Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (APC)
10,214 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-four-hour continuous protable tape-recorded electrocardiograms were obtained in 24 patients with short P-R intervals without delta waves. Atrial premature beats were noted in 15 patients (62%), paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT) in 5 (21%), ventricular premature beats in 14 (58%), and noticeable ventricular arrhythmia in 5 (21%). All episodes of PSVT reflected either unifocal or multifocal atrial ectopic firing. Atrioventricular nodal reentrant PSVT was not observed. Electrocardiographic correlation of symptoms with arrhythmias was not striking. In 21 of the patients, the P-R interval remained short constant through the 24-hour recording period. Patients with a short P-R interval without delta waves have frequent arrhythmias involving multiple areas of the conduction system. The presence of an accessory atrioventricular connection (James tract) would not explain the arrhythmias recorded in these patients.
Arch Intern Med 1975 Sep
PMID:Portable electrocardiographic monitoring: performance in patients with short P-R intervals without delta waves. 5 10

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.
Scand J Clin Lab Invest 1977 Sep
PMID:Circadian rhythm of plasma aldosterone and plasma renin activity in steroid and non-steroid treated kidney transplanted patients. 33 62

Two yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) spanning a total distance of 1.1 megabase pairs of DNA around the MCC (for mutated in colorectal carcinoma) and APC (for adenomatous polyposis coli) genes at 5q21 have been isolated and characterized. Starting from the MCC gene, a strategy was undertaken to identify constitutional submicroscopic deletions in familial adenomatous polyposis patients that might considerably narrow down the position of the APC gene. To this end, YACs identified by the MCC gene were screened across a chromosome 5-specific cosmid library to provide a source of DNA probes for genomic scanning. The cosmids isolated from these experiments were used to screen a panel of somatic cell hybrids containing chromosome 5 segregated from patients suspected to carry putative interstitial deletions. This screening approach led to the confirmation of a small heterozygous deletion in a polyposis patient that overlaps one of the two isolated YACs. This YAC has been shown to contain the entire APC gene, in addition to a significant portion of DNA flanking the 5' end of the gene, and should therefore prove a valuable resource for functional studies by transfer to colorectal tumor-derived cell lines.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1992 Sep 01
PMID:Yeast artificial chromosomes for the molecular analysis of the familial polyposis APC gene region. 132 52

To examine whether the dosage effect of germ-line mutations in patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is sufficient to cause colorectal adenomas, or an additional somatic mutation of the normal allele is required as well, we have investigated somatic mutations of the APC gene in multiple adenomas developed in one FAP patient. In addition to a 5-bp deletion of one allele present constitutionally in this patient, the normal APC allele had been lost in five of seven DNA samples extracted from small adenomas (< 3 mm in diameter) with mild or moderate atypia. This result indicates that the inactivation of both alleles of the APC gene is probably essential for the development of an early-stage adenoma, in agreement with the two-hit mutational model underlying the concept of tumor suppressor genes.
Hum Mol Genet 1992 Sep
PMID:Inactivation of both APC alleles in an early stage of colon adenomas in a patient with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). 133 60

Mutations in the APC gene give rise to familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) and also occur in many, perhaps most, sporadic colon cancers. By screening with single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis we identified several mutations in a small region of the APC gene in both FAP and sporadic cancers. These mutations were either point mutations or small deletions or insertions causing frameshifts, and all generated stop codons. One 5 base-pair deletion was found in a sporadic colon tumour, a colorectal cancer cell line derived from a sporadic colon tumour, and in four unrelated FAP patients. This mutation produces distinctive heteroduplex bands, which can be detected with a simple non-radioactive assay. Our findings suggest that highly localised short sequences, essentially runs that code for adenine and thymine, may account for up to 20% of all observed APC mutations.
Lancet 1992 Sep 12
PMID:Molecular analysis of APC mutations in familial adenomatous polyposis and sporadic colon carcinomas. 135 33

To examine whether the lack of self-tolerance to beta cells is responsible for the development of type I diabetes in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, we attempted to induce T cell responses to cells from the islets of Langerhans. The data show that all NOD mice, irrespective of age, sex, and disease progression, possess islet cell-specific CD4+, MHC class II-restricted T cells. Both primary and secondary proliferative responses to islet cells were readily induced. The activation of T cells required presentation of islet cell Ag by APC in the responding lymph node cell population. Cells from other tissues, e.g., salivary gland, adrenal gland, and spleen, failed to activate autologous T lymphocytes. T cells specific for other Ag did not respond to islet cells, indicating that the proliferation is not the result of nonspecific stimulation by islet cell products. The presence of islet cell-reactive T cells is, however, not unique to NOD mice, because similar T cell reactivity was also demonstrated in non-diabetes-prone mouse strains. Hence, self-tolerance to islet cells appears to be absent. The results indicate a normal occurrence of islet cell-reactive T cells in both diabetes-prone as well as non-diabetes-prone mice. Thus, the lack of tolerance cannot be the initial cause of diabetes, but the activation of such autoreactive T cells may be important for the development of the disease.
J Immunol 1992 Sep 15
PMID:Absence of T cell tolerance to pancreatic islet cells. 135 4

We have previously shown that the T cell response to the synthetic peptide cI12-26:NP365-380 (covalently linked epitopes of lambda repressor (cI) and influenza A nucleoprotein (NP) polypeptides) requires amino acid sequences located in the junctional region between the cI12-26 and NP365-380 epitopes in the H-2d and H-2k haplotypes. In this study, we show that the dominant epitope of cI12-26:NP365-380 in H-2b mice is also located within the junctional region of the peptide, indicating that the same amino acid sequence is immunodominant in three different H-2 haplotypes. Based on results using fixed APC, there was no qualitative difference in epitope recognition due to antigen processing. In addition, antigen presentation by APC expressing mutant I-A molecules constructed by hemiexon shuffling of regions of the molecule containing primarily beta sheet or alpha helix showed that many different substitutions were permissive for at least one of the T hybridomas. More importantly, however, when the junctional sequences are covalently linked in composite synthetic peptides containing additional previously defined T cell epitopes, antigenicity of the immunodominant junctional region was silenced and a new epitope assumed immunodominance. Thus, immunodominance does not correlate with the primary amino acid sequence of the potential epitope. Instead, the immunodominant epitope is determined by complex interactions among the epitopes, which most likely depend on the structural conformation of the composite peptide.
Cell Immunol 1992 Sep
PMID:Silencing of immunodominant epitopes by contiguous sequences in complex synthetic peptides. 138 Aug 94

There is a subtle duality in the role of proteolytic enzymes in Ag processing. They are required to fragment protein Ag ingested by APC. However, prolonged exposure to proteolytic enzymes may lead to a complete degradation of the Ag, leaving nothing for the T cell system to recognize. What ensures that some of the Ag is salvaged? Using a cell-free system we demonstrate that an Ag fragment, once bound to a MHC class II molecule, is effectively protected against proteolytic destruction by cathepsin B and pronase E. The bound fragment, however, can be modified by aminopeptidase N. We suggest that MHC class II molecules play an important regulatory role in the physiologic processing of Ag.
J Immunol 1992 Sep 15
PMID:MHC molecules protect T cell epitopes against proteolytic destruction. 138 92

The selective deficit in delayed hypersensitivity that characterizes anterior chamber-associated immune deviation (ACAID) is the direct result of a blood borne, Ag-specific, cell-associated signal that is created after Ag is injected into the anterior chamber of the eye of normal mice. The cells that carry this signal via the blood to the spleen express the mature macrophage marker F4/80 and are similar to, or perhaps even arise from, F4/80+ dendritic cells found within the stroma of normal iris and ciliary body. We have recently reported that ACAID-inducing properties can be conferred upon conventional F4/80-bearing macrophages harvested from the normal peritoneal cavity by incubating these cells in vitro with the soluble protein Ag, BSA, in the presence of supernatants harvested from cultured iris and ciliary body cells. Using this in vitro induction system, we have examined the limiting conditions for conferring ACAID-inducing potential on peritoneal exudate cells. We have found that an ACAID-inducing signal can be created in vitro with several different soluble Ag, including the retinal autoantigen-interphotoreceptor retinol binding protein, and that active endocytosis and processing by peritoneal exudate cells is required because chloroquine prevents these cells from acquiring ACAID-inducing properties. In addition, we have determined that for supernatant-treated peritoneal macrophages to induce ACAID to soluble Ag the cells must be 1) alive, 2) injected i.v. or i.p. (but not s.c.), and 3) administered to recipients with an anatomically intact spleen. When these conditions are met, as few as 20 F4/80+ macrophages pulsed with Ag in the presence of iris and ciliary body supernatants are sufficient to induce ACAID. Macrophage hybridomas derived from "conventional" APC can acquire ACAID-inducing potential in vitro if exposed to iris and ciliary body supernatants, whereas macrophage hybridomas derived from "suppressor inducer" APC constitutively possess ACAID-induced potential. Peritoneal macrophages that were endowed with ACAID-inducing properties by in vitro exposure to supernatants were found to elicit splenic suppressor cells similar to those found in spleens of mice with ACAID. Moreover, the expression of experimental autoimmune uveitis in mice immunized with interphotoreceptor retinol binding protein was significantly suppressed if the animals were pretreated with peritoneal exudate cells pulsed with this Ag in the presence of iris and ciliary body supernatants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
J Immunol 1992 Sep 01
PMID:Analysis of an in vitro-generated signal that induces systemic immune deviation similar to that elicited by antigen injected into the anterior chamber of the eye. 138 41

Intravenous administration of APC such as splenocytes loaded with a soluble protein Ag has been shown to prime for an Ag-specific CTL response. It is thought that the APC directly presents loaded Ag in a MHC-restricted manner. However, it is demonstrated in this study that allogeneic splenocytes, MHC-free RBC, and even synthetic lipid vesicles (liposomes) after loading with OVA can elicit an OVA-specific and MHC-restricted CTL response. Biodistribution studies of these Ag-associated vehicles showed that the liver, spleen, and lung were the major organs responsible to scavenge these carriers, suggesting that the monocyte-macrophage system was involved in the Ag presentation for CTL. Depletion of macrophages by a specific macrophage killer, Cl2MDP, containing liposomes, abolished the CTL induction by immunization with OVA Ag carried by these vehicles except the induction by syngeneic splenocytes. Thus, the syngeneic splenocytes present Ag directly to the T cells, but other membranous vehicles carry the Ag to the host APC including macrophages, which then present it to the T cells. These results indicate that formulation of an Ag in membranous/colloidal vehicles may be a way to prime for a CTL response.
J Immunol 1992 Sep 01
PMID:Induction of cytotoxic T lymphocytes in vivo with protein antigen entrapped in membranous vehicles. 138 44


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