Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020437 (hypercalcemia)
10,293 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To further gain insights into the mechanisms underlying impaired urine concentration in hypercalcemia, effects of increasing Ca2+ concentrations in the incubation medium on cAMP production in response to 10(-8) M arginine vasopression (AVP) were examined in thick ascending limbs of Henle (MTAL) and collecting tubules (MCT) dissected from outer medulla of mouse kidney. Increasing Ca2+ in the incubation medium from 1.0 mM to either 2.0 mM or 5.0 mM inhibited AVP-dependent cAMP production in MTAL but not in MCT. This inhibition of AVP-dependent cAMP production by 2.0 mM Ca2+ in MTAL was not reversed by verapamil or diltiazem. Also, Ca2+ ionophore A23187 did not inhibit AVP-dependent cAMP production in MTAL in the presence of 1.0 mM Ca2+. Increasing medium Ca2+ from 1.0 to 5.0 mM inhibited cAMP production in MTAL in response to both glucagon and forskolin by the magnitude comparable to that seen in response to AVP. These results show that high Ca2+ inhibits AVP-dependent cAMP production only in MTAL and not in MCT. In addition, the lack of effects of Ca2+ channel blockers and Ca2+ ionophore suggests that high ambient Ca2+ per se may inhibit AVP-dependent cAMP production in MTAL. The fact that high Ca2+ also suppressed cAMP production in response to glucagon or forskolin suggests that Ca2+ may inhibit AVP-dependent adenylate cyclase at postreceptor site(s), one of which is the catalytic unit of the enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:High Ca2+ inhibits AVP-dependent cAMP production in thick ascending limbs of Henle. 301 Jul 37

Many studies have shown that in normal man salmon and porcine CT administration in bolus inhibits the release of TSH, LH, GH, and glucose- or arginine-induced insulin secretion. In the present study we investigated the effects of human synthetic calcitonin (hCT) on glucose- or arginine-induced insulin secretion in man. Twenty-two subjects were submitted to i.v. administration of hCT during glucose or arginine test. In our opinion, the most interesting results are those observed with arginine plus hCT at two different dosages (25 micrograms and 12.5 micrograms infused in 30 min). In fact arginine plus hCT (25 micrograms in 30 min) administration induced a significant increase of glycemia at 5, 10 and 20 min (p less than 0.01) and at 30 min (p less than 0.05) and a significant decrease of IRI at 5, 10, 20 and 30 min (p less than 0.001) and at 45 min (p less than 0.005). The highest plasma CT levels were observed at 15 and 30 min (490 and 540 pg X ml-1). Arginine plus hCT (12.5 micrograms in 30 min) infusion induced a similar significant increase in plasma glucose at 10, and 20 min (p less than 0.05) and at 30 min (p less than 0.01) and a significant decrease of plasma IRI at 10 min (p less than 0.05) at 20 min and 30 min (p less than 0.005). The highest plasma CT levels were reached at 20 min and 30 min (250 and 270 pg X ml-1, respectively). Our results clearly demonstrate that physiologic doses of hCT are able to inhibit arginine induced insulin secretion in normal man. Since insulin induces hypercalcemia and food ingestion increases both insulin and CT, one could hypothesize that CT inhibits insulin secretion thus controlling post-prandial hypercalcemia by its osteotrophic effect and by its action upon calcium redistributed within the cells.
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PMID:Effect of human calcitonin (hCT) on glucose- and arginine-stimulated insulin secretion. 352 Nov 78

Carbohydrate metabolism was investigated in 9 patients with symptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism. Before and after parathyroidectomy intravenous and oral glucose tolerance test, tolbutamide test, arginine infusion test and insulin tolerance test were performed. During intravenous and oral glucose tolerance tests, patients with primary hyperparathyroidism exhibited hyperinsulinemia and impaired glucose tolerance without normalization after surgery. Tolbutamide-induced induced insulin release did not differ pre- or postoperatively. After restoration of normocalcemia and normocalcemia and normophosphatemia we found significantly lower glucose and insulin levels following arginine infusion and a significantly increased hypoglycemic response to parenterally administered insulin, probably indicating partial improvement of glucose tolerance after surgery. Our findings suggest that biochemical abnormalities associated with primary hyperparathyroidism, like hypercalcemia, hypophosphatemia, and elevated parathyroid hormone levels may cause and sustain a form of endogenous insulin resistance, which consequently leads to hyperinsulinemia and to impaired glucose tolerance. Since hyperinsulinemia as well as impaired glucose tolerance seem to be only slowly and partially reversible in symptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism, these data could be considered as an additional argument for early surgical intervention in this disorder.
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PMID:Peripheral insulin resistance in primary hyperparathyroidism. 634 5

Clinical and biochemical data are presented on 18 children with severe hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia born to non-diabetic mothers. Thirteen presented within three days of birth, three by 20 months and two aged nine years. Diagnosis of hyperinsulinism (HI) was made in a single blood sample by showing inappropriate plasma insulin levels (23 +/- 3 mU/l) for glycaemia (1.2 +/- 0.1 mmol/l), with low blood ketone body, lactate, alanine and glycerol levels. All children showed increased glucose disappearance rates (KG 7.6% +/- 0.06) and glucose requirement (range, 9-25 mg/kg/min) and an exaggerated glycaemic response to glucagon when hypoglycaemic. Confirmatory tests included measurement of plasma insulin levels during leucine and arginine tolerance tests, during hypercalcaemia and after fish insulin. Coeliac angiograms were performed in three cases. Clinical progress could be divided into five categories. Four cases recovered normal insulin control spontaneously (transient neonatal HI); two children responded and remain on diazoxide therapy, two responded to diazoxide after partial pancreatectomy (diazoxide responsive HI); in three cases resolution of hypoglycaemia resulted from resection of isolated adenoma (insulinoma); total pancreatectomy was needed in five cases (nesidioblastosis) and two children were victims of drug administration (drug induced HI). This analysis allows the definition of a practical approach to diagnosis and management of this major clinical problem.
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PMID:Hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia in infancy and childhood: a practical approach to diagnosis and medical treatment based on experience of 18 cases. 639 78

The effect of mild hypercalcaemia on the growth hormone (GH), C-peptide and glucose responses to arginine infusion in patients with insulin-dependent idiopathic diabetes mellitus (ID) was compared with that observed in patients whose diabetes was secondary to idiopathic haemochromatosis (IH) and chronic pancreatitis (CP). The summated GH responses to arginine infusion alone were similar in all three groups. Mild hypercalcaemia significantly diminished the GH response to arginine in patients with secondary diabetes, but not in those with ID. As the blood glucose and C-peptide responses were similar in the presence of a normal or raised serum calcium, the differences in GH response could not be ascribed to changes in blood glucose levels or to alterations in endogenous insulin release. For reasons as yet unknown, hypercalcaemia appears to have more of a stabilizing effect on the pituitary somatotrophic granules of those with secondary diabetes than in those with ID.
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PMID:The effect of acute hypercalcaemia on arginine induced growth hormone release in diabetic man. 653 33

A single heterozygous nucleotide exchange in exon M2 of the gene encoding the parathyroid hormone-parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTH-PTHrP) receptor was identified in a patient with Jansen-type metaphyseal chondrodysplasia, which changes a strictly conserved histidine residue at position 223 in the receptor's first intracellular loop to arginine. Constitutive, ligand-independent adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate accumulation was observed in COS-7 cells expressing the mutant PTH-PTHrP receptor but not in cells expressing the wild-type receptor. This finding explains the severe ligand-independent hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia, and most likely the abnormal formation of endochondral bone, in this rare form of short-limbed dwarfism.
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PMID:A constitutively active mutant PTH-PTHrP receptor in Jansen-type metaphyseal chondrodysplasia. 770 49

Tissue macrophages from patients with granuloma-forming disease, most notably sarcoidosis, express a 25-hydroxyvitamin D-1-hydroxylase which can produce in vivo sufficient quantities of the active vitamin D metabolite 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D to cause hypercalcemia. In contrast to the NADPH-dependent cytochrome P450-linked mixed function oxidase which is normally only expressed in significant quantity in proximal renal tubular cells and regulated in an endocrine fashion, the mitochondrial-based 1-hydroxylase in the macrophage [1] is stimulated in a paracrine mode by cytokines (i.e., IFN-gamma) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) [2] requires an extracellular source of L-arginine for full basal expression and [3] can be regulated in an intracrine fashion by nitric oxide (NO). In these experiments we employed inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS)-free, intact mitochondria preparations from the avain macrophage-like cell line HD-11, which constitutively express the 1-hydroxylase, and nonenzymatically-generated NO to investigate NO-mediated autoregulation of the macrophage 1-hydroxylase. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP)- or S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP)-induced up-regulation of the 1-hydroxylase required the presence of either NADPH or NADP in the reaction mixture, while NO-induced inhibition of mitochondrial 1,25-(OH)2D3 synthesis was NO-dependent and NADP/NADPH-independent. These data suggest NO has bifunctional effects on the macrophage 1-hydroxylase. At relatively high concentrations NO competes with O2 for enzyme binding, inhibiting hormone synthesis. At lower production levels, NO serves as a source of reducing equivalents for the enzyme by providing for the reduction of NADP to NADPH.
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PMID:Autoregulation of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D synthesis in macrophage mitochondria by nitric oxide. 882 16

Activating germline mutations in the cysteine-rich domain of the RET proto-oncogene are found in >92% of the cases of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A (MEN2A) and 85% of familial medullary thyroid carcinoma (FMTC). In virtually 100% of patients with identified mutations one of five cysteines is altered by a missense mutation. In a MEN2A family with 14 affected and 11 unaffected living members, hypercalcemia was diagnosed in eight patients and histological evaluation revealed parathyroid hyperplasia in all cases examined (10/10). No member of this family showed any evidence for the existence of pheochromocytoma. This is the first documentation of a family without pheochromocytoma but with a high incidence of parathyroid disease. Genetic analysis revealed the presence of an unusual heterozygous mutation in exon 11 of the RET proto-oncogene representing a duplication of 12 bp resulting in the insertion of four amino acids between codon 634 (Cys) and 635 (Arg), thus creating an additional cysteine residue.
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PMID:A duplication of 12 bp in the critical cysteine rich domain of the RET proto-oncogene results in a distinct phenotype of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2A. 909 63

Familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (FHH) is characterized by lifelong asymptomatic hypercalcemia without PTH hypersecretion and is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait with near 100% penetrance. In contrast, neonatal severe hyperparathyroidism (NSHPT) is a life-threatening disorder characterized by marked hypercalcemia and PTH hypersecretion. FHH/NSHPT results from inactivating mutations of the human calcium-sensing receptor (Casr) gene on chromosome 3q13.3-24. Nearly 30 different mutations of the Casr gene associated with FHH/NSHPT have been reported previously. In this report, genetic analysis of 1 Japanese NSHPT family revealed 2 novel mutations at codon 185 (CGA-->TGA/Arg-->Ter) in exon 4 of the Casr gene and at codon 670 (GGG-->GAG/Gly-->Glu) in exon 7. The Arg185Ter change was shown to occur in the proband's unaffected father and paternal grandmother as well as in the proband. The other mutation in exon 7 was shown in the proband's unaffected mother of Philippine origin as well as in the proband. This family is the first case of manifestation of more than 1 mutation in a proband's chromosomes; 1 mutation was obtained from the unaffected father, and the other was from the unaffected mother. Our observations have given us important keys to help elucidate the structure-function relationships of the Casr.
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PMID:Two novel missense mutations in calcium-sensing receptor gene associated with neonatal severe hyperparathyroidism. 925 59

Jansen-type metaphyseal chondrodysplasia (JMC) has both delayed ossification in long bones and usually hypercalcemia. We report a Japanese male patient with JMC who presented with rachitic signs on radiographs, hypercalcemia (13 mg/dl) and low %TRP at age 3 months (mo). Hypercalcemia was treated from age 3 mo to 11 yr. Progressive widening, splaying and fragmentation of the metaphyses have been recognized on radiographs which resulted in shortened tubular bones and consequent short stature [107 cm (-6.5 SD)] at age 13 yr. Hypercalcemia tended to normalize, and %TRP became normal at age 13 yr. Repeated measurements of serum PTH and PTH-related protein (PTHrP) levels showed that they were low or normal in the face of hypercalcemia and high urine cAMP excretion, which led us to suspect constitutive activation of the PTH/PTHrP receptor. Direct sequencing of PTH/PTHrP receptor complementary DNA from skin fibroblast cells revealed a CAC to CGC transversion yielding a strictly conserved His223 to Arg substitution found in 90% of DNA fragment in the second transmembrane domain of the receptor. This mutation created a restriction site Sphl (G/CATG/C). Direct sequencing of genomic DNA and also restriction enzyme digestion revealed heterozygous transition. The mutation was absent in the parents with normal phenotype. We conclude that both dysplastic bone lesions and calcium homeostasis are age-dependent in JMC, and that the His223-Arg substitution is the same as that found in four Caucasian patients with a similar phenotype irrespective of the ethnic difference, and that the preferential expression of an abnormal allele of the PTH/PTHrP receptor mRNA in skin fibroblast despite heterogygotic transversion in the genomic DNA suggests the importance of allele expression.
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PMID:Jansen-type metaphyseal chondrodysplasia: analysis of PTH/PTH-related protein receptor messenger RNA by the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain method. 944 81


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