Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.3.5 (5'-nucleotidase)
3,167 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This article reports correlations among gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT), fetal haemoglobin (fH), alpha-fetoprotein, 5'-nucleotidase, ceruloplasmin, and direct, indirect, and total bilirubin in the serum of blood taken from the umbilical cords of 128 newborns delivered after 37-42 weeks of gestation. GGT was significantly correlated with alpha-fetoprotein, but not with direct bilirubin, indirect bilirubin, total bilirubin, fH, or %fH. Neither fH nor %fH were correlated with alpha-fetoprotein, but there was highly significant negative correlation between both fH and %fH on the one hand, and gestational age and weight at birth on the other. The %fH was also correlated negatively with ceruloplasmin, which in turn exhibited negative correlation with alpha-fetoprotein. The predominant forms of GGT in umbilical cord and adult sera were, respectively, those with alpha 1 and alpha 2 mobility. In cord sera, delipidation with n-butanol brought about loss of GGT activity and a shift from an alpha 1 to an alpha 2 position, whereas no significant effect of this kind was observed in adult sera. Affinity chromatography through Concanavalin A-Sepharose showed cord sera to contain a proportion of bound-GGT (68.5 +/- 5.5%) that was significantly greater (p less than 0.001) than that found in adult sera (59.8 +/- 10.2%). It is concluded that the high GGT activity of cord sera is probably due to hepatic immaturity rather than maternal sources, enzymatic induction or microsomal lesions; that the predominant form of GGT in cord serum may be a complex with HDL and less sialized than the adult enzyme; and that, of the factors examined, the best indicator of neonatal maturity is fetal haemoglobin.
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PMID:Cord serum gamma glutamyltransferase in newborns. 244 3

Specific binding of [67Cu]ceruloplasmin to plasma membrane containing preparations from rat tissues was shown in the presence of an excess of nonradioactive Cu(II) or ceruloplasmin. With Cu(II) there was positive cooperativity and an apparent KD of 10(-7) M. The effects of both "cold" ligands was partly additive. No "specific" binding was shown with Zn(II), unrelated proteins and after boiling the membranes. Total and specific binding of [67Cu]ceruloplasmin were 2-7 fold greater for heart and brain than for liver preparations, per g tissue or per mg protein, +/- correction for yield of 5'-nucleotidase. Cu(II) also inhibited uptake of [67Cu] from ceruloplasmin by CHO cells, but monensin did not, suggesting uptake of ceruloplasmin Cu occurs at the cell surface.
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PMID:Binding and uptake of copper from ceruloplasmin. 376 88

Some indices that reflect the damaging processes in the cells and tissue structures have been found in 152 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis and in those with inactive lung tissue changes. There is evidence for that increases in the activity of plasma 5'-nucleotidase, ceruloplasmin/transferrin ratio and the appearance of free radical compounds in the plasma are accompaniments of active pulmonary tuberculosis. It is found that the greatest changes in these parameters are, the more acutely the disease runs, the more pronounced an exudative component in the general picture of inflammation is. If there are positive changes in these indices during combined therapy, the activity of 5'-nucleotidase becomes normal just after 5-6 months, and the values of other indices tends to normalize after treatment termination. A combined determination of the ceruloplasmin/transferrin ratio and the plasma levels of free radical compounds allows the activity of a tuberculous process to be established in 70% of cases.
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PMID:[Markers of alteration of tissue structures as indicators of pulmonary tuberculosis activity]. 1256 42