Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), Zn, Cu, and Se concentrations were determined in 47 healthy adults and in patients with diseases, such as renal insufficiency, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, chronic pancreatitis, liver cirrhosis, or cancer, in order to clarify the relationship between this indicator of lipid peroxidation and antioxidative trace element status. TBARS levels were higher than control values in all pathological cases, except in cancer patients. Cu levels in patients highly correlated with ferroxidase ceruloplasmin activity (r = 0.86), but were only statistically different from controls in diabetics. Zn levels were lower than normal in dialysis, liver cirrhosis, and cancer patients. Se levels were significantly decreased in all pathological cases. Half of the subjects with liver cirrhosis or renal insufficiency and 3/4 of chronic pancreatitis or cancer patients had an active inflammatory process. Despite intense modifications in determined indicators, no clear correlation could be demonstrated between the different parameters. Basic antioxidative trace element status and inflammation are therefore not major determinants of TBARS levels in normal and in pathological conditions, despite of the frequent association of low serum Zn and mainly low serum Se with high TBARS levels.
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PMID:Lipid peroxidation assessed by serum thiobarbituric acid reactive substances in healthy subjects and in patients with pathologies known to affect trace element status. 777 41

The level of ceruloplasmin, which is a more negatively charged protein than albumin, was measured by an immunoradiometric assay in timed overnight urine and serum samples from patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and healthy controls. None of the plasma proteins examined showed any cross-reactivity in this assay. A linear correlation was seen between the ceruloplasmin level and the serial dilution of the sample. Western blot analysis using concentrated urine samples showed that the molecular weight of ceruloplasmin in the urine sample was the same as that of ceruloplasmin in the serum and standard samples. These findings indicated that the substance detected by this assay was truly ceruloplasmin. The urinary ceruloplasmin excretion rate (CER) and clearance of ceruloplasmin increased in parallel with the progression of albuminuria. The highest CER was found in macroalbuminuric patients, followed by micro- and normoalbuminuric patients and the healthy control subjects, the differences between the groups being significant. In view of the fact that the isoelectric point of ceruloplasmin (4.4) is more acidic than that of albumin, the present findings suggested that an enhanced CER was due either to the alteration of charge selectivity in the glomerular basement membrane with unaltered tubular function or to a defect of the non-discriminatory pores (shunt pathway) with unaltered tubular function.
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PMID:Urinary excretion rate of ceruloplasmin in non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients with different stages of nephropathy. 778 6

To test whether diabetes associated alterations in copper metabolism contribute to diabetes-induced teratogenicity in rats, pregnancy outcome was compared between diabetic and nondiabetic rats fed either a copper adequate (12 micrograms/g diet) or low copper diet (1 microgram/g diet). The dietary regimen was begun two weeks prior to mating and continued throughout pregnancy. To facilitate the reduction of maternal copper stores in the low copper groups, the low copper diet was supplemented with a copper chelator, triethylenetetraamine, at 1% for one week; the chelator was removed from the diet one week prior to mating. Pregnancy was terminated on gestation day 20. Maternal and fetal tissues were assessed for copper concentrations, the activities of the cuproenzymes copper, zinc superoxide dismutase and ceruloplasmin, and the copper binding protein metallothionein. Dams fed the low copper diet had low tissue copper concentrations, and low plasma ceruloplasmin and erythrocyte superoxide dismutase activities compared to copper-adequate dams. Fetuses in the low copper groups were characterized by low liver copper concentrations. Gross structural and skeletal anomalies were only observed in the diabetic groups; maternal copper intake did not influence the frequency of these anomalies. However, fetuses in the low-copper nondiabetic group, and both diabetic groups, were characterized by low liver copper, zinc superoxide dismutase activity suggesting that fetal copper metabolism was influenced by both copper intake and diabetes.
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PMID:Effect of maternal diabetes and dietary copper on fetal development in rats. 811 9

To determine whether alteration in serum antioxidant status is related to the increased oxidative stress as a cause of diabetic angiopathy, we measured both the antioxidant activity (AOA) and total peroxyl radical-trapping antioxidant parameter (TRAP), and their component individual antioxidants in serum of children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). The AOA was measured as the ability to inhibit lipid autoxidation in brain homogenates. TRAP was assayed as the ability to delay lipid peroxidation induced by an azo initiator. Antioxidants measured were ceruloplasmin, transferrin, and albumin as components of AOA; and ascorbic acid, uric acid, protein sulfhydryl, and alpha-tocopherol as components of TRAP. Serum AOA appeared to be decreased in the diabetics in relation to poor glycemic control, corresponding to the decrease in transferrin and albumin. Serum haptoglobin level was also decreased in the diabetics. Similarly, the directly measured TRAP value was decreased in the diabetic serum mainly due to the decreased contribution of unidentified chain-breaking antioxidants, despite the increase in ascorbic acid and alpha-tocopherol. The decrease in both types of antioxidant activity in the diabetic serum, as new findings, suggests that a defective serum antioxidant status contributes to the increased oxidative stress in IDDM.
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PMID:Antioxidants in the serum of children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 813 85

It is found that antioxidative activity (AOA) and activity of glutathione-transferase in postmitochondrial placenta fraction of pregnant women with diabetes mellitus is lowered. Depression of AOA in placenta associated with a decrease of UDA and ceruloplasmin amount in blood of the newborns shows the exhaustion of the antioxidative protection system. A decrease of enzyme activity at the sorbitol way of glucose exchange (sorbitol-dehydrogenase and aldose reductase) in placenta reflects accumulation of sorbitol in tissue, which intensifies the damage of membrane structures in placenta.
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PMID:[Status of the antioxidant system and sorbitol pathway of glucose metabolism in diabetes mellitus]. 823 22

The effect of sodium metavanadate (NaVO3) consumption on trace element metabolism, components of the antioxidant defense system and lipid oxidative damage were studied in control (CON) and streptozotocin-induced diabetic (DIAB) rats. Ten days after injection, CON and DIAB rats received either 0 mM NaVO3/80 mM NaCl (0 group) or 1.2 mM NaVO3/80 mM NaCl (1.2V group) in their drinking water. DIAB groups had higher food and fluid intakes than the CON groups; vanadium (V) groups had lower food and fluid intakes than the saline groups. Vanadium therapy lowered plasma glucose concentrations of DIAB rats. The following parameters were similar among the groups: plasma Zn, Cu and Fe concentrations, plasma ceruloplasmin activity, liver Zn, Cu, Mn and Fe concentrations, kidney Mn and Fe concentrations, liver non-Se-dependent glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px), glutathione reductase (GSH-Red) and Mn-SOD activities, liver reduced glutathione (GSH) and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) concentrations and kidney non-Se-dependent GSH-Px activity. Kidney Zn and Cu concentrations were higher in DIAB rats than in CON rats. The CON-1.2V and DIAB-1.2V groups had V accumulation in the liver and kidney. Liver CuZn-SOD and Se-dependent GSH-Px and kidney CuZn-SOD and GSH-Red activities were lower in DIAB rats compared to CON rats; kidney Mn-SOD and kidney Se-dependent GSH-Px activities were higher in DIAB rats than CON rats. Vanadium treatment did not cause significant alterations in the antioxidant defense system; however, tissue vanadium concentrations were positively correlated to TBARS production. These results show that diabetes caused significant alterations in the antioxidant defense system and that V therapy was associated with a marked deterioration in health of both control and diabetic rats.
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PMID:Vanadium treatment of diabetic Sprague-Dawley rats results in tissue vanadium accumulation and pro-oxidant effects. 824 40

A novel mutation of the ceruloplasmin (Cp) gene was found in a patient with hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency (HCD) with diabetes mellitus (DM). The patient had been treated for DM for about 13 years, and then his illness was diagnosed as HCD. One year later, he was found dead in his home. A decrease in insulin-immunostained cells was observed in the islets of the patient's pancreas tissue, which accounted for his DM. The polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-direct sequencing analysis of the Cp gene of his daughter revealed a novel point mutation, G to A, at nucleotide 2630 in exon 15. This mutation changes the Trp858 codon (TGG) to a stop codon (TAG) (nonsense mutation). PCR-restriction analysis for the mutation revealed that the patient as well as his daughter was a heterozygote for the mutation, indicating that the patient was a compound heterozygote.
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PMID:A nonsense mutation of the ceruloplasmin gene in hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency with diabetes mellitus. 852 44

Hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency with hemosiderosis (aceruloplasminemia) is a new disease characterized by systemic hemosiderosis, diabetes mellitus, neurological abnormalities and pigment degeneration of the retina. Loss of the ferroxidase activity of ceruloplasmin results in systemic iron deposition and tissue damage. Neuroimaging studies reveal iron deposition in basal ganglia and in the red and dentate nuclei. Cerebellar ataxia, extrapyramidal signs and dementia develop after middle age. We report a patient with undetectable serum ceruloplasmin levels and the above clinical manifestations. Sequence analysis of the cDNA of ceruloplasmin from this patient revealed an insertion of adenine in exon 3; this produced a premature stop codon.
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PMID:Hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency with hemosiderosis. 864 92

We report here on the characterization of a mutation in the ceruloplasmin gene in a 45 year old woman with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus who presented with the recent onset of gait disturbance and dysarthria. Physical examination revealed an ataxic gait, scanning speech and retinal degeneration. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain was consistent with increased basal ganglia iron content and laboratory studies revealed a low serum iron concentration and no detectable serum ceruloplasmin. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the ceruloplasmin gene from this patient revealed a G to A substitution in exon 15 resulting in a nonsense mutation at amino acid 858 (Trp858ter). The patient's younger, neurologically asymptomatic brother was also found to be homozygous for this mutation. Taken together the clinical and genetic data support the concept of an essential and unique role for ceruloplasmin in human iron metabolism. Identification of this kindred extends the spectrum of ceruloplasmin gene mutations resulting in this autosomal recessive, late-onset neurodegenerative disease and highlights the importance of recognizing aceruloplasminemia as a genetic cause of diabetes and neurologic disease.
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PMID:Characterization of a nonsense mutation in the ceruloplasmin gene resulting in diabetes and neurodegenerative disease. 878 43

Aceruloplasminemia is a systemic degenerative disorder characterized by mutations in the ceruloplasmin gene, the absence of serum ceruloplasmin, and iron accumulation in the brain, liver, and other tissues. Iron is an important catalyst of oxyradical-mediated cellular and tissue injury, and beta-cells in the pancreatic islets are susceptible to the cytotoxic effects of oxidative stress. We report three patients with aceruloplasminemia who have late-onset diabetes mellitus (DM) and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) as well as neurologic symptoms. Their basal lipid peroxide levels, measured as thiobarbituric acid-reactive products, in plasma samples were three times the values for the controls. This increased susceptibility to lipid peroxidation in patients with aceruloplasminemia suggests that free-radical-mediated tissue injury plays a role in the occurrence of DM and IGT.
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PMID:Late onset diabetes mellitus in patients with hereditary aceruloplasminemia. 889 30


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