Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pancreatic stone protein, a novel protein isolated from pancreatic stones of patients suffering from chronic calcifying pancreatitis and secreted in normal human pancreatic juice, was measured by radial immunodiffusion in pure pancreatic juice. Patients with chronic calcifying pancreatitis of different etiologies had significantly lower levels of pancreatic stone protein when compared with other pancreatic diseases and controls. Pancreatic stone protein suppresses in vitro calcium carbonate precipitation and therefore stabilizes normally supersaturated pancreatic juice. The decreased pancreatic stone protein levels observed could be a key factor in the growth of calcium carbonate crystals and stone development during the course of chronic calcifying pancreatitis.
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PMID:Pancreatic stone protein. II. Implication in stone formation during the course of chronic calcifying pancreatitis. 392 21

The first lesion of chronic calcifying pancreatitis (CCP), the most frequent form of chronic pancreatitis is the formation in the ducts of plugs build up of protein and calcium carbonate which are at the origin of pancreatic calculi. Pancreatic juice is supersaturated in calcium carbonate. A novel protein, the pancreatic stone protein (PSP) has been purified from human pancreatic juice and its amino-acid composition has been determined. It is biosynthesized in the acinar cell as well as enzymes. PSP prevents the formation of calcium carbonate crystals in a supersaturated solution. Its secretion is decreased in patients presenting with CCP. It is proposed that this decrease plays an important part in the pathogenesis of CCP.
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PMID:[Pancreatic lithogenesis]. 396 39

An additional protein in rat pancreatic juice has been observed, which is present in healthy rats after pancreatic duct cannulation or in rats in which experimental pancreatitis has been induced by either cerulein or taurocholate. The protein appears 1/2-1 day after surgery or onset of pancreatitis, is present for the following 3-4 days and disappears afterwards. It is found in pancreatic homogenate or in zymogen granules from rats with pancreatitis, but not in normal rats. It does not seem to be related to the recently described 'pancreatic stone protein'. We would like to refer to this protein as 'pancreatitis-associated protein'.
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PMID:An additional secretory protein in the rat pancreas. 646 71

Lactoferrin and pancreatic stone protein (PSP) are thought to be closely related to pancreatic stone formation in chronic pancreatitis. However, the results reported so far have not been conclusive. To reevaluate the pathological importance of PSP in chronic pancreatitis, compared to lactoferrin, levels of PSP were determined by applying an immunoassay specific to PSP to pure pancreatic juice taken from a total of 52 patients. The patients consisted of 16 controls, 19 chronic pancreatitis patients (13 noncalcified and 6 calcified), and 17 probable cases of pancreatitis. The monoclonal antibody PSP antagonist used in the study recognizes both forms of the protein, PSP S1 and S2-5, with equal effectiveness. No significant reduction of PSP was observed in either calcified (mean +/- SEM, 111 +/- 30 micrograms/mg and 24 +/- 3 micrograms/mg protein) or noncalcified (305 +/- 133 and 97 +/- 47) chronic pancreatitis patients compared with controls (85 +/- 23 and 34 +/- 16). PSP levels did not decrease, at least not in the complete forms of the protein found in chronic pancreatitis. PSP antibody and assay results indicated that a reduction of PSP S2-5 alone could not be ruled out in chronic pancreatitis either.
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PMID:Pancreatic stone protein and lactoferrin in human pancreatic juice in chronic pancreatitis. 771 37

In order to elucidate the characteristics of reg-protein, which is identical to pancreatic stone protein (PSP/reg-protein), and the relationship between the generation and evolution of chronic pancreatitis and the expression of PSP/reg-protein in the pancreas, we investigated the expression of PSP/reg-protein in normal and diseased human pancreatic tissues by immunohistochemistry. The PSP/reg-protein was expressed in all cases with normal pancreas or chronic pancreatitis, and in 70.6% of cases with pancreatic cancer. This protein was present in the cytoplasm of acinar cells and, in some cases, in the intraluminal contents of ductules in nonmalignant tissues. From the view of distribution and cellular localization, PSP/reg-protein was expressed more broadly and densely in chronic pancreatitis with mild to moderate injury than in the normal pancreas. However, the protein was less expressed in severely damaged chronic pancreatitis tissue, such as calcifying pancreatitis, than in the normal pancreas. These findings suggest that mild to moderate injury to pancreatic tissue may stimulate the synthesis of PSP/reg-protein, whereas more severe injury tends to depress it.
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PMID:The immunohistochemical evaluation of PSP/reg-protein in normal and diseased human pancreatic tissues. 845 18

We present a case of a 27-year-old female suffering from chronic calcifying pancreatitis with diabetes mellitus. Radiographic examinations and exocrine pancreatic function tests revealed considerable dilatation of pancreatic ducts with large intraductal calculi and exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, respectively. Recent literature indicates that a decrease in the activity of pancreatic stone protein (PSP), which inhibits CaCO3 crystal formation in pancreatic juice, is closely related to the development of chronic calcifying pancreatitis. The patient had no apparent cause or family history of pancreatitis. We therefore investigated the possibility that alterations in the PSP gene might explain the chronic pancreatitis seen in this patient. Six exons of the PSP gene amplified by polymerase chain reaction were directly sequenced, but there was no apparent base mutation observed. Furthermore, Southern blot analysis revealed neither rearrangement nor deletion of the PSP gene in the genomic DNA of this case. However, this genetic approach will be useful for future study of the etiology of hereditary pancreatitis.
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PMID:Idiopathic chronic calcifying pancreatitis with diabetes mellitus. Analysis of pancreatic stone protein gene. 848 98

Serum pancreatic stone protein (PSP) was determined in sera of pancreatic and nonpancreatic diseases using enzyme immunoassay specific to human PSP to study the diagnostic and pathophysiological significance of PSP. Serum PSP in acute pancreatitis (mean +/- SD = 1075.4 +/- 2849.1 ng/mL, n = 33) was significantly higher than that in controls (78.6 +/- 31.8 ng/mL, n = 37, p < 0.01), chronic pancreatitis (156.8 +/- 82.8 ng/mL, n = 32, p < 0.05), and pancreatic cancer (148.468.8 ng/mL, n = 26, p < 0.05). No significant difference was found between noncalcified and calcified chronic pancreatitis. Serum PSP levels were significantly higher in chronic renal failure under hemodialysis (1796.0 +/- 1492.9 ng/mL) than in other diseases such as peptic ulcer, liver cirrhosis, gallstone, and diabetes mellitus. Low but significant correlation was obtained between serum PSP and serum immunoreactive trypsin (r = 0.22, p < 0.05). Increased serum PSP levels in acute pancreatitis and chronic renal failure suggest that serum PSP levels reflect reflex from pancreatic secretion, release from damaged pancreatic acinar cells, or retention in circulation, and can be useful for diagnosis of acute pancreatitis, but not chronic calcified pancreatitis.
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PMID:Serum pancreatic stone protein in pancreatic diseases. 850 56

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, based on two monoclonal antibodies (Hreg1-1 and Hreg101-1) specific for pancreatic stone protein (PSP)/reg-protein, was developed to determine the concentration of this protein in serum from individuals with various diseases. The serum concentration of PSP/reg-protein was significantly higher in patients with various pancreatic diseases than in normal controls, and was also significantly higher in patients with acute pancreatitis or chronic relapsing pancreatitis than in patients with chronic pancreatitis. Furthermore, the serum PSP/reg-protein concentration was also significantly increased in liver cirrhosis, choledocholithiasis, and various cancers of the digestive system, and was extremely high in all patients tested with chronic renal failure. A significant correlation was apparent between the serum concentration of PSP/reg-protein and elastase-I in 68 patients with chronic pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer. Whereas only 7 of these patients showed a normal serum PSP/reg-protein concentration and a significantly increased elastase-I concentration, 15 of these patients showed a significantly increased serum PSP/reg-protein concentration and a normal serum elastase-I concentration. These results indicate that the serum PSP/reg-protein concentration may reflect pancreatic damage, especially in acute pancreatitis, and may be a sensitive a marker for such damage as elastase-1, although false positivity was apparent in renal failure and in some patients with hepatic dysfunction or digestive system malignancies.
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PMID:Measurement of serum PSP/reg-protein concentration in various diseases with a newly developed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. 857 38

During the acute phase of pancreatitis, expression of most pancreatic enzymes decreases, whereas mRNAs of pancreatitis associated protein and lithostathine/reg increase dramatically. In the present study we have investigated the effect of serum from rats with acute pancreatitis (SAP) and cytokines on the lithostathine/reg mRNA expression in AR-42J cells. Lithostathine/reg mRNA was strongly induced by SAP in a dose-dependent manner. Induction was abolished by preheating the SAP or by treating the cells with cycloheximide. Treatment with interleukins (IL) IL-1 or IL-6 or dexamethasone alone was ineffective. Combination of IL-1 with IL-6 was also ineffective. Combination of IL-6 with dexamethasone resulted in strong induction of the lithostathine/reg gene, but the further addition of IL-1 to the mixture reduced induction. Treatment with tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) or interferon-gamma (IFNgamma) induced lithostathine/reg mRNA expression. Combination of dexamethasone with TNFalpha or IFNgamma showed an inhibitory effect on lithostathine/reg mRNA expression. These findings suggest that expression of the lithostathine/reg mRNA during acute pancreatitis could be mediated by specific combinations of cytokines and/or glucocorticoids.
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PMID:Induction of lithostathine/reg mRNA expression by serum from rats with acute pancreatitis and cytokines in pancreatic acinar AR-42J cells. 865 87

Fibrocalculous pancreatic diabetes (FCPD) is a form of diabetes associated with tropical chronic calcific pancreatitis, seen mostly in developing countries. FCPD is likely to be a multifactorial disease with both environmental and genetic components. The reg 1A gene encodes a protein associated with regeneration of pancreatic islets and has a sequence identical to that of pancreatic stone protein. Since FCPD is associated with both diabetes and pancreatitis, we tested the hypothesis that FCPD may be the result of mutations in the coding regions of the reg 1A gene. Restriction length polymorphisms (RFLPs) and possible sequence variants of the reg 1A gene were studied by RFLP analysis, looking for single-stranded conformational polymorphisms (SSCPs) and direct nucleotide sequencing. In 20 patients with FCPD and 20 control subjects, no RFLPs were detected using 10 restriction enzymes. In 50 patients with FCPD and 50 control subjects, no SSCP variants were detected. Finally, direct nucleotide sequencing of the reg 1A gene from 30 patients with FCPD did not show any differences from the published human reg 1A gene sequence. In conclusion, it seems unlikely that mutations in the coding region of the reg 1A gene are a common cause of FCPD.
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PMID:Analysis of islet regenerating (reg) gene polymorphisms in fibrocalculous pancreatic diabetes. 905 83


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