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)

The effects of an 8-day intravenous infusion of dexamethasone (7.6 mg kg-0.75 body weight) on collagen biosynthesis and wool growth in skin were examined in four Merino wethers. Plasma dexamethasone concentrations reached their peaks during the first 24 h infusion, which were followed by relatively stable levels (c. 1 X 10(-7) M) for the next 4--5 days. Minor increases in plasma dexamethasone levels were recorded during the final 2 days of treatment. Dexamethasone concentrations quickly fell below the level of detection once infusion ceased. Marked decreases in the wet weight, thickness and protein content of skin were observed at the end of infusion. DNA content was reduced to 42.4 +/- 4.9% s.e.m. during the first 2 days of treatment, but in the next 4 days of infusion gradually increased to 85.0 +/0 12.5% of controls. The level of collagen (expressed as hydroxyproline content of its acid hydrolysate) was elevated throughout the infusion and then gradually declined in 3 weeks to about 60% of controls. The biosynthesis of collagen measured by the rate of [14C]hydroxyproline formation and the activity of proline, 2-oxoglutarate dioxygenase (EC 1.14.11.2. formerly prolyl hydroxylase) was reduced during the first half of treatment to a greater extent than the rate of [14C]proline incorporation into proteins. Wool growth was reduced by 80.4 +/- 11.6% in the post-infusion period which allowed three sheep out of four to be defleeced. Inhibition of collagen biosynthesis in sheep skin was due initially to a decrease in the activity of proline, 2-oxoglutarate dioxygenase and later to the reduced rate of proline incorporation into proteins. It was also evident that changes in biosynthetic rate of collagen were not reflected in the total level of skin collagen. The extent of wool growth depression in individual animals paralleled the changes in DNA content and the extent of collagen biosynthesis inhibition.
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PMID:Effect of intravenously infused dexamethasone on collagen metabolism in skin of merino sheep. 23 81

The uptake of vitamin B12 was measured in cells of Escherichia coli whose growth had been inhibited by any of a variety of treatments. In all cases, the secondary, energy-dependent phase of B12 uptake was depressed in proportion to the decrease in growth rate, but uptake was constant in cells growing logarithmically at different rates. The depression of B12 uptake activity was independent of the site of cell metabolism affected by the inhibitor or by its effect on cell viability, and was both more rapid and of greater degree than the effects on the uptake of any of the six amino acids tested. The decline was not affected by inhibitors of either cell division or proteolysis and was manifested without any apparent decrease in the surface B12 binding activity. Transport activity was rapidly regained upon reversal of the inhibition of protein synthesis. Prompted by this response, the uptake of B12 was contrasted to the apparent uptake of the E colicins, which share the same outer membrane receptor. Sensitivity to colicin E1, measured by its inhibition of proline uptake, was not affected by growth inhibition by antibiotic treatment. Finally, there was no specific depression of B12 uptake in cells rendered colicin tolerant either by mutation or as a consequence of phage f1 infection.
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PMID:Relation of cell growth and colicin tolerance to vitamin B12 uptake in Escherichia coli. 31 41

The ability of low protein diets containing small neutral, dispensable amino acids to induce threonine imbalance has been examined. Diets containing amino acids which compete for threonine transport in vitro (serine, alanine, alpha-amino-n-butyrate) caused depressions of growth and food intake which could be corrected to varying degrees by adding threonine to the diet. Large neutral, indispensable amino acids, moderately inhibitory of threonine transport, also induced the imbalance. Some amino acids that had little or no effect on threonine transport in vitro (acidic amino acids and proline) did not cause growth and food intake depressions. Other non-inhibitory amino acids (arginine and lysine) caused growth depressions which were not satisfactorily corrected by additional threonine alone, but were prevented by supplements of all the indispensable amino acids including threonine. Ornithine which was also not inhibitory of threonine transport was an exception. It induced a moderate growth depression which was corrected by additional threonine. Similar studies showed that histidine or tryptophan imbalance could be induced by feeding diets containing only those large neutral amino acids which compete for histidine or tryptophan transport in vitro. These experiments show that, based on the results of transport competition experiments, it is generally possible to devise amino acid supplements which can induce a dietary imbalance of a given amino acid.
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PMID:Induction of threonine imbalance by dispensable amino acids: relation to competition for amino acid transport into brain. 43 Feb 32

The effects of L-proline, D-proline, and L-azetidine-2-carboxylic acid (L-A.2.C., the lower homolog of L-proline) have been compared in two systems. L-Proline is more potent than either analog in causing amnesia of one-trial avoidance conditioning of the 2-day-old chick and in preventing mechanically induced spreading depression in the retina isolated from 2-3-week-old chicks. The results suggest that the L-configuration and the proper molecular size are essential for the effects of L-proline upon memory and upon spreading depression. This level of specificity is greater than that involved in protein synthesis because L-A.2.C. is incorporated into protein in place of L-proline, in several protein-synthesizing systems.
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PMID:L-Proline and related compounds: correlation of structure, amnesic potency and anti-spreading depression potency. 70 56

Plasma albumin levels were measured in partially hepatectomized, sham operated and control rats. The levels fell in both the partially hepatectomized and sham operated groups; while the latter group returned to normal within a few days, the low plasma albumin in the partially hepatectomized animals was sustained. Albumin synthesis rates in the isolated perfused rat liver were measured in the three groups of animals at varying intervals after partial hepatectomy. There was a significant depression of albumin synthesis rate in terms of both liver and whole animal weights when compared to the sham operated and control animals. This depression was almost completely reversed by the addition of arginine, asparagine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, proline, threonine, tryptophan and valine added together to 10 times their normal plasma concentrations. The addition of hydrocortisone had no effect on the albumin synthesis rate after partial hepatectomy. Studies in vivo in the three groups of animals (partially hepatectomized, sham operated and control animals) revealed a fall in the albumin catabolic rate after partial hepatectomy coinciding with the fall in the albumin synthesis rate. An hypothesis whereby the amino acids may have their stimulatory effect is proposed.
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PMID:Albumin synthesis and catabolism following partial hepatectomy in the rat. The effects of amino acids and adrenocortical steroids on albumin synthesis after partial hepatectomy. 115 98

An alanine-rich, alpha-helical antifreeze polypeptide (AFP) from the winter flounder and seven analogs with variations in the arrangement of neutral, polar amino acids were synthesized. Circular dichroism studies determined that all of the peptides, except for one containing a proline residue, were essentially 100% alpha-helical. Freezing point depression data, analyzed by three methods, showed that rearrangement of polar residues resulted in moderate to complete loss of anti-freeze activity. It was observed that ice crystals grow as hexagonal bipyramids in dilute solutions, with a constant c to alpha axis ratio of about 3.3. Above a critical threshold concentration, which may depend on the AFP to ice binding constant and reflect the onset of cooperative interactions, growth ceases until the temperature is lowered to the freezing point. We conclude that a specific arrangement of both threonine and asparagine (or aspartic acid) residues is critical for maximal activity and that the AFPs probably bind to the pyramidal faces of ice with a specific orientation. These conclusions are consistent with a recent report (Knight, C. A., Cheng, C. C., and DeVries, A. L. (1991) Biophys. J. 59, 409-418) that a similar AFP adsorbs to the [2021] pyramidal planes of ice in dilute solution.
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PMID:Structure-function relationships in an antifreeze polypeptide. The role of neutral, polar amino acids. 162 10

Rabbit abdominal aorta was irradiated with single or repeated doses up to 10 Gy. The rabbits were killed at different time intervals after irradiation. 5 micrograms/kg x 6/hr PGE1 or its biologically active metabolite 13,14-DH-PGE1 were administered either 6 hours before or 6 hours after irradiation. The administration of both PGEs reduced radiation-induced mitotic activity (3H-thymidine incorporation) and extracellular matrix [collagen-(14C-proline) and glycosaminoglycan (35-S-sulphate)]-formation as determined by means of autoradiography. The initial peak increase in vascular PGI2-synthesis was partly abolished, while the long lasting depression was less pronounced. 13,14-DH-PGE1 was only slightly less active as compared to the parent compound. Pre-radiation treatment was more effective than post-irradiation therapy. These findings suggest that both the PGs exert significant radiation-protective actions on the arterial wall.
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PMID:Prostaglandin (PG) E1 and 13,14-dihydro (DH) PGE1 are diminishing radiation-induced arterial damage. 163 12

Hydra are characterized by having their body wall organized as an epithelial bilayer with an intervening acellular layer termed the mesoglea. As an extension of the previous study which indicated that mesoglea is a primitive basement membrane which has retained some characteristics of interstitial extracellular matrix, the present study was undertaken to analyze the role of mesoglea components during head regeneration in Hydra vulgaris. Studies were conducted that utilized drugs that affect collagen processing or secondary collagen structure (beta-aminoproprionitrile; 2,2'-dipydridyl; and cis-4-hydroxy-L-proline) and a drug that inhibits addition of glycosaminoglycan chains to proteoglycan core proteins (p-nitrophenyl-beta-D-xylopyranoside). These studies indicated that alterations in the structure of collagens or proteoglycans caused blockage of head regeneration in Hydra as monitored over a 48-hr period. Blockage of head regeneration was reversible once the drugs were removed, indicating that the drugs were not having a general toxic effect on the organism. Radiotracer studies also indicated that blockage of head regeneration was not simply due to a general depression of protein synthesis by the drugs. Various controls indicated that each drug was affecting mesoglea components under the conditions utilized in these studies. These observations indicate that preservation of normal mesoglea structure is required for Hydra head regeneration to proceed.
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PMID:Extracellular matrix (mesoglea) of Hydra vulgaris. II. Influence of collagen and proteoglycan components on head regeneration. 174 97

Sequence-specific resonance assignments for the isolated second or b domain of the bovine seminal fluid protein PDC-109 have been obtained from analysis of two-dimensional 1H NMR experiments recorded at 500 MHz. These assignments include the identification of all aromatic and most aliphatic amino acid resonances. Stereospecific assignment of resonances stemming from the Val2 CH3 gamma,gamma' groups and from seven CH beta,beta' geminal pairs has been accomplished by analysis of 3J alpha beta coupling constants in conjunction with patterns of cross-peak intensities observed in two-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect (NOESY) spectra. Analysis of NOESY and 3J alpha NH data reveals a small antiparallel beta-sheet involving stretches containing residues 25-28 and 39-42, a cis-proline residue (Pro4), antiparallel strands consisting of residues 1-3, 5-7, and 10-13, and an aromatic cluster composed of Tyr7, Trp26, and Tyr33. The results of distance geometry and restrained molecular dynamics calculations indicate that the global fold of the PDC-109 b domain, a type II module related to those found in fibronectin, is somewhat different from that predicted by modeling the structure on the basis of homology between type II and kringle units. A shallow depression in the molecular surface which presents a solvent-exposed hydrophobic area--a potential ligand-binding site-is identified in the NMR-based models.
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PMID:Sequence-specific 1H NMR assignments and structural characterization of bovine seminal fluid protein PDC-109 domain b. 199 83

GPA1734, an inhibitor of BM collagen biosynthesis, was investigated in the CAM model system for its effect on angiogenesis. Evaluation of angiogenesis was performed by placing a thin plastic coverslip inscribed with concentric circles on the CAM and counting the number of vessels intercepting the circles. The rate of BM collagen biosynthesis was monitored using [U-14C] proline incorporation into CAM proteins and determining the collagenase-digestible protein fraction. A marked depression in the vascular density was observed in the CAM area under a plastic disc containing GPA1734 as compared to control discs placed on the CAM about 1 cm apart from days 9 to 12 of incubation. A concomitant decrease in collagenous protein biosynthesis was observed in the area under the discs containing GPA1734 and [U-14C]proline as compared to control discs containing only the radiolabeled proline. The forementioned effects of GPA1734 on CAM were specific because no similar effects were observed with a closely related compound, 9,10-dihydroxy-7-methyl-benzo[b]quinolizinium bromide or with GPA1734 plus Fe++, which did not affect the rate of BM collagen biosynthesis. These results suggest that inhibitors of BM collagen biosynthesis prevent angiogenesis by interfering with the formation of an essential component of the vessel wall. The search for such inhibitors may be a new approach in the development of antiangiogenic agents.
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PMID:Inhibition of basement membrane biosynthesis prevents angiogenesis. 245 Feb 2


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