Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0039483 (giant cell arteritis)
3,204 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A female with recurrent thrombosis was found to have a functional abnormality of antithrombin, with a ratio of functional to immunological activity in plasma of approximately 50%. Crossed immunoelectrophoresis in the presence of heparin was normal, indicating an abnormality of the reactive site, rather than the heparin binding domain. Accordingly, the antithrombin was isolated by heparin-Sepharose chromatography: this produced a mixture of normal and variant antithrombin, as the patient was heterozygous for the abnormality. To remove the normal component, the antithrombin was passed through a column of thrombin-Sepharose. On sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), prior to its application to thrombin-Sepharose, the antithrombin migrated as a single band with identical mobility to that of normal antithrombin. After thrombin-Sepharose, the purified variant component was proteolysed, and migrated as two components, one with a reduced and one with enhanced mobility under non-reducing conditions. This demonstrated that the variant was unable to form stable inhibitor-thrombin complexes and was cleaved in a substrate reaction with thrombin. One site of cleavage was unambiguously ascertained to be the Arg 393-Ser 394 reactive site bond, by NH2 terminal sequencing of the cleaved variant antithrombin: 10 steps beginning at the P1' position, Ser-Leu-Asn-Pro-Asn-Arg,..., were clearly identified. The mutation responsible for this defect was studied by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of exon 6 of the antithrombin gene and direct sequencing of the amplified product. The presence of both a G and A in the first position of codon 382, identified the mutation GCA to ACA, which results in the substitution of Ala 382 to Thr. This is identical to that reported for antithrombin Hamilton (Devraj-Kizuk et al, 1988), although antithrombin gene polymorphism analysis suggests that the antithrombin Glasgow II mutation has arisen independently. We have recently shown (Caso et al, 1991) that mutation at a nearby position, Ala 384 to Pro, also transforms another variant, antithrombin Vicenza/Charleville, into a substrate for thrombin. The present results with antithrombin Glasgow II suggest that all the alanine residues at the base of the reactive site loop in positions P12-10 may be important for the formation of a stabilized inhibitor-thrombin complex.
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PMID:Antithrombin Glasgow II: alanine 382 to threonine mutation in the serpin P12 position, resulting in a substrate reaction with thrombin. 191 89

Antithrombin (AT) Vicenza has been previously identified as a functionally abnormal antithrombin associated with familial thrombosis (Finazzi et al, 1985). It binds normally to heparin, but loses its affinity following interaction with thrombin: it is a poor inhibitor of thrombin. AT Vicenza was isolated from plasma by heparin-Sepharose and thrombin-Sepharose chromatography, fragmented with cyanogen bromide (CNBr) and its tryptic peptides were analysed by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry mapping. An abnormal peptide mass 1112 was identified. Edman degradation confirmed a substitution of Ala to Pro in the sequence Ala 383-Arg 393. Polymerase chain reaction amplification of exon 6 of the gene followed by genomic sequencing, localized the mutation to codon 384, GCA to CCA. The same mutation has recently been reported in AT Charleville (Mohlo-Sabatier et al, 1989). Sodium dodecyl-sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of AT Vicenza (/Charleville) under non-reducing conditions revealed an apparent increase in mol. wt following interaction with thrombin: under reducing conditions the mol. wt was less than that of normal AT. This indicated cleavage and unfolding of the molecule. The site of cleavage was determined by incubation of AT Vicenza (/Charleville) with thrombin-Sepharose, reduction and S-carboxymethylation and reverse phase FPLC. A peptide was identified with the NH2-terminal sequence beginning Ser-Leu-Asn, demonstrating the cleavage had occurred at the reactive site of the variant. It is concluded that the Ala 384 to Pro substitution transforms AT Vicenza (/Charleville) from an inhibitor into a substrate.
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PMID:Antithrombin Vicenza, Ala 384 to Pro (GCA to CCA) mutation, transforming the inhibitor into a substrate. 199 1

The inhibitory effect of the clinically used p-carbethoxyphenyl ester of epsilon-guanidino-caproic acid methanesulphonate (epsilon-GCA-CEP) on the catalytic properties of human LYS77-plasmin (EC 3.4.21.7), bovine factor Xa (EC 3.4.21.6), bovine alpha-thrombin (EC 3.4.21.5), ancrod (EC 3.4.21.28), crotalase (EC 3.4.21.30), bovine beta-trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4), porcine pancreatic beta-kallikrein-B (EC 3.4.21.35), human urinary kallikrein (EC 3.4.21.35) and the Mr 54,000 species of human urokinase (EC 3.4.21.31) was investigated (between pH 2.0 and 8.5, I = 0.1 M; T = 21 +/- 0.5 degrees C), and analyzed in parallel with that of the homologous derivative p-carbethoxyphenyl epsilon-amino-caproate hydro chloride (epsilon-ACA-CEP). On lowering the pH from 5.5 to 3.0, values of the apparent dissociation inhibition constant (Ki) for epsilon-GCA-CEP and epsilon-ACA-CEP interaction with the serine proteinases considered increase, reflecting the acidic pK-shift upon inhibitor binding of a single ionizing group. Over the whole pH range explored, (i) epsilon-GCA-CEP interacts with bovine factor Xa and bovine alpha-thrombin with an higher affinity than that observed for epsilon-ACA-CEP binding; (ii) both inhibitors associate to bovine beta-trypsin with the same affinity; and (iii) epsilon-ACA-CEP inhibits human Lys77-plasmin and the Mr 54,000 species of human urokinase with an higher affinity than that reported for epsilon-GCA-CEP association, thus reflecting the known enzyme primary specificity properties. However, the affinity of epsilon-ACA-CEP for ancrod, crotalase, porcine pancreatic beta-kallikrein-B and human urinary kallikrein, all of which preferably bind arginyl rather than lysyl side chains at the primary position of substrates and/or inhibitors, is paradoxically higher than that displayed by epsilon-GCA-CEP. By considering the amino acid sequences, the X-ray three-dimensional structures and/or the computer-generated molecular models of serine proteinase: inhibitor adducts, the observed binding behaviour of epsilon-GCA-CEP and epsilon-ACA-CEP to the enzymes considered has been related to the inferred stereochemistry of proteinase: inhibitor contact region(s).
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PMID:Inhibition of serine proteinases by p-carbethoxyphenyl esters of epsilon-guanidino- and epsilon-amino caproic acid: thermodynamic and molecular modeling study. 272 72

Markers of endothelial cell activation were measured in 28 patients presenting with various forms of limited or focal type cutaneous vasculitis. Plasma levels of tissue plasminogen activator antigen (t-PA:Ag), plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 antigen (PAI-1:Ag) and PAI-1 activity, fibrin plate, von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag), tissue factor (TF) and soluble thrombomodulin (sTM) were measured. In comparison with the control group (n = 20) there was a significant increase in t-PA:Ag, vWF:Ag and TF (P < 0.05, Mann-Whitney U-test) in the cutaneous vasculitis group. This study confirms that measurable degrees of endothelial activation occur in cutaneous vasculitis. Cutaneous vasculitis includes a diverse group of clinical conditions, which are associated with inflammatory changes in cutaneous blood vessels with local fibrin deposition. The aetiology and pathogenesis of the majority of these entities remain unknown. Causative mediators are thought to include immune complexes, anti-endothelial cell antibodies, cytotoxic lymphocytes and viruses. Histologically, immune complexes and complement are frequently detected on the vessel wall, and serologically anti-endothelial antibodies are often detected in patients with vasculitis and in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) which correlate with the severity of cutaneous vasculitis, arthritis and nephritis. Lymphocyte-mediated toxicity to endothelial cells has been reported in a small number of patients with giant cell arteritis and Takayasu's arteritis. The vascular endothelium plays a central part in the control of haemostasis. Under physiological conditions endothelial cells present an anticoagulant surface to blood constituents, partially due to surface expression of heparan sulphate and thrombomodulin (TM). Heparan sulphate binds antithrombin III (ATIII), thereby accelerating inactivation of intrinsic coagulation enzymes. Thrombomodulin is an endothelial cell surface glycoprotein which promotes anticoagulation by forming a complex with thrombin which then activates protein C. Activated protein C together with a cofactor, protein S, inactivates FVa and FVIIIa. von Willebrand factor (vWF) is synthesized by endothelial cells, stored in Weibel-Palade bodies and released into the circulation upon endothelial stimulation. vWF mediates the binding of platelets to the subendothelium and is the carrier molecule for FVIIIC. The endothelium controls fibrinolysis by producing t-PA and its inhibitor PAI-1. Inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1 (IL-1) and tumour necrosis factor (TNF) activate endothelial cells, causing a shift from an antithrombotic to prothrombotic state, including expression of tissue factor, increased synthesis of PAI-1 and decreased expression of TM. Fibrin deposition and intravascular thrombosis are seen in cutaneous vasculitis syndromes, suggesting local endothelial cell activation. The aim of this pilot study was to assess whether perturbation of the endothelium in cutaneous vasculitis could be detected in the patients' plasma samples. If so, further studies to assess any correlation in levels of these markers with disease activity might prove useful in the future.
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PMID:Endothelial cell activation in cutaneous vasculitis. 868 65