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Symptom
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Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.4.21.69 (
APC
)
16,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As part of a controlled trial of the use of tamoxifen for the treatment of mastalgia, some of the metabolic and haematological effects of this agent were measured. A panel of haemostatic variables including prothrombin time, kaolin cephalin clotting time, fibrinogen, euglobulin lysis time,
factor VII
, factor VIII,
protein C
and anti-thrombin III were determined. In addition, levels of sex hormone-binding globulin and both total and free oestradiol were estimated. No alteration in clotting function was found during the administration of tamoxifen, although hepatic function did alter during this period with an increase in concentration of sex hormone-binding globulin. There was a significant increase in total oestradiol and free oestradiol although the percentage of biologically available free oestradiol fell slightly during the course of tamoxifen treatment. There was a slight reduction in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol with an increase in HDL2, a subclass of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, consistent with an oestrogen-agonist effect. These data suggest that tamoxifen administration does not adversely influence haemostatic mechanisms or lipoprotein metabolism in the short term.
...
PMID:Effect of tamoxifen on oestrogen binding, lipid and lipoprotein concentrations and blood clotting parameters in premenopausal women with breast pain. 319 64
Blood samples were taken for haemostatic analysis from 225 patients with angina pectoris who were admitted to hospital for coronary angiography. beta thromboglobulin, platelet factor 3, platelet factor 4,
factor VII
:C, factor VIII:C, von Willebrand factor antigen, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, antithrombin III,
protein C
:Ag, plasminogen, and antiplasmin were measured before angiography. Patients who had had a myocardial infarction in the two months before the investigation were excluded from the study. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that none of the haemostatic variables contributed independently to the prediction of an angiographic score that indicated the extent of coronary atherosclerosis. History of myocardial infarction, male sex, worsening of angina pectoris, serum triglycerides, and ejection fraction were independently associated with the angiographic score. There were some significant correlations between haemostatic variables and conventional risk factors for coronary heart disease. Thus data obtained from haemostatic analyses of peripheral venous blood do not permit the presence or the extent of atherosclerosis in coronary arteries to be predicted.
...
PMID:Lack of association between haemostatic variables and the presence or the extent of coronary atherosclerosis. 325 21
Two short-lived vitamin K-dependent factors,
factor VII
and
protein C
, were measured by both functional and antigenic techniques in 3 hematological conditions known for their risk of hepatotoxicity: Following use of asparaginase and bisantrene, and patients at high risk of hepatic veno-occlusive disease after allogenic bone marrow transplantation for relapse of acute leukemia of accelerated phase of evoluted chronic myelogenic leukemia. In these 3 conditions functionally measured levels of
protein C
and
factor VII
, and antigenically measured levels of both these factors proved to be early markers of incipient hepatic involvement. These tests were easy to use routinely were reproducible, and proved to be predictive of veno-occlusive disease in grafted patients at the preconditioning stage. In the follow-up of bone marrow grafted patients plasma markers of endothelial function (von Willebrand's factor, tissue type plasminogen activator, and plasma activity of angiotensin converting enzyme) were significantly altered at the time of overdose with cyclosporin A, probably due to a drug-induced in vivo lesion of the endothelium. In the search for cytoprotective drugs for the prevention of veno-occlusive disease in bone marrow grafted patients prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) was given prior to and for at least 4 weeks after transplantation and proved to be effective by biological criteria (the level of
protein C
mainly). This deserves further study in a prospective clinical trial of the potential usefulness of PGE1 in preventing liver veno-occlusive disease in bone marrow grafted patients.
...
PMID:[Hemostasis tests as markers of hepatic and endothelial toxicity in chemotherapy]. 329 Aug 34
Five type I protein C deficient male patients received 5 mg stanozolol b.i.d. during 4 weeks. After four weeks of treatment plasma protein C activity increased from 0.42 to 0.74 U/ml and
protein C
antigen from 0.49 to 0.75 U/ml. This approximately 1.6 fold increase in plasma protein C was accompanied by an increase in factor II antigen (1.5 fold), factor V activity (1.6 fold), factor X antigen (1.1 fold), antithrombin III antigen (1.3 fold) and heparin cofactor II antigen (1.5 fold), while the concentration of
factor VII
, factor VIII, and factor IX activity, and of protein S antigen remained unchanged. Prothrombin fragment F1+2, measured in two patients, increased 1.3 fold. In addition to its effect on procoagulant and anticoagulant factors stanozolol had profibrinolytic effects, reflected in an increase in tPA activity and in the concentration of plasminogen. These data indicate that in type I protein C deficient patients stanozolol increases the concentrations of both procoagulant and anticoagulant factors and favours fibrinolysis. The efficacy of stanozolol in preventing thrombotic disease in type I protein C deficient patients, however, remains to be established. During the four weeks of stanozolol treatment no thrombotic manifestations were observed in the
protein C
deficient patients.
...
PMID:Treatment of hereditary protein C deficiency with stanozolol. 359 78
The protease from Southern Copperhead venom that activates
protein C
was purified to homogeneity by sulfopropyl (SP)-Sephadex C-50 ion-exchange chromatography, Sephadex G-150 gel filtration, and Mono-S fast protein liquid chromatography. The purified enzyme is a glycoprotein containing 16% carbohydrate, and migrated as a single band in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with an apparent molecular mass of 40,000 kDa. The enzyme is composed of a single polypeptide chain possessing an NH2-terminal sequence of Val-Ile-Gly-Gly-Asp-Glu-Cys-Asn-Ile-Asn-Glu-His. The purified venom
protein C
activator hydrolyzed several tripeptide p-nitroanilides. The amidolytic and proteolytic activities of the enzyme were readily inhibited by phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride, p-amidinophenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride, chloromethyl ketones, and human antithrombin III. Covalent binding of diisopropyl fluorophosphate to the enzyme was confirmed using a tritium-labeled preparation of the inhibitor. The venom protease readily activated human and bovine
protein C
at 1:1000 enzyme:substrate weight ratio. The protease also cleaved human prothrombin, factor X, factor IX,
factor VII
, and fibrinogen. Prothrombin coagulant activity decreased upon incubation with the venom protease, and the rate of this reaction was reduced in the presence of calcium. Factor X and factor IX coagulant activity increased upon incubation with the venom protease in the presence of calcium, and decreased in the absence of calcium. Human
factor VII
clotting activity decreased slightly upon incubation with the venom protease. Although the venom protease did not clot human fibrinogen, it nonetheless cleaved the A alpha chain of fibrinogen, and this cleavage appeared to be associated with a measurable increase in the clottability of the protease-treated fibrinogen by thrombin. These data demonstrate that the
protein C
activator from Southern Copperhead venom is a typical serine protease with a relatively broad specificity.
...
PMID:Characterization of a protein C activator from Agkistrodon contortrix contortrix venom. 362 72
Protein C
activity and antigen levels have been related to clotting activities of factors VII and X during the induction and withdrawal periods of oral anticoagulant treatment. Both
factor VII
and
protein C
activities fell rapidly during induction but
factor VII
showed a more rapid and much more marked depression than
protein C
. In contrast, reductions in factor X were much slower.
Protein C
antigen, although depressed rapidly at the initiation of treatment, did not subsequently fall to the same degree as
protein C
activity. The ratio of activity to antigen became progressively smaller. On discontinuation there was a reversal of the pattern but with two important differences. Firstly, there was evidence of an excessive rise ('rebound') of
factor VII
compared with the steady state levels in these patients; and secondly there was a surprisingly slow return of
protein C
to normal levels after the oral anticoagulant was withdrawn (levels were still below normal on day 4). These observations lend support to gradual withdrawal of oral anticoagulants after a period of long-term administration. The results suggest that after discontinuation of long-term anticoagulants patients may have increased coagulability up to four days.
...
PMID:Protein C response to induction and withdrawal of oral anticoagulant treatment. 365 37
Factor X is one of six vitamin K dependent proteins known to be involved in blood coagulation, the others being
factor VII
, factor IX, prothrombin, protein S, and
protein C
. In the present studies, recombinant bacteriophage containing overlapping DNA inserts coding for the gene for human factor X have been isolated and characterized. These DNA inserts code for almost the entire gene for factor X, extending from the prepro leader peptide through the 3' noncoding region of the transcription product. The organization of the gene for factor X was established by DNA sequencing to identify the location of the introns and exons in the gene. Seven introns and eight exons were identified and their intron/exon boundaries established. The seven introns interrupt the coding sequence at essentially identical locations in the amino acid sequence as the introns in the genes for human factor IX and
protein C
. In addition, the introns in the gene for factor X divide the coding sequence into discrete exons that code for potential structural and functional domains of the protein. This information provides strong evidence to support the suggestion that the vitamin K dependent proteins present in plasma have evolved from a single, common gene and that this ancestral gene arose through a process that involved the assembly of small protein coding units of DNA into a single gene.
...
PMID:Gene for human factor X: a blood coagulation factor whose gene organization is essentially identical with that of factor IX and protein C. 376 36
The aim of this study was to investigate the blood coagulation changes in three patients with homocystinuria, in baseline condition and during therapy. At baseline, antithrombin III activity and
factor VII
levels were reduced in all three patients; antithrombin III protein and
protein C
antigen were also slightly lowered in one patient, and factor X in another. beta-Thromboglobulin, a measure of platelet activation, was increased in one case. During pyridoxine treatment, antithrombin III activity was rapidly restored to normal;
factor VII
increased and beta-thromboglobulin decreased. These data suggest that, in addition to platelet activation, abnormalities of blood clotting, and particularly reduction of antithrombin III, may play a role in the thrombotic tendency associated with homocystinuria. The nature of these clotting alterations is still uncertain, but their improvement during active metabolic treatment suggests that the defect in amino acid transsulfuration of homocystinuria may directly affect synthesis or activity of some liver-dependent clotting factors.
...
PMID:Blood coagulation changes in homocystinuria: effects of pyridoxine and other specific therapy. 378 25
The cellular site of synthesis of factor VIII (FVIII:C; anti-haemophilic factor) has long been sought. Previous studies suggested the liver as a major site of synthesis, but extrahepatic sources such as spleen and lung have been implicated. Using an immunoradiometric assay (IRMA), we recently localized factor VIII antigen (FVIII:Ag, formerly FVIII:CAg), to whole perfused guinea pig liver and spleen, and to isolated hepatocytes, with lesser or trace amounts in other tissues. Using an immunohistological technique, Stel et al. detected FVIII:Ag in normal human liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, while Exner et al. detected FVIII:Ag by IRMA in extracts of human lymph nodes, lung, liver and spleen. The localization of antigen in tissues does not, however, distinguish sites of factor VIII synthesis from those of storage, and such experiments are subject to misinterpretation due to entrapment of plasma factor VIII in tissues. The recent cloning of the human factor VIII gene provides hybridization probes for the detection of factor VIII messenger RNA in cells, thus directly determining sites of synthesis. During complementary DNA cloning, we detected factor VIII mRNA in liver, and it has been localized by others in liver and placenta and in liver and kidney. In the present study, we detected factor VIII mRNA in isolated human hepatocytes, in spleen and in numerous tissues including lymph nodes and kidney, but not in white blood cells or cultured endothelial cells. We also found that the factor VIII,
factor VII
, factor IX and
protein C
antigens in liver are predominantly localized in hepatocytes, while very little von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag, formerly FVIIIR Ag) is detectable in this organ.
...
PMID:Distribution of factor VIII mRNA and antigen in human liver and other tissues. 393 85
A DEAE-Sephadex column chromatography step utilized to purify human Factor VII consistently yields a protein peak between the
factor VII
activity peak and prothrombin, factor X and factor IX activity peak (S.P. Bajaj, S.I. Rapaport, and S.F. Brown: J. Biol. Chem. 251, 253-259, 1981). We now report that this protein peak contains
protein C
and protein S. Preparative disc polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the proteins in this peak permitted a complete separation of
protein C
from protein S.
Protein C
at this step usually contained approximately 5-10% of Factor X, which could be removed by a goat anti-human Factor X antibody column. For a typical preparation, starting with 10L of plasma, the yield of
Protein C
was 5 mg and of protein S was 4 mg. Both proteins revealed apparent homogeneity in sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoretic system. beta-
Protein C
and beta-protein S were not observed in our preparations starting with plasma collected directly into citrate anticoagulant containing benzamidine and soybean trypsin inhibitor, suggesting that these beta forms of
protein C
and protein S, isolated by other investigators, are slightly degraded forms of the native proteins. Antisera generated to these proteins were monospecific and could be used to monitor column fractions during purification. When examined by immunoelectrophoresis, the electrophoretic mobility of protein S in plasma was slower than that of isolated protein S. When exposed to plasmin,
protein C
was activated slightly and then rapidly degraded.
...
PMID:A procedure for isolation of human protein C and protein S as by-products of the purification of factors VII, IX, X and prothrombin. 622 44
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