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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sepsis
is a major catabolic insult resulting in modifications in carbohydrate and fat energy metabolism, and leading to increased muscle breakdown and nitrogen loss. Insulin resistance, which develops in
sepsis
, decreases glucose utilization, but plasma insulin levels are sufficiently elevated to prevent lipolysis, resulting in a further energy deficit. The availability of fuels in
sepsis
is therefore limited, and the body resorts to muscle breakdown, gluconeogenesis, and amino acid oxidation for energy supply. Previous work has not defined, however, the exact alterations in amino acid metabolism. Therefore, the following studies were undertaken. Blood samples were drawn from fifteen patients in whom the diagnosis of
sepsis
was clinically established; the samples were analyzed for amino acid, beta-hydroxyphenylethanolamines, glucose, insulin and glucagon concentrations. The plasma amino acid pattern observed was characterized by an increase in total amino acid content, due mainly to high levels of the aromatic amino acids (phenylalanine and tyrosine) and the sulfur-containing amino acids (taurine, cystine and methionine). Alanine,
aspartic acid
, glutamic acid and proline were also elevated, but to a lesser degree. The branched chain amino acids (valine, leucine and isoleucine) were within normal limits, as were glycine, serine, threonine, lysine, histidine and tryptophan. Those patients who did not survive
sepsis
had higher levels of aromatic and sulfur-containing amino acids as compared to those patients surviving
sepsis
. On the other hand, those patients surviving
sepsis
had higher levels of alanine and the branched chain amino acids. In a second group of five patients with overwhelming
sepsis
accompanied by a state of metabolic encephalopathy, a parenteral nutrition solution consisting of 23% dextrose, and an amino acid formulation enriched with branched chain amino acids was administered. In these five patients, normalization of the plasma amino acid pattern and reversal of encephalopathy was observed. The following sequence of events may be postulated: The septic patient develops insulin resistance in the peripheral tissues, primarily muscle, while the adipose tissue is much less affected. The insulin resistance and the inability to utilize fat leads to increased muscle proteolysis. Muscle breakdown results in release into the blood of enormous amounts of various amino acids; the muscle itself is able to oxidize the branched chain amino acids, supplying the muscles' own energy requirements and alanine for gluconeogenesis. The extensive muscle proteolysis coupled with relative hepatic insufficiency occurring early in
sepsis
results in the appearance in the plasma of high levels of most of the amino acids present in muscle, particularly the aromatic and the sulfur-containing amino acids. The outcome of patients with
sepsis
might be positively affected by combined therapy with glucose, insulin and branched chain amino acids.
...
PMID:Amino acid derangements in patients with sepsis: treatment with branched chain amino acid rich infusions. 9 98
Long-term parenteral feeding in childhood must be adapted to the requirements of the young organism. The caloric requirements are mainly provided by glucose and fat emulsions; additional calories can be supplied by xylite and, with some reservations, by fructose. For neonates and young infants the combination and quantity of amino-acids is of particular importance: histidine, arginine, proline and tyrosine are essential amino-acids; glycine, glutamic acid,
aspartic acid
and cystine should form part of the unspecific sources of nitrogen. Addition of trace elements and vitamins is obligatory in long-term parenteral feeding. Complications may arise at the site of the catheter (
sepsis
, clotting). Late damage due to intravenous feeding is known to occurs; but a more detailed knowledge needs long-term investigations.
...
PMID:[Problems of long-term parenteral feeding in childhood (author's transl)]. 82 14
Arterial plasma amino acids were measured in 27 patients with serious septic complications after operation, 15 patients following reduction of femoral shaft fractures and nine control patients on the first and third days following uneventful major abdominal surgery. Amino acid concentrations in the controls were similar to those which have been reported during early starvation. The amino acid patterns seen in all groups did not resemble that previously observed following glucocorticoid administration. In the patients with infection, mean phenylalanine concentration (108.0 +/- 46.9 mumoles per liter) was significantly greater than in the controls on the first (p greater than 0.001) or third (p less than 0.001) postoperative days. Four of the septic patients with hyperphenylalaninemia also had elevated arterial methionine concentrations. These observations suggest that many of the patients with
sepsis
had seriously impaired liver metabolism. In patients with fractures, the concentrations of ornithine (p less than 0.001), taurine (p less than 0.05), and
aspartic acid
(p less than 0.05) were lower than in controls. No other significant differences of amino acid concentrations were observed. It is difficult to relate these differences to a specific metabolic abnormality.
...
PMID:Arterial plasma amino acids in patients with serious postoperative infection and in patients with major fractures. 125 95
The placement of rubber band tourniquets upon rat hind-limbs for 5 h followed by reperfusion of the extremities results in a severe form of circulatory shock characterized by hypotension and death within 24 h of tourniquet release. Oxidative damage to muscle tissue is an early consequence of hind-limb reperfusion on tourniquet release, yet this local damage does not explain the lethal hypotensive shock state which evolves within the next 24 h. Multiple system organ failure (MSOF), of as of yet unknown causes, is usually described in relation to several shock states. It has been suggested that injured or necrotic tissue may activate neutrophils, platelets, and the coagulation system leading to embolization in remote tissues. Effective decreases in hepatic blood flow have been observed in several forms of
sepsis
which precedes the biochemical evidence consistent with an ischemic insult of the liver. In support of our original hypothesis, that organ failure has its genesis in a primary perfusion abnormality with secondary ischemic organ injury, herein we have assessed the possibility that oxygen-derived free radicals are generated in the liver of rats after reperfusion of their hind-limbs on release of the tourniquets. We report on the protective effects of allopurinol (ALLO) and a mixture of superoxide dismutase (SOD) catalase (CAT) and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) on liver free sulfhydryl content (SH), thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS), and on the release of
aspartic acid
(AsT) and alanine aminotransferase (AlT) activities, and of alkaline phosphatase during a 5 h tourniquet period and after 2 h of reperfusion of the hind-limbs. During the hind-limb ischemic period hepatis tissue SH levels remained essentially constant during the first hour (6.02 +/- 0.36 to 5.65 +/- 0.20 mumoles/g wet tissue), and decreased significantly, over and above the normal circadian decrease of liver glutathione levels, to 4.02 +/- 0.69 mumoles/g wet tissue after the third hour and remained lowered until tourniquet release. A further significant decrease (3.11 +/- 0.49 mumoles/g wet tissue) was observed after 2h of reperfusion. TBARS production remained constant during the 5 h hind-limb ischemic period (168.4 +/- 37.3 mumoles/g wet tissue) and rose by 55% to 261.7 +/- 55.8 mumoles/g wet tissue after 2 h of tourniquet release. ALLO, but not the SOD-CAT-DMSO combination, protected hepatic SH loss during the hind-limb ischemic insult, yet both offered protection after 2 h of tourniquet release.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Oxygen-derived free radicals mediate liver damage in rats subjected to tourniquet shock. 148 82
Non-fasting plasma amino acids, proteins, anthropometric measurements, urea, and creatinine for 17 hemodialysis patients were compared with values in normal patients of similar age and sex. Values were characteristic for renal failure but with similarities to protein-energy malnutrition. Partial correlation coefficients, correcting for age and height, identified nutritional and non-nutritional factors. Plasma valine was the most correlated variable and was used to rank and group the patients. The group with valine less than 150 micrometers/liter had low values for 17 variables. Valine, isoleucine, leucine, threonine, asparagine, weight, and arm muscle circumference were interrelated and reflected malnutrition whereas fat correlated with calorie intake, and histidine and serine with protein intake. Taurine,
aspartic acid
, cystine, citrulline, urea, creatinine, prealbumin and retinol-binding protein were decreased in malnutrition but were higher than normal due to a loss of renal function. Fourteen variables, less affected by malnutrition, were changed by specific non-nutritional factors. Hemodialysis patients of long standing (1 to 11 years) apart from two patients with recurrent
sepsis
, were adequately nourished, but those on hemodialysis for less than 15 months, most of whom had previously received peritoneal dialysis, were malnourished. Malnutrition in dialysis patients was due to protein and energy deficiency enhanced by metabolic abnormalities of amino acids. Our study shows that plasma valine is interrelated with other nutritional variables and may be used to assess protein-energy malnutrition.
...
PMID:Anthropometry and plasma valine, amino acids, and proteins in the nutritional assessment of hemodialysis patients. 680 21
Group B streptococci (GBS) are an important cause of
sepsis
and shock in the new-born. We have previously reported that GBS induce the production of tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) by human monocytes and culture-derived macrophages. We have also shown that fibronectin (FN) promotes interaction between GBS and human phagocytes. In the present study, we investigated the effect of FN and GBS on the production of TNF-alpha by adult and neonatal culture-derived macrophages. We report that soluble FN alone was a strong stimulus for the production of TNF-alpha by culture-derived macrophages (FN 50 micrograms/ml = 623.33 +/- 47 pg/ml TNF, versus media alone 3 +/- 1.5 pg/ml; P < 0.0001). While GBS also induce the production of TNF-alpha by macrophages, the addition of FN to GBS had more than an additive effect on TNF-alpha levels. FN-mediated TNF-alpha production by macrophages was inhibited by both soluble arginine-glycine-
aspartic acid
(RGD) peptide (71%; P < 0.0001) and anti-beta 3-integrin monoclonal antibody 7G2 (54%; P < 0.0001). Neonatal culture-derived macrophages produced significantly more TNF-alpha in response to GBS (356.4 pg/ml +/- 27.7) than adult cells did (222.0 pg/ml +/- 21.0; P = 0.037), and dramatically more in response to FN alone (neonatal 1931.0 pg/ml +/- 23.0 versus adult 463.5 43.5 pg/ml; P < 0.0001). FN may contribute to the high levels of TNF-alpha production implicated in the pathophysiology of GBS
sepsis
and shock.
...
PMID:Effects of fibronectin and group B streptococci on tumour necrosis factor-alpha production by human culture-derived macrophages. 775 Oct 28
A novel copper-binding protein was identified in the liver supernatant (100,000 x g) of Indian childhood cirrhosis (ICC), purified to apparent homogeneity and characterized [corrected]. Purified major copper-binding protein (MCuBP) is solely responsible for binding about 35% of the total supernatant copper. Elution profile of ICC liver supernatant on Sephadex G-75 column chromatography showed three peaks. About 60% of the total supernatant copper was resolved in peak II, whereas zinc content was insignificant in this peak. But peak II was almost missing in a gel elution profile of control liver supernatant. The control group included cases of various liver diseases viz. neonatal hepatitis,
septicemia
, and mixed nodular cirrhosis. Copper-binding proteins of peak II further purified on ion-exchange chromatography and elution profile showed that peak II was a MCuBP with high copper-binding capacity (10 g atoms/mol of native protein). SDS-PAGE of this protein also revealed the existence of a single band with molecular mass of about 50 kD. UV spectra of MCuBP showed the maximal absorbance at 254 nm. Unlike the classical metallothionein, the amino acid composition of MCuBP revealed the presence of aromatic amino acids and higher content of glutamic acid and
aspartic acid
followed by glycine and serine. The ratio (0.3) of basic amino acids to acidic amino acids strongly indicates that it is an acidic protein. The cysteine content in this protein was insignificant, which further corroborates the possibility that the acidic amino acids might be prominent candidates for binding copper. Thus, the 50-kD MCuBP apparently makes a major contribution to the total copper-binding activity in ICC liver cytosol and may play a significant role in hepatic intracellular copper accumulation.
...
PMID:Identification of a novel copper-binding protein from the liver of Indian childhood cirrhosis: purification and physicochemical characterization [corrected]. 980 48
A 3 1/2-year-old boy presented with megaloblastic anemia and recurrent episodes of severe lactic acidosis and coma. At age 4 years, he developed
sepsis
and died; postmortem examination failed to show any gross abnormality in any tissue. Biochemical analysis of muscle showed decreased activities for all respiratory chain enzymes except complex II. Muscle histochemistry revealed diffuse cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. Southern blot analysis of mitochondrial DNA from muscle, liver, and blood showed a heteroplasmic single mitochindrial DNA deletion of 2.4 kb, which removed the genes for cytochrome c oxidase I and II and the transfer ribonucleic acid genes for serine and
aspartic acid
. Single large-scale deletions in mitochondrial DNA have been associated with Pearson's syndrome, Kearns-Sayre syndrome, and progressive external ophthalmoplegia. This patient's presentation is unusual and suggests an overlap between Pearson's syndrome and Kearns-Sayre syndrome.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial DNA deletion in a child with megaloblastic anemia and recurrent encephalopathy. 1516 90
The human pathogen L. monocytogenes is a facultatively intracellular bacterium that survives and replicates in the cytosol of many mammalian cells. The listerial metabolism, especially under intracellular conditions, is still poorly understood. Recent studies analyzed the carbon metabolism of L. monocytogenes by the (13)C isotopologue perturbation method in a defined minimal medium containing [U-(13)C(6)]glucose. It was shown that these bacteria produce oxaloacetate mainly by carboxylation of pyruvate due to an incomplete tricarboxylic acid cycle. Here, we report that a pycA insertion mutant defective in pyruvate carboxylase (PYC) still grows, albeit at a reduced rate, in brain heart infusion (BHI) medium but is unable to multiply in a defined minimal medium with glucose or glycerol as a carbon source.
Aspartate
and glutamate of the pycA mutant, in contrast to the wild-type strain, remain unlabeled when [U-(13)C(6)]glucose is added to BHI, indicating that the PYC-catalyzed carboxylation of pyruvate is the predominant reaction leading to oxaloacetate in L. monocytogenes. The pycA mutant is also unable to replicate in mammalian cells and exhibits high virulence attenuation in the mouse
sepsis
model.
...
PMID:Pyruvate carboxylase plays a crucial role in carbon metabolism of extra- and intracellularly replicating Listeria monocytogenes. 2009 52
CD18 expressing phagocytes associated with the gastro-intestinal (GI) epithelium can shuttle Salmonella directly into the bloodstream within a few minutes following microbial ingestion. We have previously demonstrated that Salmonella controls the CD18 pathway to deeper tissue, manipulating the migratory properties of infected cells as an unappreciated component of its pathogenesis. We have observed that one type III effector, SrfH (also called SseI) that Salmonella secretes into infected phagocytes manipulates the host protein TRIP6 to stimulate their migration. Paradoxically, SrfH was shown in another study to subvert a different host protein, IQGAP1, in a manner that inhibits the productive motility of such cells, perhaps to avoid interactions with T cells. Here, we resolve the discrepancy. We report that one naturally occurring allele of srfH promotes the migration of infected phagocytes into the bloodstream, while another naturally occurring allele that differs by only a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) does not. This SNP determines if the protein contains an
aspartic acid
or a glycine residue at position 103 and may determine if SrfH binds TRIP6. SrfH Gly103 is a rare allele, but is present in the highly invasive strain Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium UK-1 (stands for universal killer). It is also present in the genome of the only sequenced strain belonging to the emerging pandemic Salmonella enterica serovar 4, [5],12,i:-, which is frequently associated with
septicemia
. Finally, we present evidence that suggests that Gifsy-2, the bacteriophage upon which srfH resides, is present in a clinical isolate of the human-specific pathogen, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi. These observations may have interesting implications for our understanding of Salmonella pathogenesis.
...
PMID:A naturally occurring single nucleotide polymorphism in the Salmonella SPI-2 type III effector srfH/sseI controls early extraintestinal dissemination. 2302 76
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