Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.2.1.7 (BAL)
1,977 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 60-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of progressive cough and chest pain for 2 months. She also complained of exertional dyspnea. Bilateral diffuse infiltlative shadows were found on the chest roentogenogram. Ground-glass opacity in the middle lobe and lingula, and subpleural patchy consolidation were seen on the computed tomogram of the chest. Arterial oxygenation and diffusing capacity were low. The level of angiotensin-converting enzyme in serum was normal, but that of lysozyme was high. In the BAL (broncho-alveolar lavage) fluid, total cell count and the number of lymphocytes were high, and the CD 4/8 ratio of the lymphocytes was high. Open lung biopsy revealed numerous confluent sarcoid granulomas with necrosis, which strongly correlated with severe vasculitis. After necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis was diagnosed, prednisolone was administered, which resulted in improvement of symptoms and disappearance of chest-radiograph shadows. Necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis may be seen as a variant type of sarcoidosis. However, clinical findings including the chest-radiograph shadows and clinical course of this case differ from those of ordinary sarcoidosis. These clinical findings can be attributed to severe vasculitis, as revealed by histological examination.
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PMID:[A case of necrotizing sarcoid granulomatosis]. 773 Nov 25

We describe a rare case of pulmonary sarcoidosis with multiple cavitation and pneumothorax. A 32-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with a dry cough and an interstitial shadow with dense infiltrates in both upper lungs and cavitation in the right upper lung on chest roentgenogram and CT. Laboratory tests revealed an elevated level of serum lysozyme. BAL fluid demonstrated a high proportion of lymphocytes with an increased CD4/CD8 ratio, compatible with sarcoidosis. Transbronchial lung and skin biopsies showed evidence of noncaseating epithelioid-cell granuloma, and a diagnosis of sarcoidosis was made. Although pneumothorax appeared in the left lung on chest roentgenogram during clinical observation conservative treatment without corticosteroids or any other therapy for a follow-up period of 3 years resulted in improvement of her clinical condition and abnormal X-ray findings.
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PMID:[A case of pulmonary sarcoidosis with multiple cavitation and pneumothorax]. 961 50

Urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (UPA-R-CD87) is a GPI-anchored membrane protein which promotes the generation of plasmin on the surface of many cell types, probably facilitating cellular extravasation and tissue invasion. A flow cytometric quantitative analysis of expression levels for UPA-R was performed on fresh blast cells from patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML, n = 74), acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL, n = 24), and biphenotypic leukaemia (BAL, n = 3) using two CD87 monoclonal antibodies (McAbs) (3B10 and VIM5). Peripheral blood and bone marrow (BM) cells from 15 healthy adults served as controls. Using 3B10 McAb, UPA-R was expressed (>99%) by blood monocytes, neutrophils, and BM myelomonocytic precursors in controls, whereas resting T and B lymphocytes, and CD34+ cells were UPA-R negative. We also attempted to clarify whether UPA-R has a role in mediating neutrophil functions. Oriented locomotion induced by different chemotaxins and lysozyme release by granules stimulated with fMLP or PMA were significantly decreased when UPA-R was neutralized by CD87 McAb. In contrast, the anti-UPA-R McAb had no effect on superoxide anion generation of normal neutrophils. Blasts from AML showed a heterogenous pattern of expression for the UPA-R McAbs, with reactivity strictly dependent on FAB subtype. The highest UPA-R expression was seen in the M5 group: all patients tested (n = 20) showed strong positivity for the UPA-R McAb whereas only 12% (3/24) of ALL patients were CD87 positive, and 2/3 of BAL patients showed a dim expression for CD87. The number of receptors expressed by blast cells in 6/74 (8.1%) AML patients was higher than those of normal samples: in addition, since co-expression of UPA-R and CD34 was not found in normal haemopoietic cells, it may be postulated that CD87 can be used alone (when overexpressed) or in combination with CD34 for the detection of minimal residual disease. Results also indicated that patients with UPA-receptors >12 x 10(3) ABC/cell, irrespective of FAB subtype, had a greater tendency for cutaneous and tissue infiltration and a higher frequency of chromosome abnormalities, thus suggesting the concept that cellular UPA-R content positively correlates with the invasive potential of AML cells. The combination of higher UPA-R positivity, abnormalities of chromosome 11, and M5 FAB morphology may identify a peculiar subset of AML, characterized by a more aggressive clinical course.
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PMID:Expression and functional role of urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor in normal and acute leukaemic cells. 979 97

Sarcoidosis is a granulomatous disease of unknown origin, with pulmonary findings in more than 90% of patients. Extrapulmonary involvement is common and all organs can be involved (especially lymph nodes, eyes, joints, central nervous system) but it is rare to find an isolated extrapulmonary disease (less than 10% of patients). Granulomatous inflammation of the spleen and the liver is common in patients with systemic sarcoidosis, while hepatosplenic enlargement is unusual and splenic involvement rare. We report two cases of systemic sarcoidosis, that onset with splenic and hepatosplenic disease, and one case with splenic sarcoidosis without pulmonary involvement. In the first case a 53-year-old woman with mild abdominal pain underwent sonography and CT, which revealed one hypoechoic/hypodense splenic lesion. Laboratory tests were normal. In order to exclude a lymphoma, splenectomy was performed: histology revealed a sarcoid granuloma. After surgery the patient was asymptomatic and now, after two years, disease is silent. The second case is a 66-year-old woman with a recent weight loss (8 kg in two months) and alterated liver function tests (AST 61 U/l, ALT 72 U/l, Alkaline phosphatase 748 U/l, g-GT 381 U/l). Since she had a familiar history of colon cancer, abdominal US scan, abdominal CT scan and MRI were performed and showed inter-aorto-caval lymphadenopathies and discreet multiple bilobar hepatic and splenic substitutive lesions, with no signs of primary tumor. Upper and lower GI endoscopy, full gynecological workup, complete set of tumor markers, bone marrow biopsy were performed. All resulted negative for neoplasia. Small pulmonary infiltrations were observed on chest-CT scan but cytology on BAL was normal. Infections were also excluded. An exploratory laparotomy showed whitish peritoneal, hepatic and splenic nodules. The histological exam revealed chronic granulomatous lesions typical for sarcoidosis. During a two-year follow-up after the splenectomy the patient feels well without any treatment. The third patient is a 32-year-old woman with mild epigastric pain after meals. Neck-thoracic CT, bone scintigraphy and upper GI endoscopy were negative. Abdominal US and MR showed splenomegaly with multiple splenic lesions. Splenectomy was performed and histological exam showed chronic granulomatous lesions typical for sarcoidosis. Further laboratory tests were normal, except for ACE (66 UI/l). After the surgery ACE became normal and now, three years later, the patient is still asymptomatic. We conclude that hepatosplenic involvement is less rare than it is thought. It is often oligosymptomatic or accompanied with unspecific manifestations and laboratory abnormalities. The diagnosis could be difficult; in fact typical laboratory findings of sarcoidosis such as ACE, lysozyme, calcium, were not diagnostic. Ultrasonography and CT were important but the diagnosis was established only with the histological examination of suspected lesions. This latter required to differentiate liver and/or spleen sarcoidosis from tuberculosis and other infections, primary biliary cirrhosis, metastasis or malignant lymphoma.
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PMID:Atypical sarcoidosis: case reports and review of the literature. 2138 7

Lysozyme is an important component of the innate immune system and has roles in peptidoglycan cleavage of gram-positive organisms. Myeloid cells highly express the isoform, lysozyme M, and its promoter has been used to direct Cre recombinase expression to target deletion of floxed genes in myeloid cells. However, generation of the LysMCre mouse effectively disrupts the LysM gene, and mice homozygous for the Cre allele lack the LysM gene product. To test the contribution of LysM in sterile acute lung injury, we generated LysMCre mice homozygous for the Cre allele (+/+) or wild-type allele (-/-). These mice were challenged with LPS delivered via oropharygneal aspiration. Mice were monitored and weighed daily, and BAL cell counts, differential, protein, and cytokine levels were assessed at days 2 and 4. LysMCre+/+ and LysMCre-/- had similar weight loss and recovery, and similar inflammatory responses to LPS at days 2 and 4. These findings indicate that loss of LysM and expression of Cre recombinase are non-contributory in sterile acute lung injury.
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PMID:Deletion of LysM in LysMCre Recombinase Homozygous Mice is Non-contributory in LPS-Induced Acute Lung Injury. 3170 72