Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (ACE)
18,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity was measured in 10 patients with early active sarcoidosis, nine patients with inactive or resolving sarcoidosis, 10 patients with malignant pulmonary neoplasms, eight patients with miscellaneous lung diseases, and 18 control subjects with no known pulmonary disease. The serum ACE activity, expressed in units/ml, in control subjects (5-88 +/- 1-84), was no different from the values obtained in patients with inactive or resolving sarcoidosis (6-85 +/- 2-48) or miscellaneous lung diseases (4-61 +/- 3-20). However, the ACE activity was found to be markedly raised in patients with early active sarcoidosis (13-49 +/- 2-52), and there was no overlap with control values. The patients with pulmonary neoplasms had significantly lower values of serum ACE activity than the control subjects (2-80 +/- 3-30).
Thorax 1976 Oct
PMID:Diagnostic value of serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity in lung diseases. 18 11

Selected functions of alveolar macrophages obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage of 12 healthy smokers were examined before and after eight weeks' treatment with an inhaled glucocorticosteroid, budesonide (400 micrograms twice daily). After budesonide treatment spontaneous as well as opsonised zymosan triggered prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) secretion from harvested cells was reduced; no such reduction in opsonised zymosan triggered leukotriene B4 (LTB4) production was observed. Neither the capacity to phagocytose opsonised yeast particles nor the superoxide radical generation triggered by the calcium ionophore A23187, 4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), or opsonised zymosan ex vivo were more than marginally affected by the glucocorticosteroid treatment in vivo. Lavage fluid concentrations of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE), however, after treatment were twice those before treatment and concentrations of fibronectin were reduced to half. Albumin concentrations in lavage fluid were not affected by the glucocorticosteroid treatment. In separate experiments treatment of alveolar macrophages with 10(-7) or 10(-6) M budesonide overnight in vitro did not affect their superoxide radical or PGE2 generation but significantly blocked LTB4 release. These data indicate that inhaled gluco-corticosteroid treatment may affect synthesis or release (or both) of ACE and fibronectin by alveolar macrophages from healthy smokers whereas other functions of these cells, such as the generation of reactive oxygen derived products ex vivo, are only marginally affected.
Thorax 1990 May
PMID:Effects of an inhaled corticosteroid, budesonide, on alveolar macrophage function in smokers. 216 59

The threshold for cough induced by inhaled tartaric acid was measured in 71 non-atopic healthy volunteers. The cough threshold was lower in women than in men, which may be relevant to previous reports that angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors induce cough more frequently in women than in men.
Thorax 1990 Aug
PMID:Sex difference in the inhaled tartaric acid cough threshold in non-atopic healthy subjects. 240 29

A 20 year old man presented with eight thin walled, ring shaped shadows, 1-3 cm in diameter, on a chest radiograph. Pulmonary sarcoidosis was diagnosed on the basis of histopathological examination of a cervical lymph node, transbronchial lung biopsy, and increased activity of angiotensin converting enzyme and lysozyme in serum. The lesions disappeared within six months of his starting corticosteroid treatment.
Thorax 1989 Sep
PMID:Annular lesion of the lung in sarcoidosis. 258 13

This study was designed to determine whether cell populations in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid represent a reflection of disease activity in sarcoidosis. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cells were obtained from 22 patients with sarcoidosis and from 10 normal control subjects and investigated by immunocytological methods. A panel of monoclonal antibodies was used to determine the relative proportions of phenotypically distinct subsets of macrophages and lymphocytes in the patients with sarcoidosis and to correlate them with clinical indices, such as disease duration, serum angiotensin converting enzyme, the chest radiograph, and results of pulmonary function tests. Patients with sarcoidosis had a higher percentage than the normal subjects of macrophage like cells expressing RFD1 (a class II associated antigen preferentially expressed by dendritic cells), an epithelioid cell antigen (RFD9), and a circulating monocyte antigen (UCHMI). The increase in RFD1+ cells appeared to be due to detection of antigen by this antibody on cells that were also expressing phenotypic markers of classical tissue macrophages (RFD7). The lymphocytes in lavage fluid from patients with sarcoidosis were characterised by increased expression of activation markers, such as interleukin-2 receptors (anti-Tac+), HLA-DR (RFDR+), and "blast" forms (expressing above normal concentrations of CD7 antigen). This was associated with increased proportions of the CD4+ (helper-inducer) T cell subset. Patients with sarcoidosis whose clinical indices suggested activity showed an increased number of macrophages coexpressing RFD1 and RFD7 antigens, of macrophages expressing UCHM1 and lymphocytes expressing activation markers. The expression of these markers was also increased on lavage cells from patients with radiographic evidence of widespread disease (chest radiographic stage II and III), but there was no relation with disease duration, pulmonary function, or serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity. Immunocytological analysis of lavage cells offers a probe for studying the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis and may be of value in monitoring disease activity.
Thorax 1989 Jun
PMID:Relation between immunocytological features of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and clinical indices in sarcoidosis. 266 24

Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from 43 patients with biopsy proved sarcoidosis and 10 control subjects were assayed for fibronectin and collagenase activity. Fibronectin was significantly increased in the group with sarcoidosis and was found to be positively correlated with angiotensin converting enzyme activity, protein concentration, percentage of T cells and helper:suppressor ratios in the lavage fluid. Increased fibronectin in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was not related to functional or radiographic indices of interstitial disease and did not identify patients subsequently requiring treatment. Latent collagenase was present in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from 16 patients with sarcoidosis but not in any control sample. There was no association between the collagenase activity and the cell profiles of the lavage fluid. Yet carbon monoxide transfer factor was decreased in patients with bronchoalveolar lavage fluid collagenase. Ten of 16 patients with bronchoalveolar lavage fluid collagenase had radiographic class III or IV disease and a disease duration of more than two years. On follow up 62% of patients with bronchoalveolar lavage fluid collagenase required subsequent treatment, compared with only 23% of patients without collagenase. These results indicate an association between bronchoalveolar lavage fluid collagenase and progressive, prolonged disease in sarcoidosis, whereas increased bronchoalveolar lavage fluid fibronectin is associated with indices of disease activity.
Thorax 1988 May
PMID:Collagenase and fibronectin in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid in patients with sarcoidosis. 284 27

The decrease in lung angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity occurring in rats during chronic hypoxia might be related to the pulmonary haemodynamic response or to the hypoxia. A study in rats was carried out to investigate this question. Rats from the Hilltop (H) strain are known to develop more severe pulmonary hypertension as a result of chronic hypoxia than rats from the Madison (M) strain despite having virtually identical arterial and mixed venous oxygen tensions. Rats from H and M strains were exposed to hypoxia (0.5 atm) for 3-21 days and lung and serum ACE activities were determined. After three days' hypobaria lung ACE activity was significantly lower and serum ACE significantly higher in H than in M rats. Linear regressions for lung ACE activity and right ventricular:body weight ratios showed significant inverse correlations and were similar in the two strains. The results suggest that pulmonary hypertension and not hypoxia determines the reduction in lung ACE activity, possibly by releasing ACE into the blood stream.
Thorax 1988 Sep
PMID:Lung angiotensin converting enzyme activity in rats with differing susceptibilities to chronic hypoxia. 284 30

Patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis are less likely to smoke than persons of a similar age in the general population. This could be because smoking reduces the likelihood of developing sarcoidosis, or alternatively smoking could reduce the severity of the disease process so that smoking patients are underrepresented among patients with clinically overt disease. To evaluate these possibilities 64 patients with sarcoidosis of recent onset were studied at presentation and after a one year follow up period, clinical, functional, radiographic, and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid criteria being used to identify factors that might account for the lower incidence of sarcoidosis in smokers and to determine whether the disease is less severe in smoking patients. Smoking was less common in the patients with sarcoidosis (30%) than in the control subjects (46%). The study did not support the conclusion that sarcoidosis is less severe in smokers, as clinical, radiographic, and functional abnormalities were similar in smokers and non-smokers at initial evaluation and after a one year follow up period. Nevertheless, smoking did influence various indices used to assess disease "activity." Cigarette smoking was associated with a significant increase in the serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity (SACE), and patients with very high SACE and pulmonary gallium-67 uptake were smokers. Furthermore, more CD8+ (but not CD4+) lymphocytes were recovered by lavage from smoking than from non-smoking patients, giving a lower CD4: CD8 ratio in smokers. Fewer alveolar macrophages were recovered by lavage from smokers with sarcoidosis than from normal subjects with a similar smoking history. These finding support the possibility that smokers, particularly those with a prominent accumulation of alveolar macrophages in the lower respiratory tract, may be less likely to develop sarcoidosis.
Thorax 1988 Jul
PMID:Smoking and pulmonary sarcoidosis: effect of cigarette smoking on prevalence, clinical manifestations, alveolitis, and evolution of the disease. 285 Jun 37

Serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity is increased in many patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis and has been proposed as a measure of disease activity. Assay of serum angiotensin converting enzyme, bronchoalveolar lavage, and gallium scans were performed in 27 patients with biopsy proved pulmonary sarcoidosis. There was a positive correlation between serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity and an index of pulmonary gallium uptake assessed by the National Institutes of Health method (r = 0.7, p less than 0.001). There was no significant relationship (r = 0.19) between serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity and bronchoalveolar lavage lymphocytes expressed as a proportion of cells recovered. Increase in the enzyme activity had a sensitivity of 50% as a means of detecting high intensity alveolitis but specificity was only 45%. There was no significant difference in mean angiotensin converting enzyme activity between the following groups: those with positive and those with negative gallium scans; those with bronchoalveolar lavage lymphocyte counts less than or equal to 28% and those with counts greater than 28%. Although there was a significant correlation between the enzyme activity and one component of the alveolitis of sarcoidosis, the data suggest that serum angiotensin converting enzyme activity alone is neither sensitive nor specific enough for high intensity alveolitis.
Thorax 1985 Jul
PMID:Does serum angiotensin converting enzyme reflect intensity of alveolitis in sarcoidosis? 299 47

A study was carried out to test the hypothesis that the reduced lung angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity which occurs in chronic hypoxia is related to the development of pulmonary hypertension rather than to hypoxia per se. Right ventricular mean systolic pressure (Prvs, mm Hg) and ACE activity (nmol/mg protein/min) in lung tissue homogenates were measured in seven groups of four rats placed in a hypobaric chamber (380 mm Hg; 51 kPa) for two to 24 days. Identical measurements were made on 11 groups of four rats, which were placed in the chamber for 24 days and then allowed to recover in room air for one to 153 days. After two days of hypoxia the mean Prvs (25.5 (SD 3.7] and the mean lung ACE activity (56 (4.6] did not differ significantly from control values. Exposure to hypoxia for four to 24 days caused a progressive increase in mean Prvs to 44.4 (5.9) and a progressive reduction in mean lung ACE activity to 34 (4.0). During recovery lung ACE activity increased and Prvs decreased, so that normal values were achieved by 15 and 56 days respectively. Decreased lung ACE activity may be related to haemodynamic factors associated with pulmonary hypertension rather than to hypoxia.
Thorax 1985 Aug
PMID:Lung angiotensin converting enzyme activity in chronically hypoxic rats. 299 49


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