Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plasma glycoprotein synthesis in normal and vitamin A-deficient rats was investigated by injecting the rats with labeled carbohydrate precursors and then fractionating their plasmas on DEAE-Sephadex. Plasma from deficient rats showed a consistent depression of 30% in the uptake of label into a peak eluting with 0.23 M NaCl. The major component of this peak was identified as the rat alpha1-macroglobulin, based on its molecular weight (800,000), its mobility on cellulose acetate electrophoresis and its ability to bind trypsin. Although the alpha1-macroglobulin synthesis appeared to be depressed by 30%, its fractional turnover rate was not affected by vitamin A deficiency (t 1/2 = 18 hours). The trypsin-binding ability of this glycoprotein was used as a comparative measure of its concentration, and the results confirmed that serum levels of this glycoprotein were lower in deficient rats. In severe deficiency, alpha1-macroglobulin levels dropped to between 10% and 20% of normal levels.
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PMID:A plasma glycoprotein depressed in vitamin A deficiency in the rat: alpha 1-macroglobulin. 6 42

The present study has shown that following acute hemorrhage (equivalent to 3% body weight withdrawn over 20 min) in the rat, there is a large reduction (56% of control) in circulating alpha-2-glycoprotein opsonic activity. The reduction in this plasma opsonic activity was near maximal by the completion of blood withdrawal and was maintained throughout a 2-h hypotension period. There was no trend toward recovery of the opsonic activity when evaluated 15 min following reinfusion of shed blood in animals that were hypotensive for 0, 30, and 120 min. Reticuloendothelial system (RES) phagocytic function, as assessed from the carbon clearance rate (phagocytic index) following reinfusion of the shed blood, was depressed in animals that were hypotensive for 0, 30, and 120 min. Thus, phagocytic index followed a time course similar to the depression of opsonic activity. The observed close temporal relationship between alpha-2-glycoprotein opsonic deficiency and depression of RES clearance further supports the possible role of a humoral opsonic deficiency in mediating the RES phagocytic depression during circulatory shock.
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PMID:Reticuloendothelial system function and humoral factor deficiency following acute hemorrhage. 7 3

Depression of lymphocyte transformation and an increase in insulin resistance are common to pregnancy, oral contraceptive use, widespread malignancy, infection, and tissue destruction. We suggest that these abnormalities are caused by a rise in the plasma-glycoprotein level which is also common to these clinical states. There is evidence that glycoproteins can inhibit cell division, lymphocyte transformation, and the action of hormones on target cells. Because of the increase in plasma glycoprotein the cells in many organs and their hormone receptors may have a thicker coating of glycoproteins which blunts their response to variuos stimuli.
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PMID:Do plasma glycoproteins induce lymphocyte hyporesponsiveness and insulin resistance? 8 44

Depression of reticuloendothelial (RE) phagocytic function has been clearly documented following trauma and operation. This phagocytic failure is mediated in part by depletion of an opsonic glycoprotein. Depletion of this opsonic protein may result in prolonged blood retention of potentially harmful particulates that may interfere with the microcirculation and may possibly result in altered organ function. Isolation and identification of this opsonic protein has led to the finding of the identity between opsonic glycoprotein and cold insoluble globulin (CIg) or so-called plasma fibronectin. Since CIg is concentrated in cryoprecipitate, this blood component was used as a readily available source of opsonic protein for replacement studies. Nine patients were studied following a 1-hour infusion of cryoprecipitate obtained from 10 units of plasma and suspended in a volume of 250 ml. Both the pulmonary shunt fraction and the fraction of dead space ventilation decreased significantly (P = 0.02) after cryoprecipitate administration. Limb blood flow (P = 0.001), limb oxygen consumption (P = 0.001), and reactive hyperemia of the limb (P = 0.05) increased significantly following cryoprecipitate infusion. Cardiac output, total oxygen consumption did not change consistently. The data demonstrate that the infusion of cryoprecipitate resulted in improved pulmonary and microcirculatory function--possibly due to opsonic glycoprotein replacement.
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PMID:Cardiovascular hemodynamics after opsonic alpha-2-surface binding glycoprotein therapy in injured patients. 8 71

The effect of exogenous neuraminidase on spontaneous and evoked synaptic activity was investigated following injection of the enzyme into frog spinal cord and into cord and into the carp optic tectum. 1. Injection of enzyme into spinal cord segments caused a significant increase of motoneuron activity in the corresponding spinal nerve, which lasted for 7--31 min. 2. The amplitude of postsynaptic evoked potentials in the optic tectum was increased after neuraminidase injection up to 200% of control level for 20--40 min, whereas the amplitude of summed action potentials of retino-tectal afferents remained unchanged. 3. Similar effects were observed in single cell responses of the optic tectum with some differences in the degree of increase in activity, as well as latency and final depression of the stimulus response. 4. The extent of neuraminic acid liberation following neuraminidase treatment was determined biochemically. In both tissues investigated the amount of free neuraminic acid was increased significantly (4--5.5 fold) after enzyme treatment. Whereas after enzyme injection into spinal cord and optic tectum the percentage release of total glycoprotein- and glycolipidbound neuraminic acid was 12% and 15%, respectively, liberation from enzyme incubated tissue homogenates was somewhat higher (20.5% and 24%).
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PMID:Effects of exogenous neuraminidase on unit activity in frog spinal cord and fish optic tectum. 21 38

Reticuloendothelial system (RES) depression has been correlated with diminished resistance to trauma, shock, and sepsis in man and animals. Previous studies have related the depression of RES hepatic Kupffer cell phagocytic function after trauma to diminished bioassayable opsonic activity. The present study determined if the loss of biological activity and RES alteration correlated with immunoreactive serum opsonic alpha 2 SB glycoprotein levels after trauma. Serum opsonic activity was measured by liver slice bioassay, and immunoreactive opsonic protein was measured by rocket electroimmunoassay. RE function was determined by colloid clearance over a 24-hour post-trauma period. Anesthetized rats (250-300 gm) subjected to sublethal or severe (greater than LD50) whole-body NCD trauma were the shock models investigated. Immunoreactive levels in 63 rats prior to injury were 518 +/- 24 microgram/ml. Neither biological nor immunoreactive levels were altered over 24 hours in anesthetized sham-traumatized controls. Temporal alteration in the initial decrease and recovery pattern of biologically active and immunoreactive opsonic protein levels significantly correlated following both sublethal and severe injury. Moreover, the patterns of immunoreactive levels of the opsonic protein correlated with the functional phagocytic activity of the RES as determined by vascular clearance of a test dose of blood-borne radiolabeled particulates. This glycoprotein falls after trauma, and the magnitude and duration of the decline increases with severity of injury. Immunoreactive opsonic alpha 2 SB glycoprotein appears to be an accurate measurement of circulating opsonic activity and RE Kupffer cell function after trauma, especially with respect to clearance. Thus, immunoreactive opsonic protein warrants clinical consideration as a noninvasive measure of reticuloendothelial systemic defense in patients after trauma and burn.
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PMID:Immunoreactive serum opsonic alpha 2 sb glycoprotein as a noninvasive index of RES systemic defense after trauma. 26 6

Recent advances in protein metabolism and in glycoprotein synthesis bring further insight into endemic goiter epidemiology. Retinol circulates in the blood stream in close parallelism with retinol-binding protein and prealbumin (RBP-PA), a protein complex whose liver secretory rate is dependent upon hormonal and nutritional status. On the other hand, normal glycosylation reaction occurs through the formation of a retinol-linked sugar complex. It is suggested that the relative drop of serum retinol levels, as a result of modified hormonal climate and/or declining protein status, might constitute a critical factor capable of inducing a defective incorporation of mannose into native thyroglobulin, leading to an early depression of the full glycoprotein production. This concept affords a comprehensive explanation of the following unresolved data recorded in goitrous areas: (1) clinical and biochemical discrepancies between subjects living in the same morbid territory, (2) persistence of endemicity in spite of appropriate iodine supplementation, (3) similar prevalence of goiter hypertrophy in male and female prepubertal children, (4) increased frequency of goiter enlargement in the four most vulnerable groups, namely preschool children of both sexes, adolescent girls, pregnant women, and elderly persons, (5) decreased impact of thyroid swelling accompanying improved socio-economic status, even without iodine addition, and (6) resurgence of goitrous hyperplasia as an effect of seasonal or sporadic deterioration of nutritional habits, even when iodine supply remains unchanged.
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PMID:Hormonal and nutritional status: critical conditions for endemic goiter epidemiology? 56 53

Depression of the reticuloendothelial system (RES) was observed in rats following operative trauma consisting of laparotomy and jejunal enterotomy. This RES depression was manifested as a significant impairment in the phagocytic clearance of intravenously injected blood-borne test colloid mediated by a decline in hepatic Kupffer cell phagocytosis. Reticuloendothelial systemic host defense depression was correlated with a significant decline in bioassayable and immunoreactive opsonic alpha(2)SB glycoprotein concentration over a 1-3 hr postoperative period with rebound elevation in opsonic activity by 24 hr postsurgery. Intravenous administration of purified opsonic alpha(2)SB glycoprotein at the end of the operation prevented postoperative opsonic deficiency and restored normal hepatic RES phagocytic function. These studies coupled with previous observations in patients following surgery or after severe multiple trauma suggest that reticuloendothelial depression during and after operation mediated by opsonic deficiency may lead to a precarious imbalance between systemic host defense and the dissemination of blood-borne foreign and effete particulate matter such as injured platelets, fibrin microaggregates and immune complexes. Immunoreactive serum opsonic alpha(2)SB glycoprotein determinations may serve as a valuable index of hepatic RE clearance capacity and opsonin therapy may potentially be a selective means to augment systemic host defense.
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PMID:Prevention of liver reticuloendothelial systemic host defense failure after surgery by intravenous opsonic glycoprotein therapy. 68 78

A quasi-elastic light-scattering technique was used to study the hydrodynamic conformations of antifreeze glycoproteins from an Antarctic fish. Antifreeze glycoprotein is composed of repeating units of Ala-Ala-Thr, with each threonine O-linked to a disaccharide, and it exists as several polymers of different numbers of this repeating unit. Molecular weights of the two major active polymers are 10,500 and 17,500 by such methods as centrifugation and osmotic pressure, but smaller than 20 by freezing-point depression. Translational diffusion coefficients at 20 degrees were 8.35 times 10-7 cm2 s-1 and 6.15 times 10-7 cm2 s-1 for the M-r-10,500 and 17,500 polymers, respectively. Measurements at -0.2 degrees in the presence of ice crystals did not indicate any conformational changes that might be related to the lowering of the freezing temperature. Lowering the temperature of these glycoprotein solutions close to temperatures of freezing caused a decrease in the effective hydrodynamic radius of both active and inactive glycoprotein components.
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PMID:Antifreeze glycoproteins from an Antarctic fish. Quasi-elastic light scattering studies of the hydrodynamic conformations of antifreeze glycoproteins. 116 94

Raman spectroscopy was used to study the anomalous decrease in the freezing temperature of water produced by an antifreeze glycoprotein obtained from the sera of an Antarctic fish. An active fraction of this glycoprotein has a molecular weight of approximately 18,000 by equilibrium sedimentation compared to an apparent weight of 20 by freezing temperature depression. The Raman spectra of water present in a 1% antifreeze glycoprotein solution and of ice frozen from this solution were indistinguishable from the spectra of pure water and ice, respectively. These results indicate that the bulk properties of water and ice are unaffected by the presence of the antifreeze glycoprotein. Raman measurements on ice grown slowly, using as seed an oriented single crystal of ice in contact with 1% glycoprotein solutions, showed that the active glycoprotein was not excluded from the ice phase. On the other hand, we found that a smaller, inactive glycoprotein was excluded. Comparison of the Raman spectra of active and inactive glycoprotein components as solids, in 5% solutions, and rapidly frozen 5% solutions, showed that the two components differ in conformation and possibly in the environment of their carbohydrate hydroxyls. These observations suggest that hydrogen bonding of the carbohydrate hydroxyls of the active glycoprotein at the ice-solution interface may physically prevent growth of the ice lattice.
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PMID:Raman spectra of a solid antifreeze glycoprotein and its liquid and frozen aqueous solutions. 126 26


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