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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three patients are reported on, who at the time of admittance showed a decompensated metabolic acidosis, elevated concentrations of serum lactate and a reduced kidney funktion. All the patients had taken
guanidine
derivates (phenformine, buformine) because of
diabetes mellitus
. The serum biguanid concentrations, however, were elevated in only two cases. Therapy of the lactic acidosis has to be directed at the underlying disease. In biguanid incluced acidosis, haemodialysis with simultaneous administration of sodium bicarbonate is indicated.
...
PMID:[Lactic acidosis after administration of guanidine derivatives (buformine, phenformine) (author's transl)]. 85 40
Costal cartilage from experimentally diabetic rats, labeled in vivo or in vitro with [35S]sulfate, was shown to incorporate less label into proteoglycans than cartilage from nondiabetic rats. Analyses of
guanidine
HCl cartilage extracts by gel chromatography on Sepharose CL-2B showed two major peaks at Kav approximately 0.4 and 0.8 (peaks I and II, respectively). Cartilage extracts from the diabetic rats contained predominantly peak II proteoglycans, while 60 and 55%, respectively, of the total 35S-labeled proteoglycans extracted from control cartilage labeled in vivo and in vitro with [35S]sulfate were present in peak I. After insulin treatment of the diabetic rats, the relative amount of peak I 35S-labeled proteoglycans synthesized in vivo was increased to 70%. The overall in vivo incorporation of [35S]sulfate into proteoglycans was also stimulated in diabetic rats treated with insulin to levels above those found for control rats. Thus,
diabetes
-induced changes in the biosynthesis of rat costal cartilage proteoglycans may be alleviated by normalization of the diabetic state by insulin treatment. However, addition of insulin (10(-5)-10(-9) M) to the culture medium did not affect the amount of 35S-labeled proteoglycans synthesized in vitro or the relative amounts of peak I proteoglycans produced by control or diabetic cartilage, suggesting that insulin does not have a direct effect on proteoglycan production. Moreover, no decrease in the amount of 35S-labeled proteoglycans produced was found when glucose at high concentrations was present in the culture medium. However, the presence of rat serum resulted in an increase in the amount of 35S-labeled proteoglycans produced by both control and diabetic cartilage, demonstrating that the cartilage explants were metabolically responsive to stimulatory factors.
...
PMID:Effect of insulin on the altered production of proteoglycans in rib cartilage of experimentally diabetic rats. 189 27
Human and bovine glomerular basement membrane (GBM) preparations, representing the extracellular matrix of the renal filtration units, were found to contain type VI collagen. This protein was solubilized by
guanidine
and
guanidine
-dithiothreitol extractions and characterized after polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic resolution by immunoblotting with an antiserum directed against the alpha 1(VI) and alpha 2(VI) polypeptide chains and by its insensitivity to collagenase digestion in the nonreduced state. In contrast to GBM, which is the product of three distinct cells, type VI collagen could not be detected in extracts from calf lens capsule, an epithelial cell-derived basement membrane. Quantitation by radioimmunoassay of the type VI collagen content of GBM from 17 diabetic and 15 nondiabetic human subjects indicated a 2.8-fold higher level (P less than 0.001) in the diabetic preparations. Because in the glomerulus type VI collagen is considered on the basis of immunohistochemistry to be localized to the mesangium, we believe that measurement of this protein in GBM preparations can provide a valuable index of mesangial expansion in diabetic and other glomerulopathies.
Diabetes
1990 Jan
PMID:Occurrence of type VI collagen in extracellular matrix of renal glomeruli and its increase in diabetes. 221 58
Diabetes
in the mother may cause disturbances in the chondrocyte development in the embryo. A rat model was used to investigate whether this was reflected in the production of proteoglycans by cells from two embryonic regions. One of these regions is resistant (limb bud) and the other susceptible (mandibular arch) to malformation in diabetic pregnancy. Chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans from cultures of day-12 rat embryo limb bud and mandibular arch chondrocytes were extracted with
guanidine
-HCl and analyzed by gel chromatography after in vitro 35S-sulphate-labeling. Two sizes of proteoglycans (Kav 0.26 and 0.66 on CL-2B Sepharose) were found in both types of chondrocytes and in all media. The polysaccharide chain length was the same (Kav 0.36 on CL-6B Sepharose) for both proteoglycans. Elevated levels of D-glucose or beta-hydroxybutyric acid had no effect on either proteoglycan size or proportion, nor on polysaccharide chain length. However, there were differences (in all culture conditions) between limb bud and mandibular arch cultures in that the larger proteoglycan accounted for 80% of total radioactivity in the limb bud cultures, 53% in the mandibular arch cultures, and only 25-29% in the media from both types of cultures. Furthermore, different ratios between radioactive proteoglycans in medium and matrix suggested markedly different efficiencies for matrix formation in the two cell types. These findings indicate differences in the metabolism of the proteoglycans in these two cell types which may be related to the induction of mandibular malformation in diabetic pregnancy.
...
PMID:Metabolism in vitro of cartilage proteoglycans in rat (pre)chondrocytes from different embryonic regions. 221 60
Treatment of human glomerular basement membrane (GBM) with 4 M
guanidine
HCl resulted in a preferential extraction of noncollagenous components including laminin, fibronectin, entactin, and heparan sulfate proteoglycan, whereas effective solubilization of type IV collagen required exposure to denaturing solvents in the presence of reducing agents. The
guanidine
HCl-solubilized constituents were identified by immunochemical procedures after resolution by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, CL-6B filtration, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Two immunologically related heparan sulfate proteoglycans (Mr approximately 350,000 and 210,000) were observed by electrophoresis, with the higher-molecular-weight form being predominant. An examination of the two proteoglycans after heparitinase digestion or chemical deglycosylation indicated that heparan sulfate chains and other carbohydrate units are attached to core proteins with Mr approximately 140,000 and 110,000, respectively. Radioimmunoassays indicated that human diabetic GBM contained significantly lower (P less than .005) amounts of heparan sulfate proteoglycan and laminin with average values that were 30 and 60%, respectively, of nondiabetic controls; the fibronectin content of the diabetic GBM, however, was not significantly different from the normal. These findings, together with previous studies showing increases in GBM collagen, indicate that an alteration in the macromolecular architecture of this basement membrane occurs in
diabetes
that may be responsible for the filtration defect and the ultimate glomerular occlusion.
Diabetes
1987 Mar
PMID:Studies on macromolecular components of human glomerular basement membrane and alterations in diabetes. Decreased levels of heparan sulfate proteoglycan and laminin. 294 55
The nonenzymatic glycation of glomerular basement membranes (GBMs) from 14 diabetic and 19 nondiabetic human subjects was determined after boronic acid affinity and high-performance cation-exchange chromatography of their NaB[3H]4-reduced ketoamine adducts. The glucitol-lysine (Glc-Lys) and the glucitol-hydroxylysine (Glc-Hyl) content of diabetic GBM was found to be about twofold higher than that of nondiabetic samples (P less than .001). The content of these glycated amino acids did not correlate with age over the range examined (20-91 yr) or with the length of disease in diabetic subjects (2-16 yr). However, analyses of Glc-Lys and Glc-Hyl in calf and adult bovine GBM and lens capsules indicated that the levels of these glycated amino acids were several times greater in basement membranes from older animals. We also observed that
guanidine
-insoluble collagen of bovine GBM is more extensively glycated (approximately 4-fold) than primarily noncollagenous proteins that are extracted by this reagent. In all of the basement membranes examined, the percentage of glycation of lysine was greater than of hydroxylysine. Characterization of the components released by alkaline hydrolysis indicated that O-glycosylated hydroxylysine residues are nonenzymatically N-glycated to the same extent as those without an enzymatically attached carbohydrate unit. Our study indicates that more than a hundred times as many hydroxylysine residues are enzymatically glycosylated in human and bovine GBM as those containing the nonenzymatically formed ketoamine adduct.
Diabetes
1988 Aug
PMID:Nonenzymatic glycation of basement membranes from human glomeruli and bovine sources. Effect of diabetes and age. 313 65
A large-molecular-weight proinsulin-immunoreactive protein fraction was obtained from an extract of fetal bovine pancreases by gel filtration in 6 M
guanidine
-1 M acetic acid. Concanavalin A-Sepharose-affinity column chromatography of the large-molecular-weight fraction yielded a discrete alpha-methyl-mannoside-displaceable immunoreactive peak that also displayed N-acetylglucosamine-specific binding to wheat germ lectin-Sepharose. Chemically tritiated and radioiodinated lectin-reactive proteins interacted specifically with antibodies to insulin and bovine proinsulin. Immunochemically purified (reaction with antibodies followed by separation of antigen-antibody complexes on protein A-Sepharose) radiolabeled lectin-reactive proteins were analyzed by gel filtration in
guanidine
-acetic acid and by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis after disulfide bond-cleavage treatments. Results from these studies suggest the existence of an approximately 67,000-Mr glycoprotein that contains antigenic domains common to proinsulin and insulin.
Diabetes
1987 Apr
PMID:Evidence for presence of proinsulin-immunoreactive glycoprotein(s) in fetal bovine pancreatic extracts. 354 49
Alterations in cardiac sympathetic innervation may result in QT interval prolongation and predispose to sudden arrhythmias and death. Sudden cardiac death occurs in diabetic patients who have autonomic neuropathy, but the cause is uncertain. In 30 patients with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
who had no evidence of ischemic heart disease, cardiac autonomic neuropathy, determined by clinical tests, was found in 17. The corrected QT interval (QTc), measured using Bazett's formula at rest and peak exercise, was prolonged (greater than 440 msec) in 12 of these patients at rest and in 15 at peak exercise. Prolonged QTc intervals were found only in patients who had definite cardiac autonomic neuropathy. As a group, the QTc interval (mean +/- SD) in the diabetic patients with cardiac autonomic neuropathy was prolonged compared to that in patients without cardiac autonomic neuropathy at rest (447 +/- 28 vs. 405 +/- 9 ms; P less than 0.0001) and peak exercise (468 +/- 23 vs. 402 +/- 23 ms; P less than 0.0001). There was a direct linear relationship between the extent of cardiac autonomic neuropathy and the QTc interval (r = 0.71; P less than 0.001). One of the patients with cardiac autonomic neuropathy and prolonged QTc intervals had a nonuniform loss of adrenergic neurons in his heart demonstrated by meta-iodobenzyl-
guanidine
scintigraphy, indicating sympathetic imbalance; he subsequently died unexpectedly. These data suggest that diabetic cardiac autonomic neuropathy may result in sympathetic imbalance and QTc interval prolongation, predisposing these patients to sudden arrhythmias and death.
...
PMID:QT interval prolongation and sudden cardiac death in diabetic autonomic neuropathy. 381 2
Acid-ethanol extracts of fetal bovine pancrease were examined for the presence of beta-endorphin-like immunoreactivity. Gel-filtration analyses revealed the presence of a major large-molecular-weight beta-endorphin immunoreactive species of approximately 20K delta. This molecular form maintained its size upon resubmission to gel filtration in the presence of 6 M
guanidine
hydrochloride, separated from the bulk of the glucagon immunoreactivity upon ion-exchange chromatography, showed proportional dilution in the beta-endorphin radioimmunoassay, and interacted in a biospecific manner with Concanavalin-A-Sepharose.
Diabetes
1984 Mar
PMID:Beta-endorphin-like immunoreactivity in extracts of the fetal bovine pancreas. Column chromatographic characterizations of a high-molecular-weight immunoreactive species. 632 Dec 78
Amyloid deposition is the most typical islet alteration in Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent)
diabetes
. In the present study we show by immunohistochemistry that the amyloid reacts with an antiserum against insulin B chain. Islet amyloid was also purified, dissolved in
guanidine
-HCl and gel filtered on a Sepharose 6B column. Immunization of a guinea pig with a high molecular weight fraction from this gel filtration resulted in an antiserum with insulin-binding capacity. This binding was partially blocked with pure insulin B chain. The results indicate that islet amyloid contains insulin B chain and that the amyloid is a product of the islet B cells. Thus the study support previous morphological studies.
...
PMID:Islet amyloid in Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes is related to insulin. 634 81
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