Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of large granular lymphocyte (LGL) leukemia with ascites and CNS involvement was reported. A 39-year-old Japanese female was admitted to our hospital in March, 1987 because of high fever. Her clinical and hematological features were characterized by generalized lymphadenopathy, marked hepatosplenomegaly, high serum LDH level (3,257 mU/ml), marked leukocytosis (71,000/microliters) with 74% LGLs and bone marrow infiltration with 57% LGLs. Despite of chemotherapy, ascites, retroperitoneal mass and CNS involvement developed and she died of sepsis after three months. LGLs from the patient's blood, marrow and ascites, stained positively for acid phosphatase. These LGLs were E rossete+ and Fc (IgG) receptor+ and were positive for CD2, OKM1, HLA-DR and Leu11, but were negative for CD1, CD3, CD4, CD8 and Leu7 as well as for terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase activity. The natural killer activity against K562 target cells was high and was significantly augmented after stimulation by recombinant human interleukin 2. These LGLs also demonstrated normal antibody-dependent cytotoxicity activity. Cytogenetic study on bone marrow cells and ascitic cells revealed clonal chromosomal abnormalities. These clinical, hematological, immunological and cytogenetic findings suggest that this patient had a neoplastic proliferation of natural killer cells.
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PMID:[CD3-, OKM1+, Leu7-, Leu11+ large granular lymphocyte leukemia with ascites and CNS involvement]. 247 53

Systemic release of lysosomal enzymes and local release in the pulmonary microcirculation from sequestrated and activated leucocytes could be an important factor in the development of the lung microvascular injury seen after septicaemia. The maximal activities of 11 lysosomal acid hydrolases (acid phosphatase, alpha- and beta-glucosidase, alpha- and beta-galactosidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-acetylglucosaminidase, beta-glucuronidase, arylamidase and cathepsins B and C) were measured in serum and lung lymph from seven sheep before and after infusion of live E. coli bacteria. In the early phase of septicaemia (the first hour) the activities of eight enzymes were increased in serum and/or lung lymph (1.1 to 2X pre-infusion values). In the late phase, 3-4 h after sepsis, there were significantly elevated serum activities of beta-glucosidase (5.4X), alpha- and beta-galactosidases (2.7X, 1.5X), beta-acetylglucosaminidase (2.0X) arylamidase (1.2X) and cathespin B (1.7X). In lymph acid phosphatase (1.7X), alpha- and beta-glucosidases (1.6X, 6.4X), alpha- and beta-galactosidases (2.1X, 1.7X). Beta-acetylglucosaminidase (2.6X), and beta-glucuronidase (4.0X pre-infusion) were elevated. The findings of a heterogenicity of changes in serum and lymph activities, as well as the large molecular sizes of some of the enzymes with changed activities indicated to us that permeability changes were not major causes of increased lymph enzyme activities. The results could indicate a local release of enzymes either from sequestrated leucocytes or lung tissue due to local reactions in the lung or lung microvessels. The heterogenous changes in activities for the various lysosomal enzymes as found in the present study indicated that measurement of only one enzyme could be misleading.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Lysosomal enzyme pattern in lung lymph and blood during E. coli sepsis in sheep. 329 74

Twenty-three patients with advanced prostate cancer who had failed previous hormone therapy were treated with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and methotrexate on a 3-week course. Of the 22 evaluable patients, over one-half had poor performance status, increased acid and alkaline phosphatase levels, and pain. Parameters which improved in greater than 50% of cases included acid and alkaline phosphatase levels, pain, performance status, and measurable lesions (lung and soft tissue). Initial parameters associated with a significantly decreased survival were age greater than 66 years, increased pain, poor performance status, and increasing alkaline phosphatase. Prior radiation therapy was associated with increased drug toxicity, lower doses of chemotherapy, and decreased survival (not significant). There was a significant relationship between the degree of improvement of acid phosphatase, alkaline phosphatase, pain, and performance status to increased survival. Three categories of response were defined based on these parameters. The mean survival of seven patients with partial response (106 weeks) is significantly longer than that of seven with measurable response (57 weeks) and eight with no response (26 weeks). Four patients had severe leukopenia and one died of sepsis. These results compare favorably with previous reports of chemotherapy treatment of advanced prostate cancer.
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PMID:Treatment of advanced prostate cancer with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and methotrexate. 712 21

A total of 20 patients with hormone-refractory prostate carcinoma entered a pilot study of combination chemotherapy based on the EAP (etoposide, Adriamycin and cisplatin) regimen, in which Adriamycin was replaced by pirarubicin, a less cardiotoxic derivative of Adriamycin. The response was assessed by criteria modified from those of the National Prostatic Cancer Project: prostate-specific antigen was employed instead of acid phosphatase. Of 18 evaluable patients, 6 achieved a partial response, 5 had stable disease, and in 7 the disease had progressed during therapy; thus, the overall response rate was 33.3% [95% confidence interval (CI) 11.5-55.1%]. Significant pain alleviation and performance status improvement were obtained in 5 of 12 patients (41.7%; CI 13.8-69.6%) and 3 of 13 patients (23.1%; CI 0.2-46.0%), respectively. Although myelosuppression was moderate to severe, no chemotherapy-related deaths or bacteriologically documented sepsis occurred; nor was there any clinical cardiotoxicity. All the responding patients received maintenance chemotherapy with etoposide thereafter. At present, the median duration of response is 33 weeks (range: 23-91 weeks) and the median survival period for all patients is 42 weeks (range: 27(+)-136 weeks), with 12 deaths. In spite of the small number of patients treated, these results suggest that this chemotherapy regimen is active in advanced hormone-refractory prostate carcinoma.
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PMID:Treatment of advanced hormone-refractory prostate carcinoma with a combination of etoposide, pirarubicin and cisplatin. 780 81

Endotoxin-induced cytokines such as interleukin-1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) are thought to contribute to the proinflammatory effects of endotoxin in gram-negative infections. Using a conscious rat model of sepsis, induced by intravenous challenge with LD95 doses of endotoxin (n = 24) or live Escherichia coli (E. coli) (n = 24), we examined frozen sections of kidney at various intervals for evidence of IL-1 alpha and TNF alpha expression. A transient glomerular endothelial IL-1 alpha expression was demonstrated at 30 and 90 min after initiation of the sepsis in both endotoxin and E. coli-treated animals using immunohistochemistry. The endothelial IL-1 alpha expression as determined by immunohistochemistry occurred at the same time as IL-1 alpha mRNA expression, as determined by Northern blot analysis. The glomerular endothelial IL-1 alpha expression coincided with a slight but significant increase in the number of the glomerular polymorphonuclear leukocytes as identified by naphthol AS-D chloroacetate esterase enzyme histochemical reaction. Glomerular endothelial IL-1 alpha expression was virtually absent by 180 and 360 min. No TNF alpha expression was detected in the renal tissues at any time interval. Neither alpha-naphthyl acetate esterase-positive nor acid phosphatase-positive monocytes/macrophages were identified in the glomeruli. Our findings provide direct in vivo evidence that the IL-1 alpha gene product is expressed locally in the kidney by glomerular endothelial cells in this septic rat model.
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PMID:Renal interleukin-1 expression during endotoxemia and gram-negative septicemia in conscious rats. 785 Sep 31

Sepsis stimulates an increase in the number and activity of mononuclear phagocytes in systemic host-defence organs. The present study was conducted to define the ultrastructural and cytochemical characteristics of the mononuclear phagocytes that sequester in the lung microvasculature of septic rats. Fourteen rats were challenged with a single intraperitoneal injection of saline (0.5 ml/100 g), E. coli (2 x 10(7)/100 g) or glucan (4 mg/100 g), and euthanased 2, 4, or 7 d later. The lungs were inflation fixed and processed for transmission electron microscopy. Cellular morphology was used to identify the intravascular mononuclear phagocytes and acid phosphatase (AcPase) expression was monitored as an index of cellular differentiation and activation. Control rats contained a limited number of monocytes in the pulmonary vasculature. In contrast, large numbers of activated mononuclear phagocytes were seen in the microvasculature within 48 h of treatment with either microbial product. The recruited pulmonary intravascular mononuclear phagocytes (PIMP) exhibited AcPase-reactive Golgi complexes, accumulation of secretory vesicles and other features of cell activation consistent with enhanced biosynthetic activity. Subsequent electron microscopy, conducted 4 and 7 d posttreatment, suggested that a progressive decline in the number and activity of PIMPs then occurred. In order to quantify the sepsis-induced accumulation of AcPase-positive PIMP, the experimental challenges were repeated in 11 rats and, 48 h later, tissue samples were evaluated by light microscopy for tartrate-insensitive acid phosphatase. Control rats exhibited 0.148 +/- 0.107 AcPase-positive PIMP/alveoli. E. coli and glucan challenged animals exhibited significant (P < 0.01) increases in AcPase-positive mononuclear phagocytes, with 0.782 +/- 0.073 and 0.636 +/- 0.170 PIMP/alveoli respectively. The results demonstrate that focal sepsis stimulates a significant, but transient, recruitment of activated mononuclear phagocytes into the rat pulmonary microvasculature.
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PMID:Ultrastructural and cytochemical evaluation of sepsis-induced changes in the rat pulmonary intravascular mononuclear phagocytes. 956 57

Streptococcus pneumoniae is the worldwide leading cause of deaths from invasive infections such as pneumoniae, sepsis, and meningitidis in children and the elderly. Nasopharyngeal colonization, which plays a key role in the development of pneumococcal disease, is highly dependent on a family of surface-exposed proteins, the choline-binding proteins (CBPs). Here we report the crystal structure of phosphorylcholine esterase (Pce), the catalytic domain of choline-binding protein E (CBPE), which has been shown to be crucial for host/pathogen interaction processes. The unexpected features of the Pce active site reveal that this enzyme is unique among the large family of hydrolases harboring the metallo-beta-lactamase fold. The orientation and calcium stabilization features of an elongated loop, which lies on top of the active site, suggest that the cleft may be rearranged. Furthermore, the structure of Pce complexed with phosphorylcholine, together with the characterization of the enzymatic role played by two iron ions located in the active site allow us to propose a reaction mechanism reminiscent of that of purple acid phosphatase. This mechanism is supported by site-directed mutagenesis experiments. Finally, the interactions of the choline binding domain and the Pce region of CBPE with chains of teichoic acids have been modeled. The ensemble of our biochemical and structural results provide an initial understanding of the function of CBPE.
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PMID:Crystal structure of phosphorylcholine esterase domain of the virulence factor choline-binding protein e from streptococcus pneumoniae: new structural features among the metallo-beta-lactamase superfamily. 1590 36

Benzylpenicillin (penicillin G) is a model drug for studies of drug-protein biochemical interactions. Furthermore the literature indicates that benzylpenicillin and protein conjugation is a universal phenomenon: benzylpenicillin is known to readily conjugate to proteins-serum albumin, globulin and others peptides to modify space structure and electrophoretical properties. The aim of the study was to test if the benzylpenicillin is an allosteric effector. Serum benzylpenicillin concentration in geometric progression was used. Then acid phosphatase (AcP), alanine aminotransferase (AIAT) activity and international normalized ratio (INR) was tested. Although benzylpenicillin influences AcP and INR, only AcP activity is directly proportional to the benzylpenicillin concentration (Pc): change of AcP activity was the derivative of Pc in 76% (R2 = 0.7635). Furthermore, the benzylpenicillin appears to be uncompetitive inhibitor of acid phosphatase (inhibitory constant Ki = 95.67M; Vmax = 34.843 nKat). On the contrary no effect of AIAT activity was observed. Unexpectedly INR was modified in irregular manner: in some concentrations of benzylpenicillin INR was over 25% lower than in control probe (INR approximately 0.6 vs. 0.82). Unfortunately INR > 6.5 is accepted as an early indicator of poor prognosis in fulminant hepatic failure. This phenomenon may be useful in sepsis as a prevention of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). These data indicate that high benzylpenicillin concentration may be the cause of artifacts. The facts allow of interpretation that the allosteric effect of benzylpenicillin on enzymes activity is a possible mechanism of unpredictable adverse drug reactions (i.e. intolerance).
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PMID:[Benzylpenicillin as an allosteric effector]. 1664 98

Septic shock was formerly recognized as a consequence of Gram-negative bacteraemia, but at present the incidence of Gram-positive sepsis seems to be more relevant, contributing for more than 50% of cases. Staphylococcal aureus can induce toxic shock in humans through the production of potent toxins termed Staphylococcal enterotoxins, from which Staphylococcal enterotoxin type B (SEB) is one of most studied. Platelets are reported to participate in pathogenesis of severe sepsis, but the exact role of platelets in this event is poorly investigated, particularly that caused by Gram-positive bacteria. Therefore, we have used the model of platelet adhesion to fibrinogen-coated plates to investigate the actions of SEB on human platelets. Ninety-six-well microtiter plates were coated with human fibrinogen (50 microg/mL), and human washed platelet suspension (6 x 10(6) platelets) was added to each well. Adherent platelets were quantified through measurement of acid phosphatase activity. Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (0.0001-30 microg/mL, incubated for 5 to 60 min) time- and dose-dependently inhibited platelet adhesion. This response was modified neither by the protein synthesis inhibitor puromycin (0.01 and 0.1 mM) nor by the superoxide scavengers superoxide dismutase (SOD, 100 units/mL) and polyethylene glycol-SOD (30 U/mL). The peroxide hydrogen (H(2)O(2)) scavenger catalase polyethylene glycol (1000 U/mL) significantly attenuated the platelet adhesion inhibition by SEB. The cAMP and cGMP levels were not changed by SEB (0.0001-30 microg/mL, 60 min). Our findings suggest that H(2)O(2) at least partly contributes to the inhibitory responses of human platelet adhesion by SEB.
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PMID:Inhibitory effects of staphylococcal enterotoxin type B on human platelet adhesion in vitro. 1892 11

We investigated the role of a teleostean interferon regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1) in the regulation of the fish immune system using Japanese flounder, Paralichthys olivaceus, as a model. Fish were intramuscularly vaccinated with a recombinant plasmid expressing the Japanese flounder IRF-1 (JF IRF-1) under the control of the cytomegalovirus immediate/early enhancer (CMV) promoter and were sampled at different days post-immunization. Peripheral blood leukocytes (PBLs) obtained from the JF IRF-1-vaccinated fish during the early stages post-vaccination had significantly elevated levels of nitric oxide (NO) and higher acid phosphatase (AP) activity compared with the control groups. Moreover, supernatants of PBLs obtained from the IRF-1-vaccinated fish contained cytokine-like substances as shown by their protective effect against hirame rhabdovirus (HIRRV) and viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) in two cell lines, hirame natural embryo (HINAE) cell line and epithelial papillosum of cyprini (EPC) cell line. Relative expression of an anti-viral gene, Mx was highest at the 7th day post-vaccination. Co-injection of JF IRF-1 with a DNA vaccine encoding the major capsid protein (MCP) gene of red seabream iridovirus (RSIV) resulted in elevated serum neutralization antibodies but was not significantly different from that in the fish vaccinated with the DNA vaccine alone. These results suggest that the JF IRF-1 modulates the early immune response in fish and is a potential candidate as genetic adjuvant for vaccination.
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PMID:Modulation of the early immune response against viruses by a teleostean interferon regulatory factor-1 (IRF-1). 1910 46


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