Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (disseminated intravascular coagulation)
8,673 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recently great interest has arisen in the synthesis of combinatorial libraries, and this technology provides a significant partner to contemporary strategies in rational design and lead discovery. By simple combination of a given set of building blocks, high numbers of different molecules are produced simultaneously, increasing the possibility of discovery of a lead compound in a limited time. One direction of research in this field focuses on the synthesis of libraries composed of modified amino acids. Here, the synthesis and characteristics of some building blocks derived from ornithine are described. The synthesis is based on the acylation/sulfonation of the copper complex of ornithine by aroyl and arylsulfonyl chlorides exemplified by 2-thiophenecarbonyl chloride, p-toluenesulfonyl chloride and 8-quinolinesulfonyl chloride. To evaluate the potential use of these modified alpha-amino acids as component in an oligopeptide library, all three derivatives were incorporated in a hexapeptide with a random sequence using a standard coupling procedure (DIC/HOBt/DIEA). Depending upon the acidity of the amido hydrogen on the delta-nitrogen, competition between intramolecular cyclization and peptide bond formation was observed. The higher the acidity, the more pronounced is this side reaction. Coupling conditions for peptide formation were optimized so that the newly described amino acid based building blocks are suitable for incorporation into libraries consisting of unnatural amino acids. The outlined procedures open up a broad avenue of possibilities for creation of diversity into peptidic libraries.
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PMID:alpha-Amino acids derived from ornithine as building blocks for peptide synthesis. 914 14

This paper introduces a unique amino acid that can readily be incorporated into peptides to make them fold into beta-sheetlike structures that dimerize through beta-sheet interactions. This new amino acid, Orn(i-PrCO-Hao), consists of an ornithine residue with the beta-strand-mimicking amino acid Hao [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 7654-7661] attached to its side chain. When Orn(i-PrCO-Hao) is incorporated into a peptide, or appended to its N-terminus, the Hao group hydrogen bonds to the three subsequent residues to form a beta-sheetlike structure. The amino acid Orn(i-PrCO-Hao) is readily used in peptide synthesis as its Fmoc derivative, Fmoc-Orn(i-PrCO-Hao)-OH (3). Fmoc-Orn(i-PrCO-Hao)-OH behaves like a regular amino acid in peptide synthesis and was uneventfully incorporated into the peptide o-anisoyl-Val-Orn(i-PrCO-Hao)-Phe-Ile-Leu-NHMe (4) through standard automated Fmoc solid-phase peptide synthesis, with DIC and HOAt as the coupling agent for Fmoc-Orn(i-PrCO-Hao)-OH and o-anisic acid and HATU as the coupling agent for all other couplings. A second synthetic strategy was developed to facilitate the preparation of peptides with N-terminal Orn(i-PrCO-Hao) residues, which avoids the need for the preparation of Fmoc-Orn(i-PrCO-Hao)-OH. In this strategy, Boc-Orn(Fmoc)-OH is used as the penultimate amino acid in the peptide synthesis, and i-PrCO-Hao-OH (2) is used as the final amino acid. N-Terminal Orn(i-PrCO-Hao) peptide H-Orn(i-PrCO-Hao)-Phe-Ile-Leu-NHMe.TFA (5) was prepared in a fashion similar to that for 4, using DIC and HOAt as the coupling agent for i-PrCO-Hao-OH and HATU as the coupling agent for all other couplings. 1H NMR transverse-ROESY, coupling constant, and chemical shift studies establish that peptide 4 forms a dimeric beta-sheetlike structure in CDCl3 solution. The 1H NMR studies also suggest that the ornithine unit adopts a well-defined turn conformation. Analogous 1H NMR studies of peptide 5 indicate that this TFA salt folds but does not dimerize in CD3OD solution. Collectively, these synthetic and spectroscopic studies establish that the amino acid Orn(i-PrCO-Hao) induces beta-sheet structure and interactions in peptides in suitable organic solvents. Unlike the Hao amino acid, which acts as a prosthetic to replace three residues of the peptide strand, the Orn(i-PrCO-Hao) amino acid acts as a splint that helps enforce a beta-sheetlike structure without replacing the residues and their side chains. This feature of Orn(i-PrCO-Hao) is important, because it allows the creation of beta-sheet structure with minimal perturbation of the peptide sequence.
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PMID:An unnatural amino acid that induces beta-sheet folding and interaction in peptides. 1198 57

The extrinsic hypercoagulation often resulting from sepsis could contribute to disseminated intravascular coagulation and cardiovascular complications. The effective prevention and intervention remained largely complex and unclear. In a cell model of human leukemia THP-1 monocytes following bacterial endotoxin (LPS) exposure, we show the novel anticoagulant ability of polyamino acid (polyAA) to suppress the extrinsic hypercoagulation. LPS-induced monocytic tissue factor (mTF) procoagulation was readily offset by poly-L-lysine (PLK), poly-L-arginine (PLR), or poly-L-ornithine (POR) included in single-stage clotting assays. IC50 was estimated at 0.35, 0.30, or 0.58 microM for PLR, POR, or PLK, respectively, whereas, poly-L-asparatic acid (PLD) remained ineffective. In a separate approach, inclusion of cationic polyAA in human plasma significantly prolonged prothrombin time, confirming the depressed extrinsic coagulation. In chromogenic assays dissecting the extrinsic pathway, we further determined the inhibitory site(s). PLK, PLR, or POR significantly inhibited LPS-induced FVII activation, which was consistent with the diminished FVIIa formation shown on Western blotting analysis. In contrast, polyAA did not show any additional effect on either FVIIa/FXa amidolytic activities or mTF/FVIIa-catalyzed FX activation. Nor did polyAA show any effect on FVII activation directly catalyzed by FXa. Taken together, PLK, PLR, or POR preferentially inhibited mTF-dependent FVII activation, accounting for their novel anticoagulant activities. PolyAA might present the specific antagonists to arrest the extrinsic hypercoagulation following inflammation.
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PMID:Novel anticoagulant activity of polyamino acid offsets bacterial endotoxin-induced extrinsic hypercoagulation: downregulation of monocytic tissue factor-dependent FVII activation. 1450 32

Arginase (ARG) is a metabolic enzyme present in two isoforms that hydrolyze l-arginine to urea and ornithine. In humans, ARG isoform 1 is also expressed in cells of the myeloid lineage. ARG activity promotes tumour growth and inhibits T lymphocyte activation. However, the two ARG transgenic mouse lines produced so far failed to show such effects. We have generated, in two different genetic backgrounds, transgenic mice constitutively expressing ARG1 under the control of the CD68 promoter in macrophages and monocytes. Both heterozygous and homozygous transgenic mice showed a relevant increase in mortality at early age, compared with wild-type siblings (67/267 and 48/181 versus 8/149, respectively, both P < 0.005). This increase was due to high incidence of haematologic malignancies, in particular myeloid leukaemia, myeloid dysplasia, lymphomas and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), diseases that were absent in wild-type mice. Atrophy of lymphoid organs due to reduction in T-cell compartment was also detected. Our results indicate that ARG activity may participate in the pathogenesis of lymphoproliferative and myeloproliferative disorders, suggest the involvement of alterations of L-arginine metabolism in the onset of DIC and confirm a role for the enzyme in regulating T-cell homeostasis.
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PMID:Transgenic mice overexpressing arginase 1 in monocytic cell lineage are affected by lympho-myeloproliferative disorders and disseminated intravascular coagulation. 2636 32