Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Classical galactosaemia, deficiency of galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase (GALT), is characterized by acute symptoms of hepatomegaly, jaundice,
sepsis
, cataracts and growth retardation. Treatment with dietary galactose restriction corrects these complications immediately; however, most of these children develop long-term complications of verbal dyspraxia, mental retardation and ovarian failure. Our previous molecular study showed that the most common mutation of the GALT gene is a missense mutation of Q188R (replacement of glutamine-188 by arginine) in approximately 60-65% of the German galactosaemic population. The coding region of GALT was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction from genomic DNA of classical galactosaemic individuals, who are negative or heterozygous for Q188R, and was further characterized by direct sequencing. Three new disease-causing mutations, two missense and a stop codon mutation, were identified in three patients from two families with mild galactosaemic variants: firstly R67C, replacement of arginine-67 by cysteine and W316X, the stop codon at tryptophan-316 in one male; secondly A330V, replacement of alanine-330 by valine in two female siblings. In the first family the patient was also heterozygous for the polymorphism N314D and in the second family both girls were compound heterozygotes for Q188R and A330V. All three galactosaemic individuals have a considerable amount of the residual GALT activity in RBC and the galactose-1-
phosphate
(GALP) level decreased much faster on treatment than that of other galactosaemic patients with missense mutations such as Q188R. The clinical and biochemical data of these patients were much more favourable in comparison with those of two female galactosaemic individuals, one homozygous for L195P and the other compound heterozygous for Q188R and L195P. These three missense mutations (R67C, L195P and A330V) also occur in highly conserved regions. These observations suggest that the phenotypic variation in galactosaemic individuals may be due to different molecular aetiologies.
...
PMID:Mutations in the galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase gene of two families with mild galactosaemia variants. 859 37
Elevated serum levels of the prohormone of calcitonin (CT), procalcitonin (ProCT), have been documented in illnesses such as inhalational burn injury, in several
sepsis
syndromes, and in endotoxemia. In this study, we measured and characterized the circulating precursor forms of CT during the course of infectious pneumonitis. The initial (mean +/- SEM) serum total multiform CT level in 12 patients with acute infectious pneumonia was 1,019 +/- 430 pg/mL. In comparison, the mean level of total CT for 19 age-matched control patients without lung disease was 32 +/- 6 pg/mL (P < 0.001). The mean serum total CT level on initial examination was greater in the 6 patients with bacterial isolates, at 1,793 +/- 752 pg/mL, than in those with nonbacterial infectious pneumonia, at 242 +/- 109 pg/mL (P = 0.018). After admission to the hospital, patients' serum total CT progressively declined concomitantly with the clinical resolution of the pneumonia; at discharge, mean serum level was 121 +/- 34 pg/mL. On discharge, the patients who had persistent radiographic abnormalities had significantly higher levels than did those who had complete resolution. Both the mean serum calcium and
phosphate
were significantly lower at the initial time of study than at discharge (P < 0.002 and P < 0.0004, respectively). Gel filtration chromatography of sera obtained during the acute pneumonitis phase revealed increased levels of precursor forms of CT, including ProCT; these levels diminished with clinical resolution. In an additional three patients, the serum total CT increased very rapidly after aspiration (within 6 to 12 hours); the peak levels were several times greater than the upper limits of normal. In these patients, the principal serum CT components were ProCT and other precursor forms. These results show that both infectious and aspiration pneumonitis are associated with a rapid increase in circulating ProCT and other precursor forms of CT.
...
PMID:Pneumonitis-associated hyperprocalcitoninemia. 868 24
There is accumulating evidence that inflammatory cytokines are involved in the pathophysiology of cardiac dysfunction found in
sepsis
, myocardial infarction and acute rejection after heart transplantation. Although there are some previous reports on cytokines and myocardial depression, myocardial energy metabolism caused by cytokines have not been established yet. The purpose of the present study is to determine if the IL-2 effect on contractile function is related to impaired energy production. In isolated perfused rabbit hearts (n = 6), we measured developed pressure, ATP and phosphocreatine by 31P-NMR spectroscopy during and after a 5 minute infusion of IL-2 (200 U/ml/min). Although there was slightly increased inorganic
phosphate
which might be affect on myocardial contractility reduced, high energy
phosphate
and intracellular pH did not change by IL-2 infusion, suggesting another mechanism for myocardial depression caused by inflammatory cytokine, IL-2.
...
PMID:[Cardiac disfunction and myocardial energy metabolism caused by interleukin-2 (IL-2)]. 872 57
Pneumococcus has been shown to bind to epithelial cells of the nasopharynx and lung, and to endothelial cells of the peripheral vasculature. To characterize bacterial elements required for attachment to these cell types, a library of genetically altered pneumococci with defects in exported proteins was screened for the loss of attachment to glycoconjugates representative of the nasopharyngeal cell receptor, type II lung cells (LC) and human endothelial cells (EC). A mutant was identified which showed a greater than 70% loss in the ability to attach to all cell types. This mutant also showed decreased adherence to the glycoconjugates containing the terminal sugar residues GalNAcbeta1-3Gal, GalNAcbeta1-4Gal and the carbohydrate GlcNAc, which are proposed components of the pneumococcal receptors specific to the surfaces of LC and EC. Analysis of the locus altered in this mutant revealed a gene, spxB, that encodes a member of the family of bacterial pyruvate oxidases which decarboxylates pyruvate to acetyl
phosphate
plus H2O2 and CO2. This mutant produced decreased concentrations of H2O2 and failed to grow aerobically in a chemically defined medium, unless supplemented with acetate which presumably restores acetyl
phosphate
levels by the action of acetate kinase, further suggesting that spxB encodes a pyruvate oxidase. The addition of acetate to the growth medium restored the adherence properties of the mutant indicating a link between the enzyme and the expression of bacterial adhesins. A defect in spxB corresponded to impaired virulence of the mutant in vivo. Compared to the parent strain, an spxB mutant showed reduced virulence in animal models for nasopharyngeal colonization, pneumonia, and
sepsis
. We propose that a mutation in spxB leads to down-regulation of the multiple adhesive properties of pneumococcus which, in turn, may correlate to diminished virulence in vivo.
...
PMID:Pyruvate oxidase, as a determinant of virulence in Streptococcus pneumoniae. 882 Jun 50
Calciphylaxis is a rare and life-threatening complication that is estimated to occur in 1% of patients with ESRD each year. Typically, extensive microvascular calcification and occlusion/thrombosis leads to violaceous skin lesions, which progress to nonhealing ulcers and
sepsis
. Secondary infection of skin lesions is common, often leading to
sepsis
and death. The lower extremities are predominantly involved (roughly 90% of patients). Patients with skin involvement over the trunk or proximal extremities have a poorer prognosis. Although most calciphylaxis patients have abnormalities of the calcium:
phosphate
axis or elevated levels of parathyroid hormone, these abnormalities do not appear to be fundamental to the pathophysiology of the disorder, and the etiology of calciphylaxis remains unclear. Recently, functional protein C deficiency has been hypothesized to cause a hypercoagulable state that could induce thrombosis in small vessels, with resulting skin ischemia, necrosis, and gangrene. The lack of understanding of the pathophysiology of the disease results in treatments that are equally unsatisfactory. Patients who undergo parathyroidectomy have a tendency to improve, but the prognosis for the disease is poor and mortality remains high.
...
PMID:Calciphylaxis in chronic renal failure. 882 11
Five-day-old infant rats were injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) with anti-CD11b monoclonal antibody (1 B6) at a dose of 2 mg/kg or
phosphate
-buffered saline (PBS) either 1 h before or 3 or 24 h after inoculation with 10(5) cfu Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib). When administered 1 h before infection, 23% of the 1B6- versus 17% of the PBS-treated rats and 87% of the 1B6- versus 83% of the PBS-treated animals died at 24 and 48 h, respectively. There was a similar mortality for 1B6 or PBS treatment at 3 h after infection. Thirteen of 15 (87%) 1B6 animals versus 16/17 (94%) PBS animals had positive CSF cultures at 48 h. No differences in mortality were observed in separate experiments where animals received 1B6 or PBS 3 or 24 h after infection with Hib and were treated with a single ampicillin dose (100 mg/kg) 24 h after infection. The median CSF white blood cell count/mm3 was 5627 and 4860 for the animals with meningitis receiving 1B6 and PBS, respectively, although the 1B6-treated animals had a lower percentage of polymorphonuclear cells in the CSF (P = 0.05). Histologic examination of the meninges, choroid plexus and cochlea showed a slight decrease in the numbers of inflammatory cells in animals treated with 1B6. 1B6 did not change the incidence of meningitis and only slightly decreased the degree of inflammation within the central nervous system, although animals treated with 1B6 have an altered CSF leucocyte response with the presence of more mononuclear cells as opposed to polymorphonuclear cells in their CSF. 1B6 may play a role in inhibiting neutrophil emigration to sites of inflammation within the central nervous system but is not beneficial in decreasing mortality in an infant rat model of H. influenzae type b
sepsis
and meningitis.
...
PMID:Anti-CD11b monoclonal antibody in an infant rat model of Haemophilus influenzae type b sepsis and meningitis. 906 41
The influence of the primary antibody, the fixative, and the antigen unmasking technique on the method sensitivity of immunohistochemistry as a method for the identification of viral hemorrhagic
septicemia
(VHS) virus in paraffin-embedded specimens of naturally infected rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) was examined. Fish (200-300 g) were collected during an outbreak of VHS. Parallel specimens from liver, spleen, kidney, and brain were fixed by immersion in 10%
phosphate
-buffered formalin, periodate-lysine-paraformaldehyde (PLP), Bouin's fluid, or absolute ethanol. Virus cultivation was also performed on parallel specimens, and the virus titer (TCID50/ml) was determined. Purified nucleocapsid protein (N-protein) of the virus was incorporated in an artificial antigen substrate polymerized bovine serum albumin), fixed as described above, and embedded in paraffin wax. Microwave unmasking was performed on formalin-, PLP-, and Bouin's fluid-fixed specimens. The presence of virus peptides in situ or N-protein in the artificial antigen substrates was visualized using an immunohistochemical method based on alkaline phosphatase or peroxidase and one polyclonal and five monoclonal polypeptide-specific antibodies. VHS virus was identified in situ in specimens with high virus titers (10(7-8) TCID50/ml) regardless of the fixative and without the need of an unmasking procedure. A pronounced masking effect was observed for the cross-linking formalin and PLP fixatives. Regardless of the primary antibodies used, there was a significantly higher epidemiologic sensitivity (the proportion of virus positive samples that tested positive by immunohistochemistry) using ethanol and Bouin's fluid compared with formalin and PLP (P < 0.05). At 10(5) TCID50/ml, the average sensitivity reached 0.5, and at > or = 10(6) TCID50/ml, sensitivity was 0.9. Unmasking procedures showed a moderate effect and did not result in significantly higher epidemiologic sensitivity (P = 0.17), There was great variation for the different monoclonal antibodies/antigens and fixatives. Sensitivity studies on antigen substrates were in accordance with results of in situ studies that showed the highest sensitivity for ethanol and Bouin's fluid. Virus cultivation was more sensitive than immunohistochemistry. This study showed that the fixative and the primary antibody both influence method sensitivity and that VHS virus antigens concealed during fixation are difficult to reexpose. Immunostaining for VHS virus should be performed with monoclonal antibodies specific for the N-protein, and tissue samples should be fixed in either ethanol or Bouin's fluid. Immunohistochemistry is specific but is less sensitive than virus cultivation. Immunostaining for VHS virus can be a valuable supplement to virus cultivation during acute outbreaks of disease.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of VHS virus in paraffin-embedded specimens of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss): the influence of primary antibody, fixative, and antigen unmasking on method sensitivity. 916 87
Hyperthermic isolated limb perfusion (HILP) with recombinant tumor necrosis factor-alpha (r-TNF alpha) and melphalan has been shown to result in a
sepsis
-like syndrome due to leakage of r-TNF alpha from the perfusion system to the systemic circulation. We have studied renal function parameters in 11 cancer patients, who underwent 12 perfusions. Three patients, perfused with melphalan only, served as controls. All patients treated with r-TNF alpha developed a
sepsis
syndrome and needed volume replacement and inotropes to remain normotensive; controls had an uneventful postoperative course. Creatinine clearance decreased transiently on the day of perfusion in both groups (mean preperfusion clearance 118 ml/min, mean post-perfusion clearance 68 ml/min, p < 0.02, n = 15). Follow-up measurements of renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate in 9 r-TNF alpha-treated patients did not suggest permanent damage. One patient became hypotensive and developed transient multiple organ dysfunction with renal failure needing hemofiltration. In r-TNF alpha-treated patients, but not in controls, a transient increase in clearance of beta2-microglobulin (0.05 vs. 8 ml/min, p < 0.001) and urinary excretion of
phosphate
(12 vs. 48 mmol/l, p < 0.05) was seen, compatible with proximal tubular dysfunction. These data suggest that HILP with melphalan decreases glomerular function, whether or not r-TNF alpha is added to the perfusion circuit. Extension of the treatment regimen with r-TNF alpha may result in additional proximal tubular dysfunction. If hypotension can be avoided, this deterioration in renal function seems to be transient, with full recovery within weeks.
...
PMID:Renal function in cancer patients treated with hyperthermic isolated limb perfusion with recombinant tumor necrosis factor-alpha and melphalan. 920 Apr 5
Sepsis
or endotoxaemia inhibits gluconeogenesis from various substrates, the main effect being related to a change in the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase transcription rate. In addition,
sepsis
has been reported to affect the oxidative phosphorylation pathway. We have studied glycerol metabolism in hepatocytes isolated from rats fasted and injected 16 h previously with lipopolysaccharide from Escherichia coli. Endotoxin inhibited glycerol metabolism and led to a very large accumulation of glycerol 3-
phosphate
; the cytosolic reducing state was increased. Furthermore glycerol kinase activity was increased by 33% (P<<0.01). The respiratory rate of intact cells was significantly decreased by
sepsis
, with glycerol or octanoate as exogenous substrates, whereas oxidative phosphorylation (ATP-to-O ratio or respirations in state 4, state 3 and the oligomycin-insensitive state as well as the uncoupled state) was unchanged in permeabilized hepatocytes. Hence the effect on energy metabolism seems to be present only in intact hepatocytes. An additional important feature was the observation of a significant increase in cellular volume in cells from endotoxic animals, which might account for the alterations induced by
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Inhibition of glycerol metabolism in hepatocytes isolated from endotoxic rats. 923 Jan 36
Escherichia coli hemolysin (HlyA) and Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin are membrane-perturbating bacterial exotoxins that have been implicated as significant virulence factors in human diseases. We investigated the capacity of these toxins to cause cell activation and mediator release in human endothelial cells, compared with the efficacies of thrombin and the Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Concentration ranges tested were 1 to 1000 ng/ml (HlyA), 0.01 to 10 micro/ml (alpha-toxin), 0.01 to 10 U/ml (thrombin), and 0.01 to 10 microM (A23187). All stimuli caused dose-dependent generation of platelet-activating factor, nitric oxide, and prostaglandin I2. HlyA and thrombin effected time- and dose-dependent accumulation of large quantities of inositol phosphates, with maximum effects at 100 ng/ml and 1 U/ml, respectively. Corresponding time course and dose dependency were noted for HlyA-elicited diacylglycerol formation. In contrast, only the highest concentrations of alpha-toxin (10 microg/ml) and A23187 (10 microM) effected some moderate inositol
phosphate
accumulation, and this was suppressed in the presence of the platelet-activating factor antagonist WEB 2086. Metabolic and secretory responses elicited by alpha-toxin were dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+. We conclude that both HlyA and alpha-toxin are potent inductors of inflammatory and vasodilatory mediators in human endothelial cells. HlyA-elicited effects may proceed predominantly via activation of the phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis-related signal transduction pathway, whereas transmembrane Ca2+ flux appears to be the major event underlying the release of mediators in response to alpha-toxin. These toxin properties may contribute to vasoregulatory and inflammatory disturbances encountered in states of severe infection and
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Human endothelial cell activation and mediator release in response to the bacterial exotoxins Escherichia coli hemolysin and staphylococcal alpha-toxin. 925 56
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>