Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (vasculitis)
20,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Eosinophils (EOs) participate in a variety of inflammatory states characterized by endothelial cell damage, such as vasculitis, pneumonitis, and endocarditis. We find that 100 U/ml TNF-alpha/cachectin (TNF), a concentration attainable in the blood of humans with parasitic infestations, stimulates highly purified populations of EOs to damage human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), a model of human endothelium. This TNF-dependent EO cytotoxicity is strongly inhibited by heparin and methyprednisolone but unaffected by the platelet-activating factor antagonist BN52012 or scavengers of superoxide anion and H2O2, superoxide dismutase and catalase. However, addition of a physiologically relevant concentration of Br- (100 microM) enhances EO/TNF damage to HUVEC, implicating the possible participation of EO peroxidase (EPO) in the killing mechanism. EOs adherent to FCS-coated plastic wells more than double their production of superoxide anion and the cytotoxic EPO-derived oxidant HOBr when exposed to TNF, showing that TNF activates the respiratory burst of EOs attached to a "physiologic" surface. Unlike PMNs, EOs were not irreversibly activated to kill unopsonized endothelium by previous exposure to TNF, and did not degranulate or upregulate CR3 expression as detected by Mo1 in the presence of 100 U/ml TNF. HUVEC exposed 18 h to TNF were considerably more susceptible to lysis by PMA-activated EOs and reagent H2O2, demonstrating a direct effect of TNF upon endothelium, perhaps through inhibition of antioxidant defenses. These findings suggest that abnormally elevated serum levels of TNF may provoke EOs to damage endothelial cells and thereby play a role in the pathogenesis of tissue damage in hypereosinophilic states.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor alpha/cachectin stimulates eosinophil oxidant production and toxicity towards human endothelium. 197 79

Antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) are specific for constituents of neutrophil primary granules and monocyte lysosomes. There are different types of ANCA with different specificities. By indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using alcohol-fixed neutrophils as substrate, two major categories of ANCA can be recognized, one with cytoplasmic staining (C-ANCA) and the other with artifactual perinuclear staining (P-ANCA). Some C-ANCA have specificity for proteinase 3 (PR3-ANCA) and some P-ANCA have specificity for myeloperoxidase (MPO-ANCA), but there are additional C-ANCA and P-ANCA specificities. ANCA are found in the blood of patients with necrotizing systemic vasculitis, such as Wegener's granulomatosis and polyarteritis nodosa, and patients with idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis. The glomerular lesion in patients with systemic and renal-limited ANCA-associated diseases is the same, ie, a pauci-immune necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis. No matter where the vascular lesions of ANCA-associated disease are (eg, kidney, lung, gut, muscle, skin), they are characterized by necrotizing inflammation and a paucity of immune deposits. The distribution of disease correlates to a degree with the ANCA specificity, although there is substantial overlap. For example, patients with Wegener's granulomatosis most often have C-ANCA and patients with renal-limited disease most often have P-ANCA. In patients with P-ANCA-associated glomerulonephritis, approximately 90% of the P-ANCA have specificity for MPO. The clinical manifestations of ANCA-associated diseases often begin following a flu-like illness. The onset is most often in the winter and least often in the summer. The renal disease usually presents as rapidly progressive renal failure with nephritis. One of the most life-threatening components of the systemic involvement is pulmonary hemorrhage caused by a necrotizing alveolar capillaritis. Intravenous cyclophosphamide plus steroids is as effective as oral cyclophosphamide plus steroids for controlling ANCA-associated diseases. Using life-table analysis, the 2-year patient and renal survival rate in both patients with renal-limited and systemic disease is greater than 70%. There is evidence that in addition to being a useful serologic marker, ANCA are directly involved in the pathogenesis of the vascular injury in patients with ANCA-associated diseases. Although ANCA antigens are normally in the cytoplasm of neutrophils and monocytes, priming of these cells, as occurs following exposure to certain cytokines, results in the release of small amounts of ANCA antigens at the cell surface. In vitro, ANCA-IgG causes cytokine-primed neutrophils to undergo a respiratory burst and degranulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies and associated diseases: a review. 197 31

Anti-neutrophil cytosolic antibodies (ANCA) and anti-endothelial cell antibodies (AECA) have been identified in a wide variety of disorders, but their pathophysiological role remains unclear. ANCA appear to be particularly associated with various forms of vasculitis including Wegener's granulomatosis. Kawasaki disease and microscopic polyarteritis. Cytoplasmic staining (cANCA) on indirect immunofluorescence is associated with extrarenal disease and a perinuclear pattern (pANCA) with renal limited disease. The cANCA antigen appears to be proteinase 3 and that for pANCA myeloperoxidase. AECA have been detected in systemic lupus erythematosus, scleroderma and dermatomyositis but are also found in systemic vasculitis, Kawasaki disease, haemolytic uraemic syndrome, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura and renal allograft recipients at the time of rejection. Their presence appears to be correlated with disease activity and they may be directed against epitopes on as yet unidentified infective agents that precipitate some of the diseases in which they are found that cross-react with antigenic sites exposed on endothelial cells. Measurement of these antibodies has a diagnostic role, facilitates monitoring of disease activity and may prove valuable in understanding the pathogenesis of the diseases in which they are found.
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PMID:Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies and anti-endothelial cell antibodies. 203 46

Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) are important diagnostic markers in vasculitic disorders. In a study of 164 patients with various clinical syndromes associated with vasculitis, 60 were found to have the antibody, as detected by indirect immunofluorescence; 23 had the so-called perinuclear antibody pattern, and of these, 15 had antibodies to neutrophil myeloperoxidase in an ELISA. These patients had multi-system involvement, and 14 of the 15 had histological evidence of small-vessel arteritis in the kidneys. In preliminary experiments, the isolated IgG from one patient was shown to inhibit luminol-dependent chemiluminescence of fluid phase myeloperoxidase.
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PMID:Anti-myeloperoxidase antibodies in systemic vasculitis. 215 47

To investigate the possible association of crescentic glomerulonephritis (CGN) with autoantibodies to myeloid lysosomal enzymes, we tested sera from 35 consecutive patients with CGN without diagnostic immunohistological findings in their renal biopsy for the presence of antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies directed against a 29 kD antigen from azurophilic granules (29 kD-ANCA), against myeloperoxidase (MPO-ANCA) and against elastase (elastase-ANCA), using antigen-catching ELISAs with well-defined monoclonal antibodies. 29 kD-ANCA were present in the sera of all nine patients with CGN as part of biopsy-proven Wegner's granulomatosis (WG), of ten patients with CGN and clinically suspected WG, and of two patients with idiopathic CGN. Sera from the remaining patients with clinically suspected WG (N = 5) or idiopathic CGN (N = 6) were negative for 29 kD-ANCA, but invariably positive for MPO-ANCA. Neither of these antibodies could be detected in sera from patients with CGN of infectious origin (N = 3), different forms of CGN (N = 7), other renal lesions (N = 34), or normal controls (N = 52). None of the sera tested were positive for elastase-ANCA. Our results indicate that both vasculitis-associated CGN and idiopathic CGN are associated with autoantibodies against myeloid lysosomal enzymes. This finding places these disorders within one spectrum of diseases.
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PMID:Autoantibodies against myeloid lysosomal enzymes in crescentic glomerulonephritis. 215 42

Using analogous models of acute dermal vasculitis and alveolitis in rats, we have examined the role of oxygen-derived metabolities in the tissue damage associated with neutrophil influx into sites of immune complex deposition. In the lung, as previously reported, catalase and deferoxamine are highly protective, while superoxide dismutase (SOD) has a transient protective effect. The xanthine oxidase inhibitors, allopurinol, and lodoxamide, are also protective. In the skin, neither catalase (which has been covalently linked to the antibody) nor deferoxamine is protective, suggesting that H2O2 and iron are not absolutely required for the development of dermal vasculitis. In the skin, SOD, as well as the inhibitors of xanthine oxidase, have protective effects. These data suggest that the neutrophil-mediated pathways of immune complex injury in the dermal and pulmonary microvascular compartments are fundamentally different. As a measurement of neutrophil accumulation, measurements of myeloperoxidase in tissue extracts have been employed. In both the lung and skin, the protective effects of SOD and the xanthine oxidase inhibitors are paralleled by reductions in neutrophil influx into sites of injury. In contrast, catalase and deferoxamine have no effect on neutrophil accumulation. These data suggest that vascular beds in rat skin and lung are fundamentally different with respect to mechanisms of acute immune complex mediated injury. The data also provide evidence that O2- contributes significantly to the accumulation of neutrophils.
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PMID:Role of O2- in neutrophil recruitment into sites of dermal and pulmonary vasculitis. 215 35

Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA) are in the circulation of most patients with pauci-immune necrotizing vasculitis and pauci-immune crescentic glomerulonephritis. The current study demonstrates an effect of these autoantibodies on neutrophil function in vitro. ANCA cause normal human neutrophils to undergo an oxidative burst and degranulate. Both ANCA phenotypes (i.e., cytoplasmic-pattern ANCA and myeloperoxidase-specific ANCA) induce neutrophil activation. ANCA sera and purified immunoglobulins significantly increase the release of reactive oxygen species when compared with controls. ANCA, in a dose-dependent manner, induce the release of primary granule contents. These effects are markedly enhanced by priming neutrophils with tumor necrosis factor. Flow cytometry studies demonstrate the presence of myeloperoxidase on the surface of neutrophils after cytokine priming, indicating that primed neutrophils have ANCA antigens at their surfaces to interact with ANCA. These observations suggest an in vivo pathogenetic role for ANCA. We propose that, in patients with necrotizing vasculitis, ANCA-induced release of toxic oxygen radicals and noxious granule enzymes from cytokine-primed neutrophils could be mediating vascular inflammation.
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PMID:Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies induce neutrophils to degranulate and produce oxygen radicals in vitro. 216 32

Sixteen patients with classical rheumatoid arthritis (RA) complicated by severe vasculitis were studied and compared with a matched control group of 17 RA patients without vasculitis. A control group of 24 patients with unrelated disease was also included. Neither antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (C-ANCA) nor anti-myeloperoxidase (anti-MPO) were found. Granulocyte specific antinuclear antibodies ("GS-ANA") were found in a higher frequency in the vasculitis group (75%) than in the RA control group (41%), but the difference was not statistically significant. No patient in the control group without RA had "GS-ANA".
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PMID:Absence of circulating antineutrophil cytoplasm antibodies (ANCA) in severe vasculitis associated with rheumatoid arthritis. 216 98

Antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies with specificity for myeloperoxidase (MPO) were found in 53 patient sera that were routinely submitted for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody determination. Based on clinical and histologic criteria, 15 of these 53 patients were classified as having systemic necrotizing vasculitis of the polyarteritis group, 11 patients were classified as having Wegener's granulomatosis (WG), and 14 were classified as having idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis. The remaining 13 patients did not fulfill the diagnostic criteria for these disorders, although most of these patients had clinical symptoms compatible with these disorders. While all patients with WG had renal involvement, only 4 of the 15 patients with systemic necrotizing vasculitis of the polyarteritis group had glomerulonephritis. The sensitivity of autoantibodies to MPO for either systemic necrotizing vasculitis of the polyarteritis group, WG, or idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis was further tested in all our patients with these disorders (n = 104). Twenty-seven of 104 patients had autoantibodies to MPO. Furthermore, 69 of the remaining 77 patients had autoantibodies specific for the 29-kd serine protease, which has been reported to be specifically associated with WG. Sera from 8 patients were negative for either of these antibodies (92% sensitivity of autoantibodies to MPO and/or the 29-kd serine protease). The specificity of autoantibodies to MPO for either systemic necrotizing vasculitis of the polyarteritis group, WG, or idiopathic crescentic glomerulonephritis was also tested in selected groups of patients who had closely related diseases. Two of 144 patients had autoantibodies to MPO (specificity 99%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Association of autoantibodies to myeloperoxidase with different forms of vasculitis. 165 Feb 23

The sera of 64 patients with extracapillary glomerulonephritis were investigated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the presence of antibody to human neutrophil myeloperoxidase (MPO). In all, circulating anti-MPO were found in 30% and antineutrophil cytoplasm antibodies (ANCA) detected by indirect immunofluorescence in 44% of the patients. Autoantibody to components of neutrophil granulocytes was not found in patients with other forms of glomerulonephritis. The incidence of ANCA (16/23) was higher than that of anti-MPO (5/23) in patients with a diagnosis of Wegener's granulomatosis. By contrast, anti-MPO was found in a majority of vasculitis patients without extrarenal symptoms (6/9), including 3 patients treated with hydralazine. One of the patients treated with hydralazine had circulating ANCA in combination with anti-MPO. Anti-MPO was also found in 1 out of 6 patients with Goodpasture's syndrome. The findings emphasize that autoantibodies to distinct components of neutrophil granulocytes partly differ with regard to diagnostic specificity.
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PMID:Antimyeloperoxidase antibodies in patients with extracapillary glomerulonephritis. 217 10


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