Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Individuals heterozygous or homozygous for the variant aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH2) allele (ALDH2*2), which encodes a protein differing only at residue 487 from the normal protein, have decreased ALDH2 activity in liver extracts and experience cutaneous flushing when they drink alcohol. The mechanisms by which this allele exerts its dominant effect is unknown. To study this effect, the human ALDH2*1 cDNA was cloned and the ALDH2*2 allele was generated by site-directed mutagenesis. These cDNAs were transduced using retroviral vectors into HeLa and CV1 cells, which do not express ALDH2. The normal allele directed synthesis of immunoreactive ALDH2 protein (ALDH2E) with the expected isoelectric point. Extracts of these cells contained increased aldehyde dehydrogenase activity with low Km for the aldehyde substrate. The ALDH2*2 allele directed synthesis of mRNA and immunoreactive protein (ALDH2K), but the protein lacked enzymatic activity. When ALDH2*1-expressing cells were transduced with ALDH2*2 vectors, both mRNAs were expressed and immunoreactive proteins with isoelectric points ranging between those of ALDH2E and ALDH2K were present, indicating that the subunits formed heteromers. ALDH2 activity in these cells was reduced below that of the parental ALDH2*1-expressing cells. Thus, the ALDH2*2 allele is sufficient to cause ALDH2 deficiency in vitro.
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PMID:The aldehyde dehydrogenase ALDH2*2 allele exhibits dominance over ALDH2*1 in transduced HeLa cells. 759 3

Inherited variations in alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenases, the principal enzymes of ethanol metabolism, have been implicated in determining susceptibility to alcoholism and alcohol-related organ damage. An association between an RFLP for the alcohol dehydrogenase-2 (ADH2) gene and alcohol-induced liver damage was demonstrated in a Caucasian population. Genotyping studies revealed an increase in the ADH3(2) allele in patients with alcohol-induced cirrhosis. PCR studies of the ALDH5 gene have demonstrated diverse polymorphism within a short segment of its coding region, with marked inter-racial variation in allele frequencies. In addition, the Caucasian alcohol-induced flushing reaction has been characterised and its relationship with phenotypic polymorphism of ALDH1 examined.
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PMID:Alcohol and acetaldehyde dehydrogenase gene polymorphism and alcoholism. 791 53

Sulfiram, a drug applied topically to treat scabies, produces effects similar to those of disulfiram after subsequent ingestion of ethanol. Disulfiram, used in aversion therapy in the treatment of alcoholism, inhibits hepatic aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) causing an accumulation of acetaldehyde after ethanol ingestion. The increased tissue levels of acetaldehyde cause a spectrum of undesirable side-effects including flushing, nausea, vomiting, and tachycardia, which are referred to as the disulfiram reaction. Previous studies have shown that in vitro sulfiram is a very weak inhibitor of ALDH, but solutions of sulfiram markedly increase in potency with time. In the present study, fresh solutions of sulfiram were exposed to fluorescent room light under ambient conditions and analyzed at timed intervals by HPLC. At least eight products, including disulfiram, were formed in the light-exposed sulfiram solutions, but not in solutions kept in the dark. Structural characterization of two of the photolysis products was obtained by on-line microbore HPLC-mass spectrometry (mu LC-MS) and on-line microbore HPLC-tandem mass spectrometry (mu LC-MS/MS) using continuous flow-liquid secondary ion mass spectrometry (CF-LSIMS) as the primary ionization method. Sulfiram was converted to disulfiram at an initial rate of 0.7%/hr, and the formation of disulfiram correlated with the increase in ALDH inhibition in vitro. The results of this investigation show that while sulfiram is a weak inhibitor of ALDH in vitro, it is readily photoconverted to disulfiram, a very potent inhibitor of ALDH, which may explain the adverse reaction to ethanol after sulfiram therapy.
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PMID:Photolysis of sulfiram: a mechanism for its disulfiram-like reaction. 798 3

The prevalence of the alcohol-flushing reaction was assessed in a group of healthy Caucasian medical students (200) by self-reporting and was found to occur in approximately 50% of female and 8% of male subjects. In most of the alcohol flushers there were other family members similarly affected. The presence of this side-effect after a small quantity of alcohol did not necessarily decrease the amount of alcohol consumed. A test dose of ethanol (0.4 g/kg body weight) confirmed the presence of the alcohol-induced flushing, which was of much shorter duration and intensity than that of the Oriental alcohol-induced flusher, as measured by laser Doppler velocimetry, and was not associated with high circulating concentrations of acetaldehyde. Topical administration of 5 M acetaldehyde showed an enhanced erythema in Caucasian flushers compared to non-flushing controls. This effect was not observed with topical ethanol. Low erythrocyte ALDH1 activity was found in all Caucasians (n = 30) who showed the alcohol-induced flushing reaction.
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PMID:Identification and characterisation of alcohol-induced flushing in Caucasian subjects. 798 81

Disulfiram, an aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) inhibitor, induces a flushing reaction upon the ingestion of ethanol, exerting aversion against alcohol that has been used in the treatment of alcoholism. This unpleasant response has been associated with an accumulation of acetaldehyde, and more recently, with an increase in vascular prostacyclin (PGI2) production. To evaluate the possibility of evoking the flushing reaction with drugs less toxic than disulfiram, we studied the effects of propranolol and dipyridamole on ALDH and PGI2. Acetaldehyde oxidation rate was assessed by gas chromatography in mitochondria from rats treated with these drugs for seven days. Prostacyclin generation was determined in rat aortic rings incubated in Krebs-Ringer with these drugs separately and associated to acetaldehyde, and measured by radioimmunoassay of 6-keto-PGF1 alpha. Propranolol inhibited acetaldehyde oxidation rate whereas dipyridamole did not. Furthermore, propranolol increased blood acetaldehyde levels without affecting ethanol elimination rate. Both drugs stimulated prostacyclin synthesis but only dipyridamole enhanced the stimulatory effect of acetaldehyde on vascular prostacyclin production. These results strongly suggest the possibility of producing a deterrent effect on the consumption of alcohol by using propranolol or dipyridamole. In contrast to disulfiram, these drugs could potentially induce the flushing reaction in humans in the presence of low acetaldehyde concentrations; this new therapeutic approach might have an important clinical and toxicological relevance.
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PMID:Investigations on the ethanol-induced flushing reaction: effects of propranolol and dipyridamole on acetaldehyde and prostacyclin metabolism. 802 34

The oral ethanol loading test (0.5 g/kg body mass given as 40% solution) was carried out in 5 groups, each of 10 out-patients with non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes before and after 10 days of treatment with one of the following sulphonylurea derivatives: tolbutamide (CAS 64-77-7) 0.5 t.i.d., chlorpropamide (CAS 94-20-2) 0.5 once daily morning, glibornuride (CAS 26944-48-9) 0.025 t.i.d., glibenclamide (CAS 10238-21-8) 0.005 t.i.d. and glipizide (CAS 29094-61-9) 0.005 t.i.d. The response to alcohol (facial flush, heart rate, blood pressure) were compared, and blood concentrations of ethanol, acetaldehyde, pyruvate, lactate, hydrocarbonates as well as blood pH, pO2 and pCO2 were determined in fasting state and during 6 hours after alcohol ingestion. In all patients the family history of diabetes and the presence and degree of vascular complications were registered. Evident flushing phenomenon was observed in 6 patients treated with chlorpropamide, in 3 treated with tolbutamide, in 2 treated with glibenclamide, in one receiving glibornuride and in none treated with glipizide. All drugs caused a greater rise of blood ethanol and acetaldehyde levels in relation to the control tests, but the difference reached statistical significance only in the group receiving chlorpropamide. Moreover, patients (pooled) with positive thermographic response had also significantly higher blood levels of ethanol and acetaldehyde during the second test. The ratio of acetaldehyde to ethanol concentration in blood (mumol:mmol) was not significantly changed in any group indicating parallel impairment of both steps of ethanol metabolism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Alcohol tolerance in patients with non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes treated with sulphonylurea derivatives. 805 71

The oral ethanol loading test (0.5 g per kg b.m. given as 40% solution) was carried out in 5 groups, each of 10 patients with non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes before and after 10 days of treatment with one of the following sulphonylurea derivatives: tolbutamide 0.5 t.i.d., chlorpropamide 0.5 once daily morning, glibornuride 0.025 t.i.d, glibenclamide 0.005 t.i.d. and glipizide 0.005 t.i.d. The response to alcohol (facial flush, heart rate, blood pressure) were compared, and blood concentration of ethanol, acetaldehyde, pyruvate, lactate, carbonates as well as blood pH, pO2 and pCO2 were determined in fasting state and during 6 hours after alcohol ingestion. In all patients the family history of diabetes and the presence and degree of vascular complications were registered. Evident flushing phenomenon was observed in 6 patients treated with chlorpropamide, in 3 treated with tolbutamide, in 2 treated with glibenclamide, in one receiving glibornuride and in none treated with glipizide. All drugs caused a greater rise of blood ethanol and acetaldehyde levels in relation to the control tests, but the difference reached statistical significance only in the group receiving chlorpropamide. Moreover, patients (pooled) with positive thermographic response had also significantly higher blood levels of ethanol and acetaldehyde during the second test. The ratio of acetaldehyde to ethanol concentration in blood (mumol:mmol) was not significantly changed in any group indicating parallel impairment of both steps of ethanol metabolism. All studied drugs intensified to a similar degree the alcohol-induced hypoglycaemia, but had no significant effect on the decrease of blood pyruvate level neither on the increase of blood lactate level. They didn't change the post-alcohol decrease of blood bicarbonate and pH, and didn't modify the behaviour of partial gas pressure. There was also no difference between pooled groups of patients with positive and negative thermographic reaction with respect to family history of diabetes and frequency and intensity of vascular complications. It is concluded that in patients with non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes the second generation sulphonylurea derivatives are associated with lower risk of alcohol intolerance in case of its incidental ingestion in small amounts. The hypothesis of association of positive thermographic reaction to alcohol during treatment with sulphonylurea derivatives with more frequent occurrence of diabetes in family members and lower tendency to vascular complications was not confirmed.
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PMID:[Alcohol tolerance in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes (type 2) treated orally with drugs--derivatives of sulphonylurea]. 841 9

Influence of genetic polymorphism at the alcohol dehydrogenase2 (ADH2) and aldehyde dehydrogenase2 (ALDH2) loci on ethanol elimination and blood acetaldehyde level was studied in healthy subjects. Polymorphic regions of the ADH2 and ALDH2 genes were amplified for genomic DNA by using the technique of polymerase chain reaction. The ADH2 genotype was determined by digestion with the restriction enzyme MaeIII and the ALDH2 genotype was defined by hybridization with sequence specific oligonucleotide probes. Both loci were typed for unrelated 58 individuals by using the above methods. The gene frequencies of each locus were estimated as follows; 0.31 and 0.69 for ADH2*1 and ADH2*2, respectively, and 0.73 and 0.27 for ALDH2*1 and ALDH2*2, respectively. These values were consistent with the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. Pedigree analysis of 6 families with 46 subjects on both loci confirmed Mendelian inheritance. In order to investigate differences in ethanol elimination among ADH2 and ALDH2 genotype groups, 0.4 g/kg body weight of ethanol was administered to 93 subjects whose genotypes of both loci were determined by the above methods and blood ethanol and acetaldehyde levels were measured. None of the subjects homozygous for the ALDH2*1 allele showed facial flushing and any increase in blood acetaldehyde level. All the homozygotes and heterozygotes with the ALDH2*2 allele exhibited facial flushing, and the former showed a marked increase in blood acetaldehyde level and the latter did a mild increase. On the other hand, the influence of the ADH2 genotype on blood acetaldehyde level was not significant. The values of Widmark's beta 60 (mg/ml/hr) and ethanol elimination rate (mg/kg/hr) showed significant differences among the three groups of the ALDH2 genotypes in each group of the three ADH2 genotypes, and in decreasing order of both the values were ALDH 2*1/*1, ALDH2*1/*2, ALDH2*/*2, However, there were no significant differences in the values among the ADH2 genotypes.
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PMID:Genetic polymorphism of alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase and the effects on alcohol metabolism. 851 95

The alcohol-flush reaction occurs in Asians who inherit the mutant ALDH2*2 allele that produces an inactive aldehyde dehydrogenase enzyme. In these individuals, high blood acetaldehyde levels are believed to be the cause of the unpleasant symptoms that follow drinking. We measured the alcohol elimination rates and intensity of flushing in Chinese subjects in whom the alcohol dehydrogenase ADH2 and ALDH2 genotypes were determined. We also correlated ADH2, ADH3, and ALDH2 genotypes with drinking behavior in 100 Chinese men. We discovered that ADH2*2 and ADH3*1, alleles that encode the high activity forms of alcohol dehydrogenase, as well as the mutant ALDH2*2 allele were less frequent in alcoholics than in controls. The presence of ALDH2*2 was associated with slower alcohol metabolism and the most intense flushing. In those homozygous for ALDH2*1, the presence of two ADH2*2 alleles correlated with slightly faster alcohol metabolism and more intense flushing, although a great deal of variability in the latter was noted.
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PMID:Alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase polymorphisms and alcoholism. 851 27

Implantation and placentation in the baboon share many morphological features with other primates, as well as having some specific distinctions. The ability to use deturgescence of the sex skin as a method of timing ovulation and the ease with which the uterine lumen can be flushed have been used to examine morphological aspects of blastocyst differentiation and implantation in this species. Preimplantation blastocysts were obtained by non-surgical flushing of the uterus 6-8 days after ovulation, and implantation sites were excised from uteri removed on days 10-16 of gestation. All tissues were prepared for electron microscopy by aldehyde fixation and plastic embedding. Maturation of trophoblast from the compacted morula stage to the expanded blastocyst stage includes increase in numbers of polyribosomes, changes in conformation of mitochondria, and development of an effective endocytic apparatus. An endodermal layer forms beneath the inner cell mass prior to loss of the zona pellucida, and parietal endodermal cells extend beyond the inner cell mass. Azonal blastocysts have regions of syncytial trophoblast adjacent to the inner cell mass, and they may represent adhesion stages of early implantation. In early postimplantation stages, trophoblast replaces the uterine epithelium and processes of syncytial trophoblast invade dilated superficial maternal vessels. In subsequent lacunar stages there is rapid elevation of the developing conceptus above the uterine surface as the lacunae enlarge. Cytotrophoblast rapidly enters maternal vessels, and arterioles are partially or completely occluded by migrating cytotrophoblast. The early access to controlled maternal blood flow apparently allows trophoblastic lacunae to expand superficially as opposed to more extensive endometrial invasion.
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PMID:From blastocyst to placenta: the morphology of implantation in the baboon. 958 46


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