Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0031511 (pheochromocytoma)
14,622 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Levels of vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) were measured by radioimmunoassay in plasma or tissue from thirty-five patients with watery diarrhoea, and in plasma of twenty-five normal controls. Plasma levels were between 0.6 and 11.0 ng/ml in thirty-one of the thirty-three patients in whom it was measured and too low to measure (less than 200 pg/ml) in the other two. Peptide levels were less than 200 pg/ml in twenty-three of the controls, but higher in the remaining two. All tissues from patients were "rich" in VIP (10 ng to 35 microgram per g). The aetiologic diagnoses included pancreatic islet-cell adenoma or adenocarcinoma, islet-cell hyperplasia, bronchogenic carcinoma, pheochromocytoma, ganglioneuroblastoma, medullary thyroid carcinoma, and retroperitoneal histiocytoma. The findings support the conclusions that: (1) VIP is a likely mediator of the water-diarrhoea syndrome; (2) the syndrome may result from a variety of tumours; (3) this or a related peptide hormone may be secreted by these tumours; and (4) these tumours may have a common embryonic origin.
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PMID:Evidence for secretion of vasoactive intestinal peptide by tumours of pancreas, adrenal medulla, thyroid and lung: support for the unifying APUD concept. 2 33

Two unusual cases of the watery diarrhea syndrome are presented. In one patient an adrenal medullary tumor, a pheochromocytoma that produced vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) was excised with total relief of symptoms. The second patient a 65-year-old man with abrupt onset of massive watery diarrhea that led to acidosis and coma was symptomatically controlled for one year on 10 mg/day of prednisone. Elevated levels of VIP returned to normal after prednisone therapy was started. A benign islet cell tumor not localized by angiography was removed by distal pancreatic resection. Tissue levels of VIP were markedly elevated. VIP is a humoral mediator of the water diarrhea syndrome. Both benign and malignant pancreatic and extrapancreatic tumors may cause the watery diarrhea syndrome. Steroids may cause symptomatic relief of the diarrhea by lowering peptide levels to normal. The term watery diarrhea syndrome may be more accurate than the pancreatic cholera syndrome.
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PMID:Watery diarrhea syndrome. Two unusual cases and further evidence that VIP is a humoral mediator. 20 79

The circadian rhythm of plasma aldosterone (PAC) and cortisol concentration (PCC), and renin activity (PRA) was measured in five steroid and five non-steroid treated kidney transplanted patients--all with denervated kidney grafts--and compared with four normal controls and two steroid-treated patients with non-renal disease and thus normal renal innervation. The non-steroid treated patients had a normal circadian thythm of PAC and PCC, but without variation of PRA, suggesting that denervation of the kidneys has no influence on the circadian rhythm of PAC. In both steroid treated groups the PAC showed an inverse diurnal variation--now correlating to the diurnal variation in PRA. The inverse circadian rhythm of PAC in patients with suppressed ACTH secretion remains unexplained, but is in accordance with the nocturnal peak of sodium and water excretion in steroid treated patients.
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PMID:Circadian rhythm of plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity in steroid and non-steroid treated kidney transplanted patients. 33 62

Ascorbate peroxidase active component (APAC) was purified and characterized in Synechococcus PCC 9742 (R2) cells. APAC was isolated from freshly harvested cells, by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE cellulose, ultrafiltration through a 3000 dalton cut off filter and high pressure liquid chromatography through a reversed phase C-18 column. APAC was found to be extremely stable to harsh treatments of boiling water for 30 min, acidification to pH 2.0 and proteolytic digestion. A close correlation between activity and iron content of APAC was observed throughout the purification steps. E.S.R. spectrum of APAC showed a resonance line at g = 4.3 in the oxidized from. Peroxide reduction by ascorbate decreased the E.S.R. signal, which reappeared upon reoxidation by H2O2. The affinities of APAC to H2O2 and ascorbate were high (0.38 mM and 0.2 mM, respectively). Amino acid composition analysis of APAC revealed the presence of glutamic acid:glycine:cysteine residues at 2:1:1 ratio.
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PMID:A unique ascorbate peroxidase active component in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC 7942 (R2). 133 15

Alpha receptors have been demonstrated in the bladder neck, and urinary retention may be the presenting symptom in an occasional pheochromocytoma patient. This prompted us to define the urodynamic profile in pheochromocytoma patients. Ten patients were studied. Except for 2 patients, all tumors secreted norepinephrine either alone (n = 4) or mixed (n = 4). Urodynamic studies (uroflowmetry, cystometry, profilometry, response to alpha-adrenergic agents) were performed with Urodyn 5000 chain (DANTEC) connected to a water perfused Bohler's catheter. Profilometry was done according to the Brown and Wickham technique. Normal values were those of the International Continence Society. Alpha blocker test was done by intravenous injection of thymoxamine (0.5 mg/kg) and was considered as positive if urethral closure pressure (UCP) decrease was greater than 30% after 10 minutes. Ten patients had a pre-operative study, omitting alpha-blocker test in 1 patient; 5 patients consented a postoperative study. Pre-operatively we could demonstrate: 1) Increased UCP in 8 of 10 patients, regardless of the secretory pattern; 2) Response to alpha-adrenolytic agents in 7 of 9 patients; and postoperatively: 3) Good correlation between a positive alpha-blocker test and a decrease in urethral pressure in 3 of 5 patients. Urodynamics in pheochromocytoma patients show a typical alpha-adrenergic pattern and may explain bladder dysfunction as a presenting symptom.
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PMID:Urodynamics in patients with pheochromocytoma: a peri-operative study of 10 cases. 135 31

The psbB gene encodes the intrinsic chlorophyll-a binding protein CPa-1 (CP-47), a component of photosystem II in higher plants, algae, and cyanobacteria. Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was used to introduce mutations into a segment of the psbB gene encoding the large extrinsic loop region of CPa-1 in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Altered psbB genes were introduced into a mutant recipient strain (DEL-1) of Synechocystis in which the genomic psbB gene had been partially deleted. Initial target sites for mutagenesis were absolutely conserved basic residue pairs occurring within the large extrinsic loop. One mutation, RR384385GG, produced a strain with impaired photosystem II activity. This strain exhibited growth characteristics comparable to controls. However, at saturating light intensities this mutant strain evolved oxygen at only 50% of the rate of the control strains. Quantum yield measurements at low light intensities indicated that the mutant had 30% fewer fully functional photosystem II centers than do control strains of Synechocystis. Immunological analysis of a number of photosystem II protein components indicated that the mutant accumulates normal quantities of photosystem II proteins and that the ratio of photosystem II to photosystem I proteins is comparable to that found in control strains. Upon exposure to high light intensities the mutant cells exhibited a markedly increased susceptibility to photoinactivation. However, Tris-treated thylakoid membranes from both the mutant and wild-type exhibited comparable rates of photoinactivation. Thylakoid membranes isolated from RR384385GG exhibited only 15% of the H2O to 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol electron transport rate observed in wild-type strains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of the CPa-1 protein of photosystem II: alteration of the basic residue pair 384,385R to 384,385G leads to a defect associated with the oxygen-evolving complex. 144 82

Previous experiments have shown that a Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 mutant (delta psbO) lacking the extrinsic manganese-stabilizing protein (MSP) exhibits impaired, but significant levels of H2O-splitting activity [Burnap, R., & Sherman, L.A. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 440-446]. [14C]DCMU-binding experiments now show that the number and affinity of DCMU-binding sites (normalized to chlorophyll) are equivalent in delta psbO and the wild type, suggesting equal concentrations of assembled reaction centers. A similar conclusion is reached on the basis of measurements of PSII electron transport (DPC-supported DCPIP reduction) by mutant and wild-type thylakoids. The pattern of flash O2 yield by delta psbO cells measured with a bare platinum electrode exhibits a period four oscillation (with a maximum on the third flash), indicating that the H2O-splitting enzyme in delta psbO retains the basic mechanistic features found in normal cells. However, the amplitude of these signals is smaller and more highly damped than those obtained from wild-type cells, suggesting the absence of MSP results in a higher miss probability and/or a reduction in the number of centers competent in oxygen evolution. Analysis of the rise kinetics of the ampermeric signal on the bare platinum electrode indicates that the S3-[S4]-S0 transition is retarded by at least a factor of 5 in the mutant. Thermoluminescence emission peak temperatures indicate that the S2QA-, S2QB-, and S3QB-charge pairs are significantly more stable with respect to recombination in the mutant. The intensities of the thermoluminescence emissions are also significantly reduced in the mutant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Oxygen yield and thermoluminescence characteristics of a cyanobacterium lacking the manganese-stabilizing protein of photosystem II. 151 Sep 30

The study was undertaken to clarify the role of atrial natriuretic polypeptide (ANP) in essential hypertension (EH). Plasma levels of alpha-human ANP (alpha hANP) were measured in 13 normal subjects, 25 patients with EH, 5 patients with primary aldosteronism (PA), 3 patients with renovascular hypertension (RVH) and 3 patients with pheochromocytoma (PC). Plasma level of alpha hANP (normal: 38.1 +/- 20.5pg/ml) was high in all hypertensive subjects. Synthetic alpha hANP was intravenously administrated to these subjects as follows: first a dose of 0.01 microgram/kg/min for 30 minutes, second a dose of 0.03 microgram/kg/min for 30 minutes, and then in normal subjects and EH 0.03 microgram/kg/min with a dose of 6.5 micrograms/kg/min of metoclopramide (MC) for 30 minutes. After the infusion of 0.01 microgram/kg/min alpha hANP, arterial blood pressure was significantly depressed in EH, RVH and PA, but not in PC. Marked diuretic and natriuretic responses were observed with increase in creatinine clearance and fractional sodium excretion in EH, RVH and PA, but not in PC. Sodium clearance/lithium clearance was slightly increased after infusion of 0.03 microgram/kg/min of alpha hANP in hypertensive subjects. Plasma renin activity did not change in low and normal renin EH and PA after infusion of either dose of alpha hANP, but was suppressed after 0.03 microgram/kg/min of alpha hANP in normal subjects and high renin EH, RVH and PC. Plasma aldosterone concentration was suppressed after either dose of alpha hANP in normal subjects and in EH, RVH and PC, but not in PA. Plasma cGMP concentration and urinary cGMP excretion were decreased after either dose of alpha hANP in both normal and hypertensive subjects. Furthermore, the decrease of PAC by alpha hANP was normalized by MC in normal subjects and EH. The rise in plasma cGMP by alpha hANP was suppressed by MC in both normal subjects and EH, but no changes were observed in arterial blood pressure and natriuretic response. These results suggest that alpha hANP secretion increases with elevation of blood pressure in EH, improving increase of circulatory blood volume, and alpha hANP may play a role in elevating blood pressure in EH. Moreover, it is considered that ANP increases sodium and water excretion through its effect on both renal glomeruli and distal tubules in EH. Hypotensive and natriuretic effects of ANP in EH may be concerned with dopaminergic activity which are probably related to the production of cGMP in the vascular wall and inhibition of the excretion of aldosterone in the adrenal cortex.
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PMID:[The significance of atrial natriuretic polypeptide in the cause of essential hypertension]. 165 13

Flavodoxin from the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria Anabaena PCC 7119 forms an electron-transfer complex with ferredoxin--NADP+ reductase (FNR) from the same organism. The complex is mainly governed by electrostatic interactions between side-chain amino groups of the reductase and carboxyl residues of flavodoxin. In order to localize the binding site on flavodoxin, chemical modification of its carboxyl groups has been carried out. Treatment of flavodoxin with a water-soluble carbodiimide, N-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide (EDC), in the presence of a nucleophile, glycine ethyl ester, caused a time-dependent modification of the protein that is responsible for the loss of its ability to participate as electron carrier in the photoreduction of NADP+ by chloroplast membranes, and also in NADPH--cytochrome-c reductase activity, by about 85%. Nevertheless, the ability of flavodoxin to receive electrons from the reducing side of photosystem I was much less affected. The inhibition was enhanced at low pH, suggesting that carboxylic acid groups were the target of chemical modification. Treated flavodoxin failed to form covalent complexes with FNR and the dissociation constant for the non-covalent complex with FNR was fourfold higher. After tryptic digestion of a sample of flavodoxin modified by EDC in the presence of [1-14C]glycine ethyl ester, two major radioactive peptides were isolated. The first protein fragment contained three carboxylic residues (Asp123, Asp126 and Asp129), corresponding to the region where long-chain flavodoxins show an insert compared to short-chain flavodoxins. The second peptide corresponded to a similar region, either in the amino acid sequence or in the three-dimensional structure of the protein and also containing three carboxyl groups (Asp144, Glu145 and Asp146). Four of these carboxyl groups (Asp123, Asp126, Asp144 and Asp146) are highly conserved in all long-chain flavodoxins, suggesting that they could play an essential role in substrate recognition.
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PMID:Identification of specific carboxyl groups on Anabaena PCC 7119 flavodoxin which are involved in the interaction with ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase. 173 24

A strain of cyanobacterium of Nostoc has been isolated, and found to produce a new antibiotic cyanobacterin LU-2. The antibiotic is synthesized by the cyanobnacterium under intensive cultivation conditions in a liquid mineral medium. Cyanobacterin LU-2 is an exometabolite; its maximum accumulation in the medium is achieved at 34 degrees. Cyanobacterin LU-2 is active against many cyanobacteria tested, including those of Microcystis and Aphanizomenon which are principals to give rise to blooms in fresh water supplies. It is poorly active against green algae and inactive against fungi and bacteria. The antibiotic hinders cell division in Synechococcus sp. R-2 (PCC 7942). It causes compression of the cytoplasm and exfoliation of the cell contents from cell wall; the distance between tylacoids is increased and their destruction is observed. The antibiotic hinders markedly light-dependent oxygen evolution. Cyanobacterin LU-2 is substance of a phenolic nature containing amino-sugar.
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PMID:[Production of the antibiotic-algicide cyanobacterin LU-2 by a filamentous cyanobacterium Nostoc sp]. 181 38


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