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)

A statistically highly significant elevation of serum ACE was found in a group of 58 patients with sarcoidosis (serum ACE was elevated in 34% of patients), as compared with normal controls and patients with tuberculosis and various other common diseases. The results suggest that serum ACE is a useful aid for the diagnosis of sarcoidosis when elevated, but that a normal value does not rule out the condition and may occur in more than one-half of monitored patients. There is a trend to diminution of serum ACE with increasing duration of disease with or without steroid therapy, perhaps correlating with the total body mass of active granulomas, as indirectly suggested in preliminary data by correlation of serum ACE with serum globulin in 16 sarcoidosis patients. It is not yet clear whether there is any significant steroid effect on serum ACE, but a significant number of patients on steroid therapy for more than 2-4 yr have elevated serum ACE values, which in some instances are extremely high. There was a 12-fold elevation in ACE to specific activities generally exceeding those of normal lung in granulomatous lymph nodes of 14 patients with sarcoidosis, suggesting that sarcoid granulomas may be actively synthesizing ACE and resulting in elevation of serum ACE. Extensively fibrotic sarcoid lymph nodes had normal or slightly elevated ACE, suggesting that obliteration of granulomas in sarcoid lymph nodes diminishes their ACE content and that this obliteration may be related to the tendency to diminution of serum ACE with time. ACE was not elevated in one tuberculous lymph node or in experimental granulomas, suggesting that elevation of ACE may have some specificity for the granuloma of sarcoidosis rather than being a characteristic of all granulomas. The catalytic and physical properties of ACE in serum and lymph nodes in sarcoidosis were generally similar to normal ACE with respect to pH activity, modulators, polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, and Sephadex G-200 gel filtration. However, sarcoid lymph node ACE appeared to be more heat labile than normal lung or lymph node ACE, suggesting the possibility that an abnormal ACE may be present in sarcoidosis. If an abnormal enzyme is indeed present, it might be coded for by a host gene that is not normally expressed or a nonhost gene or it might be a normal ACE that has been altered. No ACE activity was found in circulating white blood cells in sarcoidosis or in control subjects, suggesting that circulating white blood cells may not contain the epithelioid cell precursor or that ACE synthesis (or less likely, uptake) may be turned on at a later stage in the transformation. Lysozyme activity was also elevated in sarcoid lymph nodes. Serum ACE and serum lysozyme were significantly positively correlated in 16 sarcoidosis patients, suggesting a relationship between the two...
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PMID:Elevation of angiotensin-converting enzyme in granulomatous lymph nodes and serum in sarcoidosis: clinical and possible pathogenic significance. 18 95

Serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity and lysozyme (LZM) concentration in 22 silicosis and 18 asbestosis patients were studied. These patients were compared with 57 untreated and 36 treated sarcoidosis patients. In all groups significantly raised ACE and LZM mean values were noted. Untreated sarcoidosis patients had the highest values. Raised ACE activity in silicosis and asbestosis has not been reported before, and weakens the differential diagnostic value of this enzyme determination for sarcoidosis. The similar patterns of increased ACE and LZM mean values in all three diseases suggest that these enzymes have a common source.
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PMID:Angiotensin-converting enzyme and lysozyme in silicosis and asbestosis. 21 79

The giant cells (multinucleate macrophages) of human sarcoidosis have been shown by the unlabelled antibody immunoperoxidase technique at electron microscope level to contain lysozyme within cytoplasmic granules.
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PMID:The EM immunocytochemical demonstration of lysozyme in macrophage giant cells in sarcoidosis. 21 90

Serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activity was studied in healthy controls, in 57 untreated sarcoidosis patients, and in 164 patients with other chest or lymph node diseases. The serum ACE activity of healthy persons was independent of sex, intake of meals, and smoking habits. There were no diurnal variations. Healthy children had a significantly higher ACE mean value than adults, whose ACE activity was not affected by age. The sarcoidosis patients had the highest ACE mean values, but those of patients with silicosis and asbestosis were also significantly elevated. Pulmonary cancer patients had decreased serum ACE activity, which was probably due to antimitotic treatment. Serum lysozyme (LZM) concentrations did not correlate with normal ACE activity, but the correlation between elevated ACE and LZM was significant in sarcoidosis and silicosis, and the trend was clearly the same for asbestosis. This indicates separate sources for these enzymes when ACE activity is normal, and a common source, i.e. macrophages, when ACE activity is increased. ACE production in certain diseases involving macrophages may be due to the bradykinin inhibiting effect of this enzyme.
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PMID:Angiotensin-converting enzyme. I. Activity and correlation with serum lysozyme in sarcoidosis, other chest or lymph node diseases and healthy persons. 22 Jul 4

Serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) was studied in 51 patients with early or newly diagnosed sarcoidosis. Only 45% of these patients had increased ACE activity when their diagnosis was established, which diminishes the diagnostic value of this enzyme measurement. On the other hand, ACE accurately reflected disease activity, and it proved a useful tool for assessing of need for corticosteroid treatment. Patients with acute sarcoidosis associated with erythema nodosum (EN) had low ACE activity compared with the other patients with active, but less acute disease. Serum ACE was not significantly correlated with blood lymphocytes or the immunoglobulins, but there was a positive correlation between the enzyme and serum lysozyme, which strengthens the hypothesis of both enzymes being produced by the epithelioid cells of sarcoid granulomas.
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PMID:Angiotensin-converting enzyme. II. Serum activity in early and newly diagnosed sarcoidosis. 22 Jul 5

Serum angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE) and lysozyme have been measured in 23 controls, 115 patients with sarcoidosis, and 64 with other chest diseases. Both enzymes were significantly raised in sarcoidosis. ACE was raised above the normal range in 21 of 72 (29%) patients with definite sarcoidosis and in 17 of 38 (45%) of those who were untreated and seen within one year of presentation. The rise discriminated usefully between those with stable and progressive disease (5% and 62% respectively). Lysozyme was raised in 50 of 72 (69%) patients with sarcoidosis but also in 11 of 54 (20%) patients with other chest diseases. Discrimination between stable and progressive disease was useful only if very high levels were considered. Five patients had serial measurements after treatment with oral steroids and showed a progressive fall in levals of both enzymes, but patients with other diseases also showed a significant fall within the normal range when so treated. Measurement of these enzymes may help in the management of some cases of sarcoidosis, but results require critical interpretation.
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PMID:Value of measuring serum angiotensin I converting enzyme and serum lysozyme in the management of sarcoidosis. 22 Jul 48

The activity of serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) was repeatedly measured together with serum lysozyme (LZM) in patients with untreated sarcoidosis. Changes in the clinical picture were registered using chest X-ray, forced vital capacity (FVC), diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide (DLCO) and appearance of extrapulmonary lesions. During a clinically unchanged period the highest ACE activity and the corresponding LZM value (not the highest value) were used for the calculation. A statistically significant change in ACE was noted when a normal chest X-ray changed to a stage II lesion or vice versa, and when a signficant change in FVC occurred. All other changes were insignificant. On the other hand, statistically significant changes in ACE were found during stable periods according to chest X-ray, FVC or DLCO. ACE is frequently elevated in serum of patients with active sarcoidosis. The fluctuations in activity mostly parallel the clinical course of the disease. The behaviour and metabolism of the enzyme need further investigation. An increased concentration of serum LZM is frequent in patients with active sarcoidosis. The highest LZM values are not always seen simultaneously with the highest ACE values, indicating that they probably express different dimensions of the disturbances in the sarcoid granuloma.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme. III. Changes in serum level as an indicator of disease activity in untreated sarcoidosis. 23 19

The mean values of serum angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) activities and lysozyme (LZM) concentrations measured during different phases of sarcoidosis coincided well with the clinical evaluation of the state of the disease. However, both enzymes, especially LZM, decreased before improvement was detected. Changes in these enzymes were in accord with the simultaneous clinical development in three fourths of cases. Incompatibility between clinical observations apnd LZM fluctuations was most frequently seen during active stable or inactive disease. LZM often decreased during the active stable phase and fluctuated irregularly during inactive disease. During the former phase LZM decrements possibly reflect decreasing activity of granulomatous macrophages and, in fact, precede detectable improvement. During inactive disease, on the other hand, cells were not connected with the disease process dominate LZM production. ACE changes paralleled the clinical development more often than corresponding LZM changes during stable sarcoidosis. This may have been misleading and due to a delayed reaction of serum ACE, compared with LZM, inreflecting the activity of granylomatous cells. This delayed reaction was also observed in connection with erythema nodosum. Stable ACE activity during inactive sarcoidosis indicated the usefulness of measurements when trying to predict a relapse. We conclude that ACE may be a secondary feature of sarcoidosis rather than a primary funtion of macrophage activity.
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PMID:Angiotensin converting enzyme. IV. Changes in serum activity and in lysozyme concentrations as indicators of the course of untreated sarcoidosis. 23 20

Lysozyme activity of macrophages and giant cells in various human granulomas were examined with immunoperoxidase bridge method in tissue sections. Various numbers of epithelioid cells and giant cells of epithelioid cell granulomas of tuberculosis, sarcoidosis and Crohn's disease exhibited intense granular cytoplasmic lysozyme activity. Foreign body granulomas induced with various substances showed negative or faintly positive lysozyme stain. Macrophages and giant cells of aspergillus granuloma associated with thymus hypoplasia and T-cell depression contained no lysozyme. The results suggest that cell-mediated immunology plays an important role for the lysozyme synthesis of macrophages in granuloma.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical observation of lysozyme in macrophages and giant cells in human granulomas. 36 52

Blood monocytes from patients with sarcoidosis were incubated in vitro, and secretion of endogenous pyrogen (EP), the protein which mediates fever, and lysozyme (L) were measured. After incubation with endotoxin, monocytes from 5 patients with sarcoidosis released twice as much EP as did monocytes from normal individuals (p < .001). Initial 24-hr secretion of L by monocytes from 6 of 11 additional patients with sarcoidosis exceeded the normal range of values for cells from 11 age- and sex-matched control individuals. Cells with initially augmented secretion rates continued to secrete increased amounts of L for 3 days. A correlation was noted between in vitro secretion of L by monocytes and serum levels of L in the same patient. These studies indicate that circulating mononuclear cells in some patients with sarcoidosis have an increased capacity to secrete EP and/or L prior to tissue localization.
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PMID:Increased production of endogenous pyrogen and lysozyme by blood monocytes in sarcoidosis. 46 69


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