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 study of the uncharacterized serum inhibitors of hyaluronidase, first described half a century ago, was undertaken. Activity was measured against bovine testicular hyaluronidase using a microtiter-based assay and reverse hyaluronan substrate gel zymography. The predominant inhibitory activity was magnesium-dependent and could be eliminated by protease or chondroitinase digestion and by heat treatment. Kinetics of inhibition were similar against hyaluronidases from testis and snake and bee venoms. The inhibitor had no effect on Streptomyces hyaluronidase, indicating that inhibition was not through protection of the hyaluronan substrate. Inhibition levels in serum were increased in mice following carbon tetrachloride or interleukin-1 injection, inducers of the acute-phase response. Reverse zymography identified a predominant band of 120-kDa relative molecular size, with two bands of greater and one of smaller size. The predominant protein was tentatively identified as a member of the inter-alpha-inhibitor family. Inhibition was also observed using either purified inter-alpha-inhibitor or an inter-alpha-inhibitor-related 120-kDa complex. Inter-alpha-inhibitor, found in the hyaluronan-rich cumulus mass surrounding mammalian ova and the coat of fibroblasts and mesothelial cells, may function to stabilize such matrices by protecting against hyaluronidase degradation. Turnover of circulating hyaluronan is extraordinarily rapid, with a half-life of 2-5 min. Prompt increases in levels of serum hyaluronan occur in patients with shock, septicemia, or massive burns, increases that can be attributed, in part, to suppression of degradation by these acute-phase reactants, the inhibitors of hyaluronidase.
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PMID:Evidence that the serum inhibitor of hyaluronidase may be a member of the inter-alpha-inhibitor family. 1090 71

The inhibitors of hyaluronidase present in mammalian sera, first described half a century ago, have remained uncharacterized. Because of increased interest in hyaluronidases and their hyaluronan substrate, a study of these inhibitors was undertaken recently. The predominant serum inhibitor is magnesium-dependent and is eliminated by protease or chondroitinase digestion, and by heat. Kinetics of inhibition are similar against hyaluronidases from testis, snake and bee venom. The inhibitor has no effect on Streptomyces hyaluronidase; indicating inhibition is not through protection of the hyaluronan substrate. Circulating inhibition levels are increased in mice following carbon tetrachloride or interleukin-1 injection, inducers of the acute-phase response. Reverse hyaluronan gel zymography reveals a predominant band of 120 kDa relative molecular size. Additional studies indicate that the inhibitor resembles a member of the Kunitz type inter-alpha-inhibitor family. Inhibition of hyaluronidase activity is observed using purified inter-alpha-inhibitor and is reversed by antibodies specific for inter-alpha-inhibitor. This molecule, found in the hyaluronan-rich cumulus mass surrounding mammalian ova and the pericellular coat of fibroblasts and mesothelial cells, may function to stabilize such matrices by protecting against hyaluronidase degradation. Turnover of circulating hyaluronan is extraordinarily rapid, with a half-life of two to five min. Prompt increases in levels of serum hyaluronan occur in patients with shock, septicemia or massive burns, increases that may be partly attributed to suppression by these acute phase reactants of the constant and rapid rates of hyaluronan degradation by hyaluronidase. A literature survey of other hyaluronidase inhibitors is also presented.
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PMID:Inhibitors of the hyaluronidases. 1182 90

Circulating endotoxin is elevated in sepsis and plays a role in endothelial dysfunction whereas antithrombin is decreased by virtue of its consumption during complex formation with clotting factors and by proteolytic degradation by granulocyte elastase. Dysfunction of endothelium results in enhanced leukocyte rolling and diapedesis into tissues leading to edema formation and injury. Antithrombin exerts beneficial effects on endothelial function in sepsis. A direct anti-inflammatory action of anti-thrombin in inflammatory cells is exerted via heparan sulfate proteoglycans. In this study, we investigated whether antithrombin affects endotoxin-induced adhesion of neutrophils to human endothelial cells in vitro and whether glycosaminoglycans are involved in its signaling. Adhesion of human neutrophils to monolayers of umbilical vein endothelial cells was tested under static conditions. Endothelial cells were pretreated with endotoxin, interleukin-1, heparinase-I, chondroitinase-ABC or anti-syndecan-4-antibody. Endotoxin and interleukin-1 increased neutrophil adherence to human umbilical vein endothelial cells which was inhibited by antithrombin. Concomitant incubation with pentasaccharide abolished this effect of antithrombin. Treatment of endothelial cells with heparinase or chondroitinase led to higher adhesion and prevented effects of antithrombin. With antibodies to syndecan-4, enhanced adhesion of neutrophils was observed. As studied by Western blotting, endotoxin-induced signaling was diminished by antithrombin and the effect was reversible by chondroitinase or heparinase. From our results, we can conclude that endotoxin-induced adhesion of leukocytes to endothelium can be reversed by ligation of syndecan-4 with antithrombin's heparin-binding site and interferences with stress response signaling events in endothelium.
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PMID:Syndecan-4-dependent signaling in the inhibition of endotoxin-induced endothelial adherence of neutrophils by antithrombin. 1465 50