decreased in individuals greater than or equal to 90 y. Among the trace elements, magnesium changed little, zinc and lead decreased, and
copper
values increased with age. Total triiodothyronine and thyroxine decreased, with concomitant increases in thyroid-stimulating hormone. More individuals had increased microsomal antibodies and thyroglobulin titers in the aging population than in the young. In men, the free, percent free, bioactive, and total testosterone values decreased, but luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) values increased. In women, estrone and estradiol values decreased, with concomitant increases in LH and FSH. Androstenedione and progesterone decreased in both sexes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Laboratory values in fit aging individuals--sexagenarians through centenarians. 159 90
Dietary intake and biochemical nutritional status was studied in patients who had undergone total gastrectomy (TG, n = 10) or partial gastrectomy (PG, n = 10) several years ago. The dietary intake of energy, macronutrients and micronutrients was very similar in the two groups and was also similar to the intake reported for healthy subjects in Sweden. The concentration of alpha-tocopherol in serum was subnormal in the TG group and that of carotene in both groups of patients, and the values were also significantly lower in the TG group than in the PG group. This was probably due to fat malabsorption, since dietary intake was found to be adequate. The proportions of n-6 and n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids in serum phosphatidylcholine were not significantly different between the TG and PG groups. Iron deficiency was found in three patients in the TG group. Three patients (two TG, one PG) had elevated serum
alkaline phosphatase
and one patient (PG) had subnormal cobalamin concentration. For ascorbic acid, folate, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, zinc,
copper
and selenium, the serum concentrations were normal or close to normal. Although the stores of some micronutrients seemed smaller after total gastrectomy, no major differences in nutritional status were found between the TG and PG groups. For the demonstration of decreased micronutrient stores during long-term follow-up after gastrectomy, an extended profile of biochemical markers of nutritional status is recommended.
...
PMID:Nutrient intake and biochemical markers of nutritional status during long-term follow-up after total and partial gastrectomy. 160 Sep 23
Dietary boron, in concentrations similar to that found in human diets comprised mainly of fruits and vegetables, affects both mineral and energy metabolism. Therefore, the effects of boron on a model system with a perturbed metabolic insulin-vitamin D3 axis was examined. Weanling male rats were fed a ground corn-high protein casein-corn oil-based diet (0.06 mg B/kg; no supplemental vitamin D3) supplemented with B (as orthoboric acid) at 0 or 2.4 mg/kg. After 55 days, all rats were equilibrated in individual metabolic cages for 6 days. After another 6 days, one half of the rats in both dietary groups were injected intraperitoneally with streptozotocin (STZ). All rats were killed 3 days after STZ treatment. STZ affected many aspects of mineral metabolism as expected. Plasma ionized calcium concentrations fell by approximately 10% in STZ-treated rats. Brain and heart mineral metabolism was spared from the toxic effects of STZ whereas spleen mineral metabolism was especially vulnerable to STZ. Supplemental dietary boron increased urinary excretion of calcium in the non-STZ rats but did not affect the plasma concentrations of
alkaline phosphatase
, ionized calcium or the concentration of calcium in the brains, lungs, kidneys and spleens of those animals. Supplemental dietary boron temporarily reduced the abnormally elevated renal excretion of albumin, potassium and sodium during the acute phase of diabetes mellitus. On the other hand, physiological amounts of dietary boron exacerbated the abnormally elevated rate of collagen breakdown in the STZ animal. Finally, boron may have indirectly affected heart mineral metabolism because dietary boron did not affect cardiac boron concentrations but did affect cardiac
copper
, calcium, manganese, molybdenum and phosphorus concentrations, primarily in non-STZ rats. The findings suggest that dietary boron has both protective and regulatory roles in mineral metabolism.
...
PMID:Effects of dietary boron on calcium and mineral metabolism in the streptozotocin-injected, vitamin D3-deprived rat. 166 22
Changes in serum zinc and
copper
levels were studied in 17 patients who received 18 courses of total parenteral nutrition for 28 to 89 days. Mean serum zinc levels decreased significantly after 4 weeks of therapy in the group without zinc supplementation when compared with pretreatment levels (p less than 0.05) and in a second group who received about 1.5 mg of zinc per day (p less than 0.05). Serum
copper
levels fell consistently and significantly in patients of both groups. However, no obvious clinical signs or symptoms of zinc or
copper
deficiencies were observed. Blood transfusions were not able to significantly change the serum levels of zinc or
copper
. Although serum
alkaline phosphatase
has been suggested as a functional indicator of zinc deficiency, the concomitant hepatic or skeletal dysfunction of the patients made its interpretation difficult. These findings indicate that a decrease in serum zinc and
copper
is common during TPN using solutions unsupplemented with these trace elements. Supplementation of TPN solutions with zinc,
copper
, and other trace elements is recommended.
...
PMID:Serum zinc and copper during long-term total parenteral nutrition. 168 54
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