Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.4.23.15 (
renin
)
35,795
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Using bioassay method (rat blood pressure technique) as well as the radioimmunoassay,
renin
-like activity (RLA) was measured in eccrine sweat of patients with
cystic fibrosis
of the pancreas (CF) and of controls. Sweat-formation was induced by pilocarpine-iontophoresis or by local injection of carbamylcholine (Doryl). RLA-values between O (not measurable) and 460 ng/ml.h were measured. With increasing sweat flow-rate a tendency to lower RLA-values was detected. No significant difference was observed between CF and controls. From the observation that RLA of sweat is up to 30 times higher than that of plasma, it is concluded that RLA is probably released not from plasma but from the sweat glands themselves, where it is stored or synthesized.
...
PMID:Renin-like (angiotensinogenase) activity in sweat of patients with cystic fibrosis and controls. 84 90
Cystic fibrosis
(CF) is characterized by high sweat sodium and chloride concentrations. CF patients have long been assumed to be at risk for heat illness, but there has been no quantitative documentation that CF patients actually have a greater loss of sodium and chloride than normals when under environmental stress. We compared thermoregulatory responses of eight CF patients with five normal controls during 90-min exposures to exercise and heat stress. Both groups reached similar peak rectal temperatures and peak heart rates; they had similar sweat volumes and rates. CF patients showed the normal rise in
renin
and aldosterone and the normal fall in urine sodium excretion; however, CF patients lost significantly more sodium (48.8 +/- 23.4 mEq/liter/m2 versus 20.2 +/- 11.2 mEq/liter/m2) and chloride (46.6 +/- 21.6 mEq/liter/m2 versus 18.5 +/- 11.3 mEq/liter/m2) per unit of surface area than the controls. Serum sodium and chloride concentrations fell in the CF patients but not in the normals. After exercise/heat stress, CF serum chloride was significantly less than normals' (99 +/- 3 mEq/liter versus 104 +/- 1 mEq/liter, P less than 0.01). CF patients have normal temperature, heart rate, hormonal, and renal responses to exercise and heat stress, yet still lose significantly more sodium and chloride than normal. These losses are reflected in part in lower serum concentrations of these ions. There may be important effects of these losses on respiratory tract secretions.
...
PMID:Exercise and heat stress in cystic fibrosis patients. 634 89
A four-month-old female presented with dehydration and an unexplained hypoelectrolytaemia and metabolic alkalosis in association with hyperreninaemia and hyperaldosteronism. These findings suggested Bartter's syndrome. Sweat sodium concentrations were within normal limits. Total skin water loss was estimated and found to be sufficient for the sodium loss in the sweat to exceed the dietary intake. Reinvestigation at three years revealed normal plasma electrolytes, plasma
renin
activity and aldosterone values but sweat sodium concentrations were in excess of 80 mmol/l, indicating a diagnosis of
cystic fibrosis
.
...
PMID:Cystic fibrosis mimicking Bartter's syndrome. 635 78
Sodium chloride deficiency (SCD) was observed within the 1st year of life in 12 of 46
cystic fibrosis
(CF) patients between July 1989 and September 1992. All patients showed sweating, loss of appetite, fever, vomiting, irritation, dehydration, weakness, and cyanosis during an attack. Mean plasma sodium, potassium and chloride levels were 122.9 (range 106-135), 2.5 (range 1.6-3.5), and 73.3 (range 60-90) mEq/l respectively. Alkalosis and elevated plasma
renin
activity were detected in all patients. Of the patients, 50% showed microscopic haematuria, and hypercalciuria was detected in two out of four patients. Low urinary sodium and high urinary potassium were observed in the four examined patients. Increased creatinine, BUN and uric acid values returned to normal with treatment. All the patients were treated initially with intravenous fluids and electrolyte solutions. All patients were less than 7 months of age during the first attack, five received only breast milk and the others breast milk with formula milk. Their oral salt supplement was 2-4 mEq/kg per day, which is recommended for CF patients, but could be deficient in excessively sweating infants. The genotype of these patients might be cause of high salt losses. F508 is the most common mutation with the frequency of 38% in our CF patients with SCD, but the frequency of unknown mutations is high (54%).
...
PMID:Sodium chloride deficiency in cystic fibrosis patients. 784 98
The relative importance of molecular biology in clinical practice is often underestimated. However, numerous procedures in clinical diagnosis and new therapeutic drugs have resulted from basic molecular research. Furthermore, understanding of the physiological and physiopathological mechanisms underlying several human diseases has been improved by the results of basic molecular research. For example, cloning of the gene encoding leptin has provided spectacular insights into the understanding of the mechanisms involved in the control of food intake and body weight maintenance in man. In
cystic fibrosis
, the cloning and identification of several mutations in the gene encoding the chloride channel transmembrane regulator (CFTR) have resolved several important issues in clinical practice:
cystic fibrosis
constitutes a molecular defect of a single gene. There is a strong correlation between the clinical manifestations or the severity of the disease (phenotype) with the type of mutations present in the CFTR gene (genotype). More recently, identification of mutations in the gene encoding a subunit of the renal sodium channel in the Liddle syndrome has provided important insight into the physiopathological understanding of mechanisms involved in this form of hereditary hypertension. Salt retention and secondary high blood pressure are the result of constitutive activation of the renal sodium channel by mutations in the gene encoding the renal sodium channel. It is speculated that less severe mutations in this channel could result in a less severe form of hypertension which may correspond to patients suffering from high blood pressure with low plasma
renin
activity. Several tools, most notably PCR, are derived from molecular research and are used in everyday practice, i.e. in prenatal diagnosis and in the diagnosis of several infectious diseases including tuberculosis and hepatitis. Finally, the production of recombinant proteins at lower cost and with fewer side effects is used in everyday clinical practice. Gene therapy remains an extraordinary challenge in correcting severe hereditary or acquired diseases. The use of genetically modified animal cell lines producing growth factors, insulin or erythropoetin, which are subsequently encapsulated and transferred to man, represents an attractive approach for gene therapy.
...
PMID:[Is molecular biology useful to the practitioner?]. 919 Jun 68
A recent case of iatrogenic Cushing's syndrome and complete suppression of the pituitary-adrenal-axis in a patient with
cystic fibrosis
(CF) and allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis treated with itraconazole as an antifungal agent, and budesonide as an anti-inflammatory agent led to a systematic assessment of this axis and gonadal function in all patients treated with itraconazole in the authors' CF centre. Itraconazole can inhibit CYP3A, thus interfering with synthesis of gluco- and mineralocorticoids, androgens and oestradiol as well as the metabolism of budesonide. The aim of this study was to evaluate adrenal and gonadal function in patients treated with itraconazole with or without budesonide. An adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) test (250 microg tetracosactid) was performed in 25 CF patients treated with both itraconazole and budesonide, and in 12 patients treated with itraconazole alone (six patients with CF and six with chronic granulomateous disease). Mineralocorticoid and gonadal steroid function were evaluated by measurements of plasma-
renin
, follicle stimulating hormone, luteinising hormone, progesterone, oestradiol, testosterone, serum-inhibin A and B. ACTH tests performed as part of a pretransplantation programme in an additional 30 CF patients were used as controls. Eleven of the 25 patients treated with both itraconazole and budesonide had adrenal insufficiency. None of the patients on itraconazole therapy alone nor the control CF patients had a pathological ACTH test. Mineralocorticoid and gonadal insufficiency was not observed in any of the patients. Only one patient with an initial pathological ACTH-test subsequently normalised, the other 10 patients improved but had not achieved normalised adrenal function 2-10 months after itraconazole treatment had been discontinued. Suppression of the adrenal glucocorticoid synthesis was observed in 11 of 25
cystic fibrosis
patients treated with both itraconazole and budesonide. The pathogenesis is most likely an itraconazole caused increase in systemic budesonide concentration through a reduced/inhibited metabolism leading to inhibition of adrenocorticotrophic hormone secretion along with a direct inhibition of steroidogenesis. In patients treated with this combination, screening for adrenal insufficiency at regular intervals is suggested.
...
PMID:Iatrogenic adrenal insufficiency as a side-effect of combined treatment of itraconazole and budesonide. 1216 60
The
renin
-angiotensin system (RAS) is classically characterized as a circulating hormonal system primarily through the production of the physiologically active product angiotensin II (Ang II) that plays a crucial role in the regulation of blood pressure, fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. In addition to this circulating RAS, numerous tissues and organs have been recently demonstrated to exhibit their own RAS products and activities. Such an intrinsic RAS can modulate the specific local functions of their respective tissues and organs, frequently in a paracrine and autocrine manner. Recent findings from our laboratories and others have made a significant contribution on the expression, localization, regulation, and potential role of a local RAS in the pancreas. Although, it is quite intriguing that components of the local pancreatic RAS are responsive to various physiological and pathophysiological conditions, the crucial role of this system in regulating the exocrine and endocrine functions and ultimately the clinical relevance to pancreatic disease is still largely equivocal. Of particular interest in this context are the actions of pancreatic RAS on the growth, anti-proliferation and free radical generation in the pancreas. The aims of the current article focus on the emerging data on the local pancreatic RAS; its involvement in exocrine acinar and endocrine islet aspects, and the clinical significance in the pancreas are particularly addressed. The target for the local pancreatic RAS may provide a new insight into future management of various clinical conditions including islet transplants, diabetes mellitus, pancreatic cancer, pancreatitis and
cystic fibrosis
.
...
PMID:A local pancreatic renin-angiotensin system: endocrine and exocrine roles. 1267 70
Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common life-threatening, hereditary disease. The prevalence of ADPKD is more common than Huntington disease, haemophilia, sickle cell disease,
cystic fibrosis
, myotonic dystrophy and Down syndrome combined. In recent years there have not only been advances in the understanding of the genetic and molecular events involved in ADPKD, but some diagnostic and therapeutic advances have also emerged. In the genetics area, the gene for PKD1 was localised to chromosome 16, is associated with polycystin-2 protein, and found to account for approximately 85% of patients with ADPKD. The gene for PKD2, found in chromosome 4, accounts for approximately 15% of ADPKD, and is associated with the polycystin-2 protein. While these genetic and molecular biology findings have stimulated a great deal of exciting basic research in ADPKD, therapies to decrease morbidity and mortality in ADPKD patients have yet to emerge from these findings. In contrast, the early diagnosis and treatment of hypertension with inhibitors of the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system have the potential to decrease or prevent left ventricular hypertrophy cardiac complications and slow the progression of the renal disease.
...
PMID:Optimal care of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease patients. 1688 82
The systemic
renin
-angiotensin system (RAS) plays an important role in regulating blood pressure, electrolyte and fluid homeostasis. However, local RASs also exist in diverse tissues and organs, where they play a multitude of autocrine, paracrine and intracrine physiological roles. The existence of a local RAS is now recognized in pancreatic acinar, islet, duct, endothelial and stellate cells, the expression of which is modulated in response to physiological and pathophysiological stimuli such as hypoxia, pancreatitis, islet transplantation, hyperglycaemia, and diabetes mellitus. This pancreatic RAS has been proposed to have important endocrine and exocrine roles in the pancreas, regulating local blood flow, duct cell sodium bicarbonate secretion, acinar cell digestive enzyme secretion, islet beta-cell (pro)insulin biosynthesis, and thus, glucose-stimulated insulin release, delta-cell somatostatin secretion, and pancreatic cell proliferation and differentiation. It may further mediate oxidative stress-induced cell inflammation, apoptosis and fibrosis. Further exploration of this system would probably offer new insights into the pathogenesis of pancreatitis, diabetes,
cystic fibrosis
and pancreatic cancer formation. New therapeutic targets and strategies might thus be suggested.
...
PMID:The physiology of a local renin-angiotensin system in the pancreas. 1721 53
Polycystic kidney diseases (autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive) are progressive renal tubular cystic diseases, which are characterised by cyst expansion and loss of normal kidney structure and function. Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common life- threatening, hereditary disease. ADPKD is more prevalent than Huntington's disease, haemophilia, sickle cell disease,
cystic fibrosis
, myotonic dystrophy and Down's syndrome combined. Early diagnosis and treatment of hypertension with inhibitors of the
renin
-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and its potential protective effect on left ventricular hypertrophy has been one of the major therapeutic goals to decrease cardiac complications and contribute to improved prognosis of the disease. Advances in the understanding of the genetics, molecular biology and pathophysiology of the disease are likely to facilitate the improvement of treatments for these diseases. Developments in describing the role of intracellular calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)) and its correlation with cellular signalling systems, Ras/Raf/mitogen extracellular kinase (MEK)/extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK), and interaction of these pathways with cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) levels, provide new insights on treatment strategies. Blocking the vasopressin V(2) receptor, a major adenylyl cyclase agonist, demonstrated significant improvements in inhibiting cytogenesis in animal models. Because of activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway, the use of sirolimus (rapamycin) an mTOR inhibitor, markedly reduced cyst formation and decreased polycystic kidney size in several animal models. Caspase inhibitors have been shown to decrease cytogenesis and renal failure in rats with cystic disease. Cystic fluid secretion results in cyst enlargement and somatostatin analogues have been shown to decrease renal cyst progression in patients with ADPKD. The safety and efficacy of these classes of drugs provide potential interventions for experimental and clinical trials.
...
PMID:Potential pharmacological interventions in polycystic kidney disease. 1803 88
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