Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038358 (gastric ulcer)
5,179 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A hybridoma monoclonal antibody against human pepsinogen I was used to develop an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for pepsinogen I in serum. In the two-step competitive procedure using antimouse immunoglobulin F(ab')2 fragment coupled to alkaline phosphatase, the measurable assay range was 8-256 micrograms/l. No cross-reactivity with rat pepsinogen 1, human pepsinogen II, gastrin I, bombesin, somatostatin and peptide YY was shown. However, there was slight cross-reactivity (0.09%) with porcine pepsinogen. The coefficients of variation within and between series were 7.6% and 13.0%. This enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for serum pepsinogen I correlated positively with radioimmunoassay (r = 0.87, n = 92). The concentration range of serum pepsinogen I in 354 healthy controls was 15-100 micrograms/l with a lognormal distribution. Serum pepsinogen I levels were significantly higher in the subjects who developed active duodenal ulcer or active gastric ulcer, but significantly lower in those who had gastric cancer, than in control subjects.
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PMID:Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of serum pepsinogen I. 380 50

Helicobacter pylori, is an invariably commensal resident of the gut microbiome associated with gastric ulcer in adults. In addition, these patients also suffered from a low grade inflammation that activates the immune system and thus increased shunting of energy to host defense mechanisms. To assess whether a H. pylori infection could affect growth in early life, we determined the expression levels of selected metabolic gut hormones in germ free (GF) and specific pathogen-free (SPF) mice with and without the presence of H. pylori. Despite H. pylori-infected (SPFH) mice display alteration in host metabolism (elevated levels of leptin, insulin and peptide YY) compared to non-infected SPF mice, their growth curves remained the same. SPFH mice also displayed increased level of eotaxin-1. Interestingly, GF mice infected with H. pylori (GFH) also displayed increased levels of ghrelin and PYY. However, in contrast to SPFH mice, GFH showed reduced weight gain and malnutrition. These preliminary findings show that exposure to H. pylori alters host metabolism early in life; but the commensal microbiota in SPF mice can attenuate the growth retarding effect from H. pylori observed in GF mice. Further investigations of possible additional side effects of H. pylori are highly warranted.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection can affect energy modulating hormones and body weight in germ free mice. 2573 5