Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A number of soluble proteins contained in human aortic intimal tissue was extracted into buffered saline (pH 7.4) and identified and quantitated by immunoelectrophoresis and immunodiffusion. The proteins included IgA, IgG, IgM, B1C (C3), alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 2-macroglobulin, fibrinogen, albumin, LDL, HDL, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, beta 2-glycoprotein, transferrin and ceruloplasmin. The concentration of soluble proteins was significantly higher in the atherosclerotic intima than in the normal intima. The diseased intima also contained a small amount of tissue-bound IgG, IgA and B1C which was extractable with citrate buffer at pH 3.2. The vascular band IgG, and B1C were shown by enzymatic and immunohistochemical studies to be closely associated with the collagenous tissue of the plaque. The Ig contained in the atherosclerotic plaque may be derived in part from the biosynthesis of Ig by the artery, since the incorporation of 14C-labeled leucine into IgG by the atheromatous plaque was demonstrable by radioimmunoelectrophoresis. In contrast to the diseased artery, the normal artery did not synthesize IgG and did not contain vascular bound IgG or complement. However, the normal artery was capable of fixing IgG and B1C eluted from the diseased artery. The present studies suggested that the IgG contained and synthesized by the plaque might represent an immune response to an endogenous or exogenous antigen closely associated with plaque collagen. IgG and B1C either alone or in the form of an immune complex also may play an important role in phagocytosis in the plaque and thereby influence the course of atherosclerosis. The proteolytic inhibitors, alpha 1-antitrypsin and alpha 2-macroglobulin, found in relatively high concentrations in the plaque, could enhance fibrosis of the lesion because of thier known inhibitory effects on collagenase and elastase.
Atherosclerosis 1979 Dec
PMID:Soluble proteins in the human atherosclerotic plaque. With spectral reference to immunoglobulins, C3-complement component, alpha 1-antitrypsin and alpha 2-macroglobulin. 9 93

Insufficiencies of the circulatory system and increasing transport losses in pigs as well as analogies with respect to atherosclerosis of men and swine were the motives for a broad statistical investigation of important characteristics of the circulatory system in a big population of female German landrace pigs, fattened as progeny groups under identical conditions in a testing station and slaughtered at 100 kg weight. As the most essential results, highly significant seasonal and genetical influences on several traits are to be mentioned, and some meaningful correlations between them: Plasma cholesterol, ceruloplasmin and hematocrit showed markedly lower levels in the summer and increased values in the cold season; the thickness of the intima (aorta and arteria pulmonalis) was quite distinctly greatest in the spring, this phenomenon being almost exactly paralleled by augmented amounts of copper and iron in the aortic wall. Increased heart weights were again found in the cold, decreased ones in the warm seasons. On average, bigger hearts and vessels were accompanied by higher elastin contents of the aorta, but these contents stood in very significant negative correlation to the ash content and the amounts of certain mineral components (Ca, Mg and P) of the vessel wall, especially to the ash percentage of the elastic fibers. This indicates that calcifying and mineralizing processes in the wall obviously take place at the cost of the elastic components. The estimation of heritabilities in half and full sibs revealed with h2 = 60% high henetic influences on the elastin content of the aorta and equally so on the ash percentage of elastic fibers. Future investigations must correlate these findings with direct measurements of biomechanical and rheological properties of the vessels.
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PMID:[The exogenous and genetic components of some vessel wall characteristics in the pig (author's transl)]. 122 Jun 64

Phagocyte-mediated oxidant damage to vascular endothelium is likely involved in various vasculopathies including atherosclerosis and pulmonary leak syndromes such as adult respiratory distress syndrome. We have shown that heme, a hydrophobic iron chelate, is rapidly incorporated into endothelial cells where, after as little as 1 h, it markedly aggravates cytotoxicity engendered by polymorphonuclear leukocyte oxidants or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). In contrast, however, if cultured endothelial cells are briefly pulsed with heme and then allowed to incubate for a prolonged period (16 h), the cells become highly resistant to oxidant-mediated injury and to the accumulation of endothelial lipid peroxidation products. This protection is associated with the induction within 4 h of mRNAs for both heme oxygenase and ferritin. After 16 h heme oxygenase and ferritin have increased approximately 50-fold and 10-fold, respectively. Differential induction of these proteins determined that ferritin is probably the ultimate cytoprotectant. Ferritin inhibits oxidant-mediated cytolysis in direct relation to its intracellular concentration. Apoferritin, when added to cultured endothelial cells, is taken up in a dose-responsive manner and appears as cytoplasmic granules by immunofluorescence; in a similar dose-responsive manner, added apoferritin protects endothelial cells from oxidant-mediated cytolysis. Conversely, a site-directed mutant of ferritin (heavy chain Glu62----Lys; His65----Gly) which lacks ferroxidase activity and is deficient in iron sequestering capacity, is completely ineffectual as a cytoprotectant. We conclude that endothelium and perhaps other cell types may be protected from oxidant damage through the iron sequestrant, ferritin.
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PMID:Ferritin: a cytoprotective antioxidant strategem of endothelium. 151 45

The production of growth factors by endothelial cells (EC) and other vascular cells may regulate the migration and proliferation of smooth muscle cells in normal and pathological vessel wall processes. We have previously shown that EC production of platelet-derived growth factor-like protein (PDGFc) is regulatable, and in particular is inhibited by specific lipids and by lipid-containing complexes, e.g. oxidized low density lipoproteins and fish oil emulsions. In this report we show that the inhibitory activity of the fish oils is in turn regulated by a component present in serum. Addition of the fish oil extract MaxEPA to bovine aortic EC, in serum-free medium, reduced PDGFc secretion to about 30% that of control cells. Addition of calf serum to the medium almost completely suppressed this inhibitory activity of MaxEPA, while in contrast, fetal calf serum augmented the activity. The suppressor activity in calf serum was dose-dependent, with a half-maximal suppression of about 0.1% serum at a MaxEPA concentration of 50 micrograms/ml. Adult human serum was observed to have a quantitatively similar suppressor activity. The suppressor activity in human serum was identified as ceruloplasmin since: 1) purified ceruloplasmin also suppressed the activity of fish oil, and at concentrations comparable to the inhibitory levels in serum, and 2) removal of ceruloplasmin from human plasma-derived serum by immunoprecipitation restored the inhibitory activity of MaxEPA. These results may have implications in the effectiveness of fish oils as a therapeutic agent for the reduction of intimal thickening in atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Serum factor that blocks the action of fish oils on endothelial cell production of platelet-derived growth factor is ceruloplasmin. 158 87

Lipid peroxidation and the antioxidant status were studied in male patients having stable angina (SA) and unstable angina (UA) pectoris and the results were compared with that of controls. Lipid peroxides (LPx) and conjugated dienes (CD) were found to be elevated in patients with both SA (LPx: 3.96 +/- 1.07, P less than 0.001; CD: 357.09 +/- 66.23, P less than 0.01) and UA (LPx: 4.66 +/- 1.33, CD: 373.33 +/- 49.82, P less than 0.001) than in controls (LPx: 3.22 +/- 0.86, CD: 335.15 +/- 60.27). In SA, the erythrocytes expressed a diminished activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) (SA: 435.59 +/- 76.02, control: 651.69 +/- 145.90, P less than 0.001) and normal activities of catalase and glutathione peroxidase, whereas in UA it showed enhanced activities of both SOD (UA: 735.72 +/- 145.67, P less than 0.01) and catalase (UA: 21.94 +/- 6.26, control: 18.69 +/- 6.37, P less than 0.01). A significant increase was also noticed in the levels of ceruloplasmin and vitamin E during both types of angina, but not alteration was observed in the levels of transferrin. Further, the patients with diabetes showed maximum levels of lipid peroxides compared to smokers and hypertensives. The level of lipid peroxides was also observed to increase with the severity of disease. This study indicates that free radicals are involved in the pathogenesis and progression of atherosclerotic heart disease.
Atherosclerosis 1992 Jun
PMID:Antioxidant status in relation to free radical production during stable and unstable anginal syndromes. 163 72

After cardiac surgery performed with extracorporeal circulation (ECC) involving heart valve prostheses (PHVS, n 12) and after a bypass of the coronary arteries by a venous graft (CABG, n 19), the authors investigated the dynamics of changes of haemostasis on the 1st, 3rd, 6th, 10th and 21st day after operation. As anti-thrombotic treatment after PHVS anticoagulants were used, after CABG thrombocyte inhibitors. On the 1st day after operation in both groups thrombocytes decline, while after the 10th day their numbers increase. From the 6th day there is in both groups a rise of fibrinogen and other proteins of the acute phase (alpha-1-antitrypsin, orosomucoid and ceruloplasmin, while there was a drop of transferrin. On the 3rd and 6th day after operation fibrinolysis activators decline (euglobulin fibrinolysis). These findings suggest an increased risk of thrombophilia during the postoperative period and are probably associated with the release of interleukin-1 after Ecc and the stress of cardiac surgery. In patients with CABG on the 1st day a major drop of thrombocytes occurs, on the 6th day an elevated fibrinogen value was recorded and on the 10th day a reduced fibrinolytic activity, as compared with patients with PHVS. These changes will be, however, associated rather with a greater development of general atherosclerosis in patients with CABG, which leads to a further alteration of haemostasis, rather than with the applied antithrombotic treatment.
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PMID:Changes in haemostasis and proteins of the acute phase following cardiac surgery. 170 76

The antioxidative system (AOS) ceruloplasmin-transferrin (Cp-Tr) was studied by means of electron paramagnetic resonance in 14 rabbits with experimental atherosclerosis and in 33 patients with ischemic heart disease (IHD). A correlation was found between the AOS Cp-Tr activity and the pathological process severity: mild disease was associated with high AOS activity, while in severe disease course, this activity was threefold lower. This regularity was detectable both in experimental animals and in human IHD patients. It was found that hemosorption (HS) exerted a positive effect only in the presence of low AOS Cp-Tr activity which increased after HS in these cases. In high AOS activity HS caused deterioration of the patients' condition and accumulation of lipid peroxidation products in the blood plasma; this was attended with lowering of the AOS Cp-Tr activity.
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PMID:[Ceruloplasmin-transferrin antioxidant system in in experimental and clinical atherosclerosis]. 229 27

The pattern of immunocytochemical staining with antibodies to caeruloplasmin, myosin, myoglobin and C-reactive protein seen in myocardium taken from deaths with macroscopic evidence of myocardial infarction and/or significant coronary artery atherosclerosis and from deaths with neither of these lesions has been correlated with H&E, PTAH and HBFP staining of myocardium and circumstances of each death indicative of antemortem hypoxia and/or ischaemia. Loss of staining with these antibodies correlated well with fuchsinorrhagia and both techniques are more sensitive than H&E and PTAH staining in the detection of early ischaemic/hypoxic damage to myocardium. However, their sensitivity is such that they appear to detect agonal changes and, therefore, cannot be used for specific diagnosis of early myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Further evaluation of immunocytochemical staining in the diagnosis of early myocardial ischaemic/hypoxic damage. 233 27

Both stenosis and aneurysmal dilatation are associated with atherosclerosis of the distal aorta. As part of an investigation into factors predisposing to aneurysmal dilatation we compared the levels of acute phase proteins in patients with stenosing and aneurysmal disease. Increased levels of acute phase proteins were found in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms compared with patients with stenosing aortic disease. In 20 aneurysm patients the C-reactive protein was 56 +/- 10 mg/l, alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor 2.5 +/- 0.13 g/l and ceruloplasmin 0.41 +/- 0.01 g/l. In 20 patients with stenosing aortic disease the C-reactive protein was 28 +/- 8 mg/l, alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor 1.65 +/- 0.11 g/l and ceruloplasmin 0.35 +/- 0.03 g/l. These results argue for the participation of an inflammatory process in the aortic wall in the pathogenesis of all aneurysms.
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PMID:Acute phase proteins in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms. 244 5

The sensitive and reliable dinitrophenyl (DNP) hapten sandwich staining (DHSS) procedure (B. Jasani et al., Virchows Arch (Pathol. Anat.), 406 (1985) 441-448) was used to study the distribution of immunoperoxidase staining seen with antibodies to seven protein markers in post-mortem heart tissue. This was obtained from 12 cases with macroscopic myocardial infarction and 17 cases without myocardial infarction (10 with and 7 without significant coronary artery atherosclerosis). The immunostaining patterns were compared with the appearances seen in adjacent sections stained by the routine haematoxylin and eosin (H & E) and phosphotungstic acid haematoxylin (PTAH) methods and a method previously recommended for the detection of early myocardial infarction, the haematoxylin basic fuchsin picric acid (HBFP) stain. Loss of immunostaining with an antibody to myoglobin was found to be a reliable and more objective marker of both early and established myocardial infarction compared with the histological stains. Antibodies to myosin, caeruloplasmin, C-reactive protein and pre-albumin gave similar but less reliable results, whilst those to complement factor C3b and alpha-1 anti-trypsin gave the least reliable results for early myocardial ischaemic/hypoxic damage. The immunocytochemical results are considered sufficiently encouraging to extend the work to a large number of sudden death cases in order to establish a new, more reliable approach to the detection of histologically latent ischaemic/hypoxic damage in the myocardium.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical diagnosis of early myocardial ischaemic/hypoxic damage. 264 26


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