Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We constructed a cDNA library against the plasma obtained from the patient with acute exacerbation of non-A, non-B liver cirrhosis, and immunoscreened this library with the sera obtained from the patients with non-A, non-B chronic liver disease. One positive clone lambda 22C containing about 1.2 kb cDNA insert was isolated from 10(6) clones. Nucleotide sequence determination and subsequent homology search revealed its identity to the tolA gene of Escherichia coli. Anti-tolA antibody was detected in 54.5% of the patients with NANB chronic liver disease whose sera were negative for antibody to hepatitis C virus (anti-C100). In contrast, anti-tolA was detected only of 14.6% patients with anti-C100 positive NANB chronic liver disease, 10.5% with hepatitis B surface antigen-positive chronic liver disease, 7.7% with alcoholic liver disease and 4.2% in normal control, and no positive case in acute hepatitis of etiology and in primary biliary cirrhosis. However, antibody to the core protein of hepatitis C virus (anti-JCC) was detected 50% of the patients whose sera were negative for anti-C100 but positive for anti-tolA. Recently, it has been reported that hepatitis C virus is rich in mutations and has some variants. These results indicated the presence of a common epitope between the tolA protein and some agent related to non-A, non-B hepatitis, especially to anti-C100 negative non-A, non-B hepatitis such as variants of hepatitis C virus which have mutations in C100 coded region.
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PMID:Anti-tolA antibody in non-A, non-B chronic liver disease. 128 59

A cDNA fragment encompassing the 5'-terminal half of the NS1 region of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) genome was cloned. The cDNA was expressed in insect cells using a recombinant baculovirus, and a protein band of approximately 21K was identified by immunoblotting with a serum sample from a patient with chronic hepatitis C. Antibody to the protein was detected in sera from 13.4% of patients with chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis (NANBH), 20.8% of patients with liver cirrhosis and 16.8% of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma with no serum markers for hepatitis B virus infection. However, the antibody was not detected in sera from patients with acute NANBH. The prevalence of antibody to the protein encoded by the NS1 region was lower than that of antibody to the HCV core protein, but much higher than that of antibody to the envelope protein. Thus, the NS1 region of the HCV genome is suggested to encode a protein produced during the course of HCV replication.
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PMID:Expression of the amino-terminal half of the NS1 region of the hepatitis C virus genome and detection of an antibody to the expressed protein in patients with liver diseases. 137 27

There was an epidemic of non-A non-B hepatitis in a small area of a town in the central part of Japan, which began with an outbreak of several patients in 1981 and then spread extensively with the result that about one third of the inhabitants showed abnormality in serum liver function tests at the health check performed in 1985. We determined histological diagnoses on that occasion for 167 individuals of the abnormal population and recently assayed antibodies against hepatitis C virus (HCV) for most of their sera left available. Histologically, chronic active hepatitis (CAH) was the major pattern, accounting for 59.3% (99 cases) of the total. Others were chronic persistent hepatitis (CPH) (13.2%), chronic lobular hepatitis (CLH) (16.2%), liver cirrhosis (LC) (6.6%) and fatty liver (4.8%). In the serological studies, the newly developed system to detect antibodies against the viral core protein p 22 was found to be much more sensitive than the conventional system to detect anti C 100-3 antibodies. By using these two methods in combination, we found that 82% were antibody-positive, indicating strong implication of HCV in this epidemic. This was further supported by direct detection of the viral genome in patients' sera by polymerase chain reaction following reverse transcription. We further found a strong correlation between the histological inflammatory activity and the antibody prevalence, since nearly all (97.6%) of the CAH cases were antibody-positive by at least either of the antibody assays, while only about 50% were positive in the less active cases such as CPH and CLH.
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PMID:Correlation between detection of anti-viral antibody and histopathological disease activity in an epidemic of hepatitis C. 138 9

Our aim was to investigate the existence of an association between B cell responsiveness to hepatitis C virus (HCV) core protein and progression of liver disease. In fact, the persistence of HCV infection is permitted by avoidance of viral clearance, despite chronic inflammation in the liver; this process ends with the development of hepatocellular carcinoma in many patients. On the basis of computerized prediction of antigenicity of the genomic sequence of HCV core protein, three 15-mer peptides (named Q15V, R15P, and G15V) were synthesized to be used as antigens in an enzyme immunoassay. Sera from 97 patients (65 males and 32 females) were tested: 43 patients had mild chronic liver disease (steatofibrosis, chronic persistent, or chronic active hepatitis) and 54 had cirrhosis, which was complicated by hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in 19. Seventy-six patients were positive to anti-HCV testing by second generation ELISA and 21 were negative. Rates of positivity for synthetic peptides in anti-HCV-positive versus anti-HCV negative patients were as follows: 53 of 76 and 0 of 21 for anti-Q15V; 41 of 76 and 0 of 21 for R15P; and 67 of 76 and 2 of 21 for G15V. Rates of positivity to anti-Q15V and anti-G15V were similar among diagnostic groups (Pearson's chi 2, 1.97, P > 0.10 and 0.45, P > 0.10), whereas anti-R15P antibodies were detected at a significantly lower rate in patients with HCC (2/13) in comparison to mild chronic liver disease (22/35) and cirrhosis (17/28) (Pearson's chi 2, 9.42, P < 0.01). We conclude that anti-R15P antibodies are uncommon in anti-HCV-positive patients with HCC. During the course of chronic HCV infection, anti-R15P testing might help to identify a subgroup at higher risk to develop HCC.
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PMID:Reactivity to B cell epitopes within hepatitis C virus core protein and hepatocellular carcinoma. 752 37

Proteoglycans are macromolecules containing a core protein to which glycosaminoglycan chains are covalently attached. The family contains several members with different structures and various functions. Some of them are elements of the extracellular matrix, while others are located to the cell surface playing important role in cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions. Present paper discusses the possible consequences of the alterations of proteoglycans observed in liver cirrhosis and liver tumors. It has to be emphasized however, that they are also involved in the pathomechanism of arteriosclerosis, Alzheimer-disease, immune diseases, arthritis, tumor progression and metastasis formation.
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PMID:[Proteoglycans (their structure, function and role in liver diseases)]. 841 46

Chronic hepatitis C virus infection can be associated with mixed cryoglobulinemia and systemic vasculitis. The pathogenesis remains poorly understood. 55 consecutive patients with chronic HCI infection (anti-HCV- and serum HCV RNA-positive) were studies prospectively. Cryoglobulinemia was detected in 28 patients (51%) with a mean cryocrit level of 2.2%. Clinical symptoms of vasculitis were encountered in six patients. Compared to those HCV-infected patients without cryoglobulinemia the following distinctive features were observed in the presence of cryoglobulinemia: increased age (p<0.02), female preponderance (p<0.002), longer-lasting HCV infection (mean of 10.7 vs. 4.7 yrs), higher prevalence of cirrhosis (42.8 vs. 0%), increased serum concentration of IgM and increased rheumatoid factor activity, decreased concentration of serum C4 (each p<0.05). The response to interferon treatment was similar in patients with and without cryoglobulinemia. When cryoprecipitates were analyzed by immunofixation, type II cryoglobulinemia was present in 1/3 and type III in 2/3 of patients. By SDS-PAGE four different proteins were demonstrable in cryoprecipitates each identified by immunoblotting as IgG and IgM heavy or light chains respectively. Cryoprecipitate IgGs were shown to react with HCV structural as well a non-structural proteins in a recombinant immunoblotting assay (RIBA). In contrast, cryoprecipitate IgMs reacted only to the HCV core protein c22-3. HCV RNA was detected in cryoprecipitates without a significant enrichment when compared to the corresponding serum or supernatant HCV RNA content. Given the monoclonality of some cryoprecipitate IgM and their reactivity to HCV core, a cross-reactivity to IgG was postulated. In fact, when performing a computer-assisted search for sequence homology, a motif within the core protein (EGLGWAGWL, conserved in HCV genotypes) was identified homologous to a sequence of IgG heavy chains. Thus, temperature-dependent affinity changes of IgM anti-HCV core (nonapeptide) and ensuing complex formation with IgG via binding to the homologous IgG sequence could be a mechanism of cryoprecipitate formation.
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PMID:Cryoglobulinemia in chronic hepatitis C virus infection: prevalence, clinical manifestations, response to interferon treatment and analysis of cryoprecipitates. 860 Jun 60

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major worldwide cause of acute and chronic hepatitis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. The development of vaccines against HCV have been complicated by the high variability of the envelope region, and it is likely that the cellular immune responses to viral structural proteins may be important for eradicating persistent viral infection. Recently, it was reported that the injection into muscle cells of plasmids encoding viral genes resulted in the generation of strong cellular immune responses. We constructed vectors that express the highly conserved HCV core gene. In this regard, the pHCV 2-2 construct contained the entire HCV core region and pHCV 4-2 contained both the 5' noncoding region and the core gene. Cellular expression of HCV core protein was assessed following transfection into human and murine cell lines, and higher intracellular levels of the 21-kd core protein were observed with pHCV 2-2. These HCV core DNA constructs were used to immunize BALB/c mice and produced low-level anti-HCV core humoral immune responses. To assess cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) activity generated in vivo, a cloned syngeneic SP2/O myeloma cell line constitutively expressing HCV core protein was established and inoculated into BALB/c mice to produce growth of plasmacytomas. Strong CTL activity was generated because the tumor size and weight in pHCV 2-2-immunized mice were remarkably reduced compared with mice injected with mock DNA. Spontaneous CTL activity was also exhibited by splenocytes in an in vitro cytotoxicity assay. These investigations demonstrate that plasmid constructs expressing HCV core protein generate strong CTL activity, as assessed both in vivo and in vitro, and are promising candidates as antiviral agents.
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PMID:Expression and immune response to hepatitis C virus core DNA-based vaccine constructs. 870 53

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major healthproblem with a prevalence of 1% in the United States population, and a significant percentage of infected patients progress to chronic liver disease and cirrhosis. Interferon therapy has demonstrated that the immune system can be modulated to alter the acute course of the disease, but long-term treatments remain elusive. Prevention of hepatitis C infection is therefore an important strategy to mitigate the impact of this disease. Initial attempts at vaccination have focused on recombinant envelope vaccines, which have shown an ability to protect against very low titre challenges of HCV in chimps. The need for vaccines capable of protecting against higher titre challenges has led to the search for alternative vaccine strategies. The most highly conserved structural protein in the HCV genome is the core protein, and vaccine strategies targeting the core protein have been proposed to increase vaccine efficacy. The variability of HCV core sequences and genotypes in the Ann Arbor patient population are not known, and the present study was undertaken to assess the theoretical feasibility of developing a HCV core vaccine by excluding promiscuous core (C) gene variability as a mechanism of vaccine failure. Results of nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequence analysis from 13 of 14 patients studied reveal a 93% nucleotide and 96.4% amino acid core sequence homology in the C gene regions studied. Genotype analysis revealed four of 14 to be type 1a and nine of 14 to be type 1b with one infection not being sufficiently characterized to determine genotype. These results demonstrate a sufficiently high degree of conservation of HCV core sequences in our patient population to permit design of a vaccine directed against core protein.
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PMID:Sequence analysis of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) core gene suggests the core protein as an appropriate target for HCV vaccine strategies. 874 15

The viral load of hepatitis C virus, as reflected by hepatitis C virus viremia, has been shown to have important clinical implications. In this study the hepatitis C virus core protein level in serum was evaluated for the detection and quantification of hepatitis C virus viremia. Hepatitis C virus core protein in serum was detected using a simple and sensitive fluorescent enzyme immunoassay. Hepatitis C virus core protein was quantitated in 100 healthy subjects, 258 patients with hepatitis C virus infection and 108 patients with non-hepatitis-C-virus-related chronic liver diseases. HCV-RNA was determined using the branched DNA (bDNA) assay and reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. The detection limit of this fluorescent enzyme immunoassay was found between 10(4) - 10(5) copies/ml HCV-RNA equivalent. There was a good correlation between the core protein and bDNA assay results (p <0.01). Hepatitis C virus core protein was detected in 81% of patients with hepatitis C virus infection (acute hepatitis 4/5, chronic hepatitis 85/104, cirrhosis 64/73 and hepatocellular carcinoma 56/76) but in none of the healthy subjects and patients with non-hepatitis C virus chronic liver diseases. The amount of hepatitis C virus core protein in patients with hepatitis-C-virus-related hepatocellular carcinoma was lower compared to chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis (p <0.05). All 26 patients treated with interferon-alpha showed parallel changes between HCV-RNA and core protein levels. This fluorescent enzyme immunoassay is simple and quick (assay time <3 h) with sensitivity at least matching the bDNA assay. Similar levels of hepatitis C virus core protein were detected in patients with chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis, but patients with hepatocellular carcinoma tended to have a lower level of hepatitis C virus core protein.
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PMID:Simple fluorescent enzyme immunoassay for detection and quantification of hepatitis C viremia. 875 Jan 76

Infection with the hepatitis C virus (HCV) commonly causes persistent disease, which may lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The pathogenesis of HCV infection is not well understood. It is most likely that both viral and host factors contribute to HCV persistence. This review focuses on the host's immune response to HCV in an attempt to present the current knowledge and concepts of the interactions between the virus and the host during HCV infection. Expansion of B lymphocytes and antibody production to virtually any HCV protein can be detected in most infected patients. However, observations in HCV-infected humans as well as experimental infections in chimpanzees suggest that natural HCV infection does not induce protective immunity, and reinfection can readily be demonstrated after inoculation with homologous or independent strains in HCV-seroconverted animals. Nevertheless, the immune system may gain partial control over HCV even in patients with chronic infection, as HCV infection in severely immunocompromised patients runs a particular cholestatic course which may rapidly lead to death from liver failure. Cytotoxic CD8+ T lymphocyte responses to HCV proteins have been characterized in peripheral blood and liver tissue and were found to be remarkably polyclonal and multispecific. Epitopes were identified on all of the putative HCV proteins, although only few major histocompatibility complex molecules were considered restriction elements. Immunoregulation may be particularly important in HCV infection. The HCV core and NS4 proteins appear to be most immunogenic for peripheral blood lymphocytes, and NS4 specific CD4+ lymphocytes are preferentially compartmentalized to the liver. However, there is an inverse relationship between CD4+ lymphocyte responses and antibody levels in infected patients. Furthermore, a strong cellular response to the HCV core protein apparently favors a benign course of infection. This unusual T-B cell relationship may be the consequence of an altered cytokine release during HCV infection. Alternatively, this virus may have found devices that can disturb immunoregulation in infected patients. A better understanding of these immunological mechanisms induced by HCV infection should make it possible to develop more effective strategies for the prevention and treatment of this insidious disease.
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PMID:Immune responses in hepatitis C virus infection. 883 85


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