Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0003873 (rheumatoid arthritis)
53,068 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The amino acids of blood plasma of 43 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and 19 controls were investigated by ion exchange chromatography. It was proofed simultaneously whether human more than 60 years old exhibit significantly different amino acid concentrations from younger individuals. It was found that RA patients more than 60 years differ significantly in 23 out of 30 amino acids. Only Asparagine was decreased, all other amino acids were increased. The controls did not show the same uniform direction of results. Older individuals exhibited differences in only 14 amino acids. Phosphoserine, Cystathionine and Arginine were increased to a great extent while Threonine, 1-Methylhistidine and Tryptophane were apparently diminished in this group of age.
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PMID:[Investigations on the plasm amino acids of old patients with rheumatoid arthritis (author's transl)]. 2 25

28 plasma amino acids of 40 female patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 24 male patients with ankylosing spondylitis (ASp) and 19 controls (14 females and 5 males) were investigated. In RA-patients 19 amino acids showed statistically significant differences to healthy people of which 18 were decreased. In ASp-patients 14 amino acid concentrations were statistically altered whereby 10 showed enhanced values. In female RA-patients and controls a linear dependency between distinct amino acids (threonine, glutamic acid, proline, alanine, citrulline, tyrosine, phenylalanine, ornithine, lysine and 3-methylhistidine) - and advanced age could be demonstrated.
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PMID:Plasma amino acid level in rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis and its variation during age. 63 65

The serum concentrations of 12 free amino acids (alanine, arginine, glycine, histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, phenylalanine, serine, threonine, tyrosine, and valine) were measured in 26 patients with rheumatoid arthritis and in 12 control subjects. Patients with rheumatoid arthritis had a low serum histidine concentration (P equals 0.002) but no abnormality of any other amino acid concentration or of the combined concentration of the measured amino acids, excluding histidine. These data and 22 other reported studies provide strong evidence for the presence of hypohistidemia, not associated with generalized hypoaminoacidemia, in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. (J Rheumatol 2: 384-392, 1975).
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PMID:Decreased concentration of free histidine in serum in rheumatoid arthritis, an isolated amino acid abnormality not associated with generalized hypoaminoacidemia. 120 70

Cyclosporin A is an established immunomodulatory agent with an increasing number of clinical applications. Although its precise mechanisms of action remain elusive, one of the most important known properties of CyA is its ability to inhibit the production of cytokines involved in the regulation of T-cell activation. In particular, CyA inhibits de novo synthesis of interleukin 2(IL-2), the major cytokine involved in T-cell proliferation, as well as other cytokines, probably at the level of gene transcription, as shown by the suppression of mRNA levels in activated T-cells. Although the major actions of CyA are on T-cells, there is some evidence for possible direct effects on other cell types e.g. B-cells, macrophages and, from our own work, on bone and cartilage cells. Cyclosporin A is thought to enter cells and to bind to cyclophilins, which are members of a family of high-affinity cyclosporin A-binding proteins, now known as immunophilins. The binding of cyclosporins to such proteins appears to be closely linked to the immunosuppressive action of cyclosporins. The immunophilins possess enzyme activity, ie. peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase, also known as rotamase, which can regulate protein folding, and may therefore alter the functional state of many cell proteins. Cyclosporin A blocks peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase activity but it is not clear whether this plays a part in its selective inhibition of cytokine-gene transcription. Moreover, the ubiquitous presence of cyclophilins and immunophilins raises the question of why cyclosporin A has its apparent major effects only on T-cells. Recent proposals regarding the intracellular mode of action of CyA suggest that it interacts with cyclophilin and other regulatory proteins including calmodulin and calcineurin, which is a serine/threonine phosphatase, and thereby affects the functional state of key regulators of gene transcription in its target cells. The effects of CyA on T-cells and directly or indirectly on connective tissue cells, including bone, cartilage and synovial cells, which all can produce a range of cytokines, are of interest in relation to the tissue changes that occur in inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis. Thus, for example, cyclosporin A inhibits in vitro the bone resorbing activity of interleukin 1, 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D3, parathyroid hormone and prostaglandin E2 by apparently non-T-cell effects, while in vivo protects against bone and cartilage loss in adjuvant arthritis. More needs to be known about the direct and indirect modulation of cytokine production by cyclosporin A in connective tissues, in order to understand its potential value in clinical disorders.
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PMID:Cyclosporin A. Mode of action and effects on bone and joint tissues. 147 34

Adjuvant arthritis in Lewis rats is a model of T cell-mediated autoimmune arthritis resembling human rheumatoid arthritis. A nonapeptide from the 65-kD heat-shock protein of Mycobacterium bovis BCG, amino acid sequence 180-188, has been described to carry the dominant immunogenic epitope(s) for both arthritis-protective and arthritogenic T cell clones. Here we demonstrate that immunizations with the synthetic nonapeptide completely protected rats against adjuvant arthritis induced by M. tuberculosis. Interestingly, deletion of the N-terminal threonine of the nonapeptide resulted in loss of the protective activity. Pretreatments with the nonapeptide resulted in an immune response to the nonapeptide and to M. tuberculosis. After immunizations with the synthetic nonapeptide, only low titres of nonapeptide-specific antibodies were produced, whereas a significant cellular immune response to the nonapeptide was observed. In addition, the protection was transferable to naive rats by spleen T cells. These findings document the requirement of a T cell-specific immune response to the dominant epitope of the 65-kD mycobacterial heat-shock protein for the protection against adjuvant arthritis and suggest the feasibility of immune intervention in autoimmune arthritis through the use of synthetic peptides.
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PMID:Prevention of adjuvant arthritis in rats by a nonapeptide from the 65-kD mycobacterial heat-shock protein. 169 60

Two associated calcium-binding proteins (CaBPs) have recently been identified specifically in cells of myeloid origin. These proteins have relative molecular masses (Mr) of 8,000 and 14,000 and are variously referred to as the cystic fibrosis antigen, the L1 light chain, MRP-8 or p8, and the L1 heavy chain, MRP14 or p14, respectively. The expression of p8 and p14 seems to be confined to a specific stage of myeloid cell differentiation, because both proteins are expressed in circulating neutrophils and monocytes but not in normal tissue macrophages. In chronic inflammatory conditions, however, such as rheumatoid arthritis, macrophages in affected tissues express both p8 and p14. These proteins are members of a family of CaBPs of low Mr, which include S-100 alpha and beta proteins, calcyclin (2A9), intestinal CaBP and p11. All the proteins have an Mr of approximately 10,000 with the exception of p14 which has a longer C-terminal sequence after the second calcium-binding domain. Little is known about their function, although by analogy with calmodulin they could be molecules involved in intracellular signalling that are activated by an increase in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]). Here we report that p14 is phosphorylated in both monocytes and neutrophils. The level of p14 phosphorylation can be increased by elevating the [Ca2+]i using the ionophore ionomycin, but is not affected by activation of protein kinase C using phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate. The phosphorylated residue is threonine at position 113, which is the penultimate amino acid in p14 and contained in the longer 'tail' sequence. Part of this sequence is identical to the neutrophil immobilizing factors NIF-1 and NIF-2, indicating that the phosphorylation event could have a role in the generation of NIF activity in the p14 protein.
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PMID:Ionomycin-regulated phosphorylation of the myeloid calcium-binding protein p14. 247 89

Plasma amino acid concentrations have been investigated in 12 female patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), who were hospitalized for two 14-day periods, one of which included 7 days of total fasting, whereas the other served as control period with normal food intake. All medical treatment was stopped on admission to the hospital. Plasma amino acid levels were repeatedly determined during both periods. Another group, consisting of 8 healthy volunteers, also underwent total fasting, for 6 days. The response to food deprivation with regard to plasma amino acid levels was compared with that in the RA patients. The results obtained from the control period were compared with those derived from age and sex matched healthy controls. RA disease was not characterized by a typical amino acid pattern. Major increases were seen in the concentrations of taurine, aspartate, glutamate, glycine, 1-methyl histidine, isoleucine and arginine. Rather smaller yet significant elevations could be observed in the levels of cystein, threonine, serine, citrulline, methionine and leucine. The only amino acid to show a lowered concentration was alpha-aminobutyrate. Most of the alterations induced by fasting were similar to those in healthy volunteers. An exception was the levels of taurine, which evidenced in RA patients a further increase during starvation, not observed in healthy volunteers, and valine which exhibited, a smaller increment than that apparent in healthy controls. The increase in sulphur-containing amino acids might be interpreted as a sign of an enhanced glutathione (GSH) catabolism, whereas the differing metabolic behaviour of branched chain amino acids (BCAA) suggests a specific reaction of valine in RA disease, similar to that in other catabolic diseases.
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PMID:Plasma amino acids in rheumatoid arthritis. 408 62

Thr prevalence of HLA-DR antigens was determined in a group of white patients with rheumatoid arthritis, similar patients originating from the Indian subcontinent, and corresponding controls. Rheumatoid arthritis was found to be highly associated with DR4 in the white patients but with DR1 in the Indian patients. These results raise the possibility that the DR antigens themselves do not play a part in increasing susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis, but the locus for increased susceptibility is probably closely linked to the DR locus.
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PMID:DR antigens and rheumatoid arthritis: a study of two populations. 679 22

A random nanopeptide phage library was used to screen a pool of immunoglobulin fractions obtained from rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. After three rounds of panning, random individual phages were selected by their capacity to react with individual sera from RA patients. By sequencing the inserts corresponding to the peptides displayed on the surface of the phages, we found that phages displaying particular peptides were overrepresented in the selected libraries. The peptides displayed by these phages were: pep1 = Ala-Asp-Gly-Gly-Ala-Gln-Gly-Thr-Ala; pep2 = Pro-Gly-Pro-Ser-Arg-Ala-His-Phe-Leu; pep3 = Leu-Ser-Ser-Arg-Glu-Pro-Gln-Ala-Arg; pep4 = Arg-Leu-Thr-Arg-Glu-Leu-Tyr-Ala-Gln and pep5 = Tyr-Thr-Gln-Lys-His-Gln-Ala. The percentage of sera positive for pep1 was higher in RA patients as compared to the normal adults (p < 0.0004) and the reacting antibody was mainly of IgG isotype. The specificity of binding to the phage displaying pep1 was confirmed by competition experiments using both isolated phages and a synthetic peptide. Interestingly, a mutated phage displaying only Ala-Asp-Gln-Gly-Thr-Ala had no significant reactivity with the sera, indicating that the amino acids (Gly-Gly-Ala) of pep1 are the vital for the binding. Taken together this study demonstrates that it is possible to select specific ligands from a random phage library using sera from RA patients. In addition, this approach could be useful for identifying peptide antigens that might be part of causitive agents in autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Identification of new B cell epitopes in the sera of rheumatoid arthritis patients using a random nanopeptide phage library. 750 91

Polyclonal IgM rheumatoid factors (RF) from ten patients with rheumatoid arthritis and six monoclonal IgM RF were isolated from monomeric IgG affinity columns and studied for their reactivity with the entire CH3 domain of IgG synthesized as overlapping 7-mers using a pin-ELISA assay. All ten polyclonal IgM RF showed similar profiles of reactivity which included peptides with solvent accessible residues PREPQVY (residues 343-349), PQVYTLP (residues 346-352), TLPPRSE (350-356), DGSFFLY (401-407), WQQGNVF (417-423), CSVMHEG (425-430), EGLHNHY (430-436) and KSLSLSP (439-446) of the CH3 domain. Substitution of a neutral glycine or alanine for each residue within these RF-reactive epitopes indicated that tyrosine at position 349, prolines at 343, 346 and 352, glutamine 347, valine 348, threonine 350, leucine 351, arginine 354, aspartic acid 401, tyrosine 407, serine 426, histidine 429, leucine 432, tyrosine 436 and lysine 439 represented important single amino acids within CH3 for RF reactivity. Regions of CH3 primary sequence with and without the single allotype-specific amino acid substitutions of glycine for alanine 431 (Gmx) or aspartic acid for glutamic acid (356) and leucine for methionine (358) (Gma) often showed considerable differences in reactivity with individual polyclonal and monoclonal RF. However, these differences in RF reactivity did not correlate with the individual anti-Gm RF specificity. Assays using monoclonal IgM RF produced from RA synovial B cells or peripheral blood B cells frequently showed a much more restricted spectrum of reactive CH3 epitopes. 7-mer peptides representing RF-reactive sites on CH3 preincubated with polyclonal IgM RF showed strong inhibition (55-66%) of RF binding to whole IgG on the ELISA plate. These studies indicate that it is possible to define portions of the IgG CH3 domain participating in the reaction with IgM RF using reactive epitope-mapping with sequential linear peptides derived from the primary IgG CH3 sequence.
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PMID:Rheumatoid-factor-reactive sites on CH3 established by overlapping 7-mer peptide epitope analysis. 753 85


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