Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We present 10 Italian patients with type 2b autoimmune hepatitis (anti-LKMI positivity) and HCV infection. 6 patients had IgG concentrations above the upper limit of normal and all had histological features of chronic autoimmune hepatitis or chronic persistent hepatitis or cirrhosis. ANA and SMA were positive in 2 patients, pANCA in 3 patients. Anti-GOR were negative in all patients, 6 of them were HLA B8 DR3 and 2 HLA B8 DR4. Antibodies to HCV (tested by ELISA 2nd and 3rd generation) were positive in all patients and in 9 subjects were detected HCV RNA. The two patients with positivity for ANA and SMA were treated successfully with corticosteroids, but they relapsed after the drug withdrawal; the others received interferon, that had to be suspended in 2 patients because inducing an autoimmune thyroiditis. Although, at present, it is still not known if HCV is a really trigger factor in developing autoimmunity or if the two diseases are coincidental, the authors suggest that it is important for clinicians to use appropriate treatment strategies on the basis of the predominant illness.
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PMID:Type 2 autoimmune hepatitis and hepatitis C viraemia. 876 75

From autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) classification which recognizes three types of AIH, we discuss the main relations between hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and AIH. Type I AIH is associated with antinuclear and antismooth muscle antibodies, and with other autoimmune diseases. There is no relation between type I AIH and HCV. Type I anti-liver kidney microsome and anti-liver cytosol I antibodies represent the hallmark of type II AIH. Among type II AIH, two subgroups emerged: type IIa AIH (10-40%) are true AIH (sensitive to steroids but worsens with interferon alpha), whereas type IIb AIH (60-90%) appear as a particular form of HCV hepatitis. Type IIb AIH have a moderate activity, a low titer of autoantibodies, anti-GOR antibodies but never anti-liver cytosol I, no sensitivity to steroids but are sensitive to interferon alpha. The hallmark of type III AIH are anti-cytosol antibodies, but these AIH have the same characteristics as type I AIH. The classification between true AIH (I, IIa, III) or "pseudo-AIH" due to HCV infection has major therapeutic implications. Steroids or immunosuppressive treatments are effective in type I, IIa and III AIH but have no efficacy in type IIb AIH. Alpha interferon has an efficacy in type IIb AIH, but it has no efficacy and may even worsen hepatitis in type I, IIa and III AIH.
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PMID:[Autoimmune hepatitis and hepatitis C]. 878 84

To investigate the possible involvement of autoimmune mechanisms in the development of hepatosplenic schistosomiasis (HSS), 234 patients with chronic Schistosoma mansoni infections were screened for a wide range of non-organ-specific autoantibodies as well as for antibodies reacting with the GOR peptide and with a liver-specific autoantigen, the hepatic asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGP-R). Thirty-five (15.0%) were seropositive for antinuclear, smooth muscle or gastric parietal cell antibodies at low titres (< or = 1:80), and 15/176 (8.5%) had anti-GOR, all of whom had concomitant hepatitis C viral (HCV) infections. Anti-ASGP-R was found in 64 (27.4%) of the 234 patients at titres similar to those found in 18 untreated auto-immune hepatitis patients studied concurrently. Anti-ASGP-R seropositivity occurred significantly (P < 0.005) more frequently in patients with HSS (62/190, 32.6%) than in those with hepatointestinal schistosomiasis (2/44, 4.5%), but did not correlate with severity of liver disease or with the presence of the non-organ-specific autoantibodies. Anti-ASGP-R was found significantly (P < < 0.0005) less frequently in HSS patients who had had a splenectomy for portal hypertension (5/86, 5.8%) than in those who had not had a splenectomy (57/104, 54.8%). The findings suggest that liver-specific autoreactivity may play a role in the development of HSS.
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PMID:Specific liver autoreactivity in schistosomiasis mansoni. 923 Dec 5

The sequence 'GOR47-1' is a consistent part of human DNA; the expressed polypeptide of it 'GOR' is accepted to be an autoantigen, and the anti-GOR an autoantibody. However, GOR47-1 was originally isolated through a cDNA clone from blood of a chimpanzee. This animal belonged to a series of chimpanzees, in which human plasma of a patient with non-A, non-B hepatitis had been passaged. To date, nothing is known how it is that this 'sequence GOR47-1' without recognizable self-replicating properties and allocated to the human genome could be isolated from a chimpanzee plasma. The aim of this study was to detect by polymerase chain reaction GOR47-1 sequences in healthy, anti-HCV-negative humans, HCV-positive patients, chimpanzee, snake, and in maize and tobacco plants. The GOR47-1 sequence is present not only in human DNA but also with a high degree of homology in chimpanzee DNA. Essential parts of this sequence are also present in DNA of a snake and the two plants listed above. Our findings reveal that the GOR47-1 sequence isolated from a chimpanzee was probably of the chimpanzee origin. This fact has not yet been considered up until now, when discussing the role of GOR/anti-GOR in humans particularly suffering from chronic hepatitis C.
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PMID:The GOR47-1 sequence in human DNA encoding for a potential autoantigen in connection with hepatitis C--a sequence not only reserved for humans. 984 65

GOR (GOR47--1) is an epitope thought to be a host-derived antigen cross-reactive with hepatitis C virus (HCV) since it was isolated from a cDNA library of host animals reactive with sera of HCV-positive patients. An enzyme immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using this epitope as antigen is of sufficient sensitivity and specificity for screening patients with HCV. However, the relationship between GOR47--1 epitope and autoimmune phenomena associated with HCV infection or autoimmune hepatitis is controversial. Here we isolated the human GOR gene and found that the GOR47--1 epitope was not translated in humans due to a single base replacement from chimpanzee. Furthermore, we found some patients who had antibodies against another epitope, which is translated (GOR1--125) in humans, although there was no correlation between the existence of anti-GOR47--1 or anti-GOR1--125 Ab and autoimmune phenomena. Serum IgG levels did not influence the titres of these antibodies. Taken together with the results of several other studies, our finding that the GOR47--1 epitope cannot be translated into a protein suggests that there is little relationship between autoimmunity and the GOR gene product in human beings. We also discuss here the possible mechanism of cross-reactivity between HCV and the GOR gene product.
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PMID:The GOR gene product cannot cross-react with hepatitis C virus in humans. 1147 4

The interactions of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) with the immune system are numerous. As one of the many results, a considerable number of autoantibodies occur in serum. This chapter describes methods to detect anti-GOR antibodies (1-3). Anti-GOR are autoantibodies that are specifically associated with replicating HCV infection Anti-GOR antibodies were first described by Mishiro et al. (1). These authors had tried to isolate the HCV from chimpanzees infected with serum from a patient with posttransfusion hepatitis non-A, non-B. Screening a cDNA library prepared from RNA isolated from a chimpanzee that was infected with serum from a hepatitis non-A, non-B patient resulted in the isolation of several cDNA clones. Expressed protein of one of such clones specifically reacted with serum from patients with non-A, non-B posttransfusion hepatitis, which later became known as the HCV. Interestingly, this cDNA clone reacted with the liver of uninfected chimpanzees.
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PMID:Detection of Anti-GOR Antibodies in HCV Infection. 2137 45


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