Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An attempt is made in this study to provide an answer to the question whether glomerular diseases are accompanied by tubular disorders. The urinary lysozyme activity was determined by means of a turbidimetric assay method in 10 healthy children as controls, 10 patients with glomerulonephritis, 8 patients with Alport's syndrome (hereditary glomerulonephritis with deafness) and 12 children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome. In most of the cases a significant increase in urinary lysozyme excretion, indicative of tubular damage, was found and this finding correlates well with the tubular morphology of the patients.
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PMID:[Tubular involvement in glomerular diseases of the kidney (author's transl)]. 32 Jul 67

In order to assess to what extent glomerular or tubular function is involved in the renal handling of amylase and the lysozyme to creatine clearance ratios (CAm/CCr and CLys/CCr) were evaluated in 22 healthy volunteers and in 71 patients with different renal diseases. In normal controls, the mean CAm/CCr was 2.55 +/-1.54 SD, with an upper normal limit of 5.56. A normal ratio was found in patients with glomerulonephritis, with or without a nephrotic syndrome, and in patients with pyelonephritis. A significantly elevated ratio (P less than 0.001) was instead found in patients with uremia and in patients with uremia and in patients with either chronic or acute tubular damage. The CLus/CCr ratio was elevated in all the groups, except in patients with glomerulonephritis and minimal proteinuria. These results show that in humans, as in animals, the amylase filtered load undergoes partial tubular reabsorption. In renal diseases, an increase of the CAm/CCr is caused by either a marked reduction of functioning nephrons or a severe tubular damage, while the glomerular permeability does not seem to be involved. Some other mechanism is probably involved in the elevation of the CAm/CCr during acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Amylase to creatine clearance ratio in renal diseases. 44 31

IgA specific for 7 food and 6 airborne antigens were sought in the serum of 30 adult patients with IgA mesangial nephropathy (IgA GN), 23 with membranous nephropathy (MGN), 20 with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (INS), 11 with membranoproliferative GN (MPGN) and 22 healthy controls by means of an enzyme-linked immunoassay. The IgA subclass was determined using monoclonal antibodies. Increased levels of IgA specific for gliadin, bovine serum albumin (BSA), ovalbumin, lysozyme and alpha-lactalbumin were found in IgA GN, while increased levels of IgA to BSA, ovalbumin, lysozyme and alpha-lactalbumin were observed in MGN; IgA specific for alpha-lactalbumin were increased in INS, and MPGN patients had reduced levels of IgA to BSA and increased levels of IgA to beta-lactoglobulin and alpha-lactalbumin. These specific IgA to food antigens were restricted to the IgA1 subclass. Patients with IgA GN had significantly increased levels of IgA specific for Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (DP) and Dactil while the MGN group showed increased levels of IgA specific for DP, feathers, Dactil and mold. INS patients had increased levels of IgA specific for DP, feathers, Dactil, mold and dog hairs, while MPGN patients had increased levels of IgA specific for feathers, Dactil, dog hairs and mold. All these specific IgA to airborne antigens were restricted to the IgA1 subclass. Patients with the four types of primary glomerulonephritis had decreased IgA specific for cat hairs which were of both the IgA1 and IgA2 subclasses. We conclude that anomalies of the IgA repertoire to environmental antigens are also encountered in primary glomerulonephritis other than IgA GN.
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PMID:Mucosal immunity in primary glomerulonephritis: II. Study of the serum IgA subclass repertoire to food and airborne antigens. 176 94

We report the first case of angiotropic large-cell lymphoma (intravascular malignant lymphomatosis) presenting as minimal change disease (MCD) and diagnosed by renal biopsy. Neoplastic lymphoid cells were disseminated throughout the glomerular capillary bed and were associated with diffuse foot process effacement. The tumor had the immunophenotype of a B cell lymphoma (reactive with LCA and L-26 and unreactive with FVIII-R-Ag, Leu-M-1, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, lysozyme, UCHL-1, Leu-22, kappa, and lambda). The temporal association between the onset of lymphoma and MCD, and the failure of the nephrotic syndrome to respond to immunosuppressive therapy support a role for lymphoma in the pathogenesis of MCD in this patient.
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PMID:Angiotropic large cell lymphoma (intravascular malignant lymphomatosis) of the kidney: presentation as minimal change disease. 265 92

On the assumption that increased urinary lysozyme concentration (;lysozymuria') indicates tubular proteinuria and therefore impaired tubular function, urinary lysozyme has been estimated in acute disorders where transient disturbances of renal function might be expected, in cases diagnosed clinically as extrarenal uraemia, and in a few examples of acute renal disease. Reversible lysozymuria occurred with hypokalaemia, postoperative ;collapse', electrolyte depletion, severe extrarenal infection, acute pyelonephritis, the nephrotic syndrome, after a few apparently uncomplicated surgical operations, and very transiently after ventricular fibrillation abolished by DC shock. There was no lysozymuria with severe uraemic heart failure, aspirin and paracetamol poisoning, or severe jaundice, nor in two cases of acute glomerulonephritis. Although lysozymuria may occasionally be useful in the clinical diagnosis of acutely disordered renal function, the results suggest that its value is limited; on the other hand, they have provided information on renal pathophysiology in acute disease.
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PMID:Lysozymuria and acute disorders of renal function. 470 97

The present study was directed toward determining the role of the kidney in the metabolism of various classes of serum proteins and to define the urinary protein excretion patterns and the pathogenesis of disorders of protein metabolism in patients with proteinuria. To this end, the metabolic fates of a small protein, lambda-L chain (mol wt 44,000), and a protein of intermediate size, IgG (mol wt 160,000), were studied in controls and patients with renal disease. Controls metabolized 0.28%/hr of circulating IgG and 22.3%/hr of circulating lambda-L chain. All the IgG and 99% of the lambda-L chain was catabolized with the remaining lambda-L chain lost intact into the urine. The kidney was shown to be the major site of catabolism for small serum proteins. Three distinct disorders of protein metabolism were noted in patients with renal tubular disease and tubular proteinuria, glomerular disease (the nephrotic syndrome), and disease involving the entire nephrons (uremia), respectively. Patients with renal tubular disease had a 50-fold increase in the daily urinary excretion of 15-40,000 molecular weight proteins such as lysozyme and lambda-L chains. Serum IgG and lambda-L chain survivals were normal; however, the fraction of the over-all lambda-L chain metabolism accounted for by proteinuria was increased 40-fold whereas endogenous catabolism was correspondingly decreased. Thus, tubular proteinuria results from a failure of proximal tubular uptake and catabolism of small proteins that are normally filtered through the glomerulus. Patients with the nephrotic syndrome had a slight increase in lambda-L chain survival whereas IgG survival was decreased and the fraction of IgG lost in the urine was markedly increased. Here, abnormal glomerular permeability to proteins of intermediate size is the basic abnormality. Patients with uremia had a normal IgG survival but a four to 10-fold prolongation of lambda-L chain survival due to loss of entire nephrons, the major site of metabolism of these proteins. This results in an increase (up to 10-fold) in the serum concentration of lambda-L chain, lysozyme, and other small biologically active proteins, a phenomenon that may be of importance in causing some of the manifestations of the uremic syndrome.
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PMID:The renal handling of low molecular weight proteins. II. Disorders of serum protein catabolism in patients with tubular proteinuria, the nephrotic syndrome, or uremia. 505 68

The nephrotic syndrome, characterized by nonselective proteinuria, hypoproteinemia, hypoalbuminemia, and ascites, was observed in a 10-month-old male cat. Profound glomerular changes and renal tubular changes appear to have been induced by iatrogenic chronic exposure to metallic mercury originally contained in a rectal thermometer. Large concentrations of mercury were present in the kidneys, liver, spleen, and urine. Evaluation of glomeruli by immunofluorescent microscopy revealed interrupted granular deposition of immuno-globulin G and the third component of complement in glomerular capillary walls and the mesangium. Electron microscopic evaluation of glomeruli revealed diffuse alterations in glomerular basement membranes and visceral epithelial cells. Small electron dense deposits were observed in capillary walls, but they were not characteristic of immune complexes. The mechanism(s) responsible for the mercury induced glomerulonephropathy in this patient could not be determined on the basis of available data.
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PMID:Membranous glomerulonephropathy and nephrotic syndrome associated with iatrogenic metallic mercury poisoning in a cat. 725 62

Lysozymuria was studied in 70 patients with chronic pyelonephritis with preserved renal function and two groups of 18 patients each with pyelonephritis, with chronic renal insufficiency (CRI) and glomerulonephritis without CRI. Elevated value of lysozyme in urine was obtained in 40% of the patients with chronic pyelonephritis with preserved renal function and in 66.6% of those with chronic pyelonephritis in the stage of a chronic renal insufficiency. Lysozyme level in urine is in a correlation dependence on serum creatinine level. Lysozymuria is more frequent among patients with pyelonephritis with significant bacteriuria as well as among patients not treated with uroantiseptics. Lysozymuris is present in two patients with nephrotic syndrome from the patient group with glomerulonephritis and in two with probable not complicated chronic pyelonephritis.
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PMID:[Diagnostic significance of lysozymuria in chronic pyelonephritis]. 738 2

Sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS PAGE) of urinary proteins was performed in 56 children with nephrotic syndrome during relapse, of whom 31 had their urines tested within 2 months of the onset of disease. The urines of all 32 steroid-sensitive [presumed minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS)] patients revealed albumin and transferrin bands only; whereas 19 steroid-resistant children with focal glomerular sclerosis showed additional excretion of IgG and low molecular weight proteins (lysozyme, beta 2-microglobulin). This mixed pattern of proteinuria was also detected in 5 other steroid-resistant patients, 3 of whom were Africans with MCNS on biopsy and 2 who were Indians and not biopsied. Findings in patients studied within 2 months of presentation were identical to those investigated later in the course of the disease. SDS PAGE analysis of urine, which appears to distinguish steroid-responsive from steroid-resistant patients may provide a valuable adjunct to the management of childhood nephrotic syndrome.
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PMID:Sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of urinary proteins in steroid-responsive and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome in children. 769 97

To determine the diagnostic role of urinary trehalase in chronic glomerular disease, urinary trehalase activity and other urinary markers such as N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG), alanine aminopeptidase (AAP), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (gamma-GTP), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), lysozyme and beta 2-microglobulin (BMG) were measured in patients with chronic glomerulonephritis, nephrotic syndrome and chronic renal failure. Urinary trehalase activity was significantly increased in chronic glomerular disease, especially nephrotic syndrome, as compared with that in the healthy subjects. The highest incidence of elevated excretion was observed for trehalase with 52% in chronic glomerular disease, followed by NAG. Urinary trehalase activities in the patients were significantly correlated with the urinary levels of protein, NAG and AAP and total score of tubular damage, but not correlated with urinary levels of BMG or lysozyme. In patients with chronic glomerulonephritis and nephrotic syndrome, there was no significant difference in urinary trehalase activities between with and without hematuria. These results indicate that in some patients with chronic glomerular disease, there is tubular involvement as substantiated by elevation of the other urinary enzymes and BMG. Urinary trehalase is elevated more often in these types of disease than other markers of tubular damage.
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PMID:Urinary trehalase activity in chronic glomerulonephritis. 809 31


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