Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (bacterial meningitis)
4,038 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirty-seven strains of the genus Haemophilus and five strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae were examined for their ability to produce extracellular enzyme that cleaves immunoglobulin molecules. All strains of H. influenzae, H. aegyptius, and S. pneumoniae elaborated enzyme that selectively cleaved human immunoglobulin A1 (IgA1) myeloma proteins but was inactive against a variety of other proteins including human IgA2, IgG, and IgM, porcine and bovine secretory IgA, human and bovine serum albumins, and ovalbumin. Although susceptible, human secretory IgA remained largely undigested. Two strains of H. pleuropneumoniae isolated from fatally infected pigs cleaved porcine secretory IgA, but had no effect on human IgA proteins. None of 16 strains that belonged to nonpathogenic Haemophilus species produced IgA protease. Analyses of the cleavage products of human IgA1 and secretory IgA proteins by immunochemical methods, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and analytical ultracentrifugation revealed that Fab and Fc fragments were produced. Since the production of IgA1 protease by Neisseria meningitidis has been reported previously, our finding that H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae produce an IgA1 protease indicates that this is a property of all three major etiological agents of bacterial meningitis. This suggests that IgA1 protease production may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of this disease.
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PMID:Pathogenic species of the genus Haemophilus and Streptococcus pneumoniae produce immunoglobulin A1 protease. 4 Aug 78

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) immunoglobulins were measured in 62 normal children, in 9 children with purulent meningitis, and in 10 children with presumptive viral meningitis. The mean values in normal children were IgA 0, IgM 0, and IgG 0.84 +/- 1.4 mg/100 ml (+/- SD). The mean levels of all CSF immunoglobulins were raised in acute bacterial meningitis and were significantly greater than the levels found in viral meningitis. CSF IgM was 0.16 +/- 0.5 mg/100 ml in viral meningitis compared with 2.64 +/- 2.06 mg/100 ml in bacterial meningitis (P less than 0.01). However, these values overlapped to a considerable extent and, generally, measurement of CSF immunoglobulins did not enhance diagnostic accuracy in this group of children.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid immunoglobulins in children. 53 1

Serum levels of 5 immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, IgM, IgD and IgE) were determined at frequent intervals in the course of bacterial meningitis in children. 59 patients were examined; 27 with Haemophilus influenzae meningitis, 23 with meningococcal and 9 with pneumococcal meningitis. All 5 immunoglobulins increased during the 2-week course of bacterial meningitis. IgM was the immunoglobulin class responding most rapidly, regularly and intensively. IgG increased moderately. However, practically no rise of the IgG level was observed in children with H. influenzae meningitis. The elevation of the IgA and IgE levels possibly suggests that meningitis may also cause synthesis of IgA and IgE antibodies. The results of the study indicate that antibodies of all the 5 immunoglobulin classes are probably involved in the defense against the causative microbes in bacterial meningitis.
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PMID:Serum immunoglobulin levels in the course of bacterial meningitis in children. 84 Dec 76

Albumin, IgG, IgA, IgM, transferrin, and alpha 1-antitrypsin were determined quantitatively in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 44 healthy children and 37 pediatric patients with central nervous system diseases. Neither IgA nor IgM were found in the CSF of normal children, but they were present in cases of purulent and non-bacterial meningitis. In cases of encephalitis all proteins studied were increased except IgA and IgM, which could not be demonstrated. On the basis of the results it may be concluded that the increase of IgG in the CSF in bacterial and a bacterial meningitis is due to an increased permeability of the blood-CSF barrier. Except in cases with ependymitis, IgG is produced only in small amounts in or near the CSF spaces even in the presence of inflammation of the meninges. The quantitative determination of IgG, IgA, and IgM in case of increased CSF protein content may facilitate the differential diagnosis between purulent and acute viral meningitis and encephalitis.
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PMID:[The quantitative determination of the individual CSF proteins in the diagnosis of inflammatory diseases of the CNS in children (author's transl)]. 108 15

The possible contribution of additional immunologic variables to the susceptibility of late complement component-deficient individuals to meningococcal disease has not been systematically examined in previous studies. Thus, we studied three groups of patients: (1) 24 healthy individuals, (2) 8 complement-sufficient individuals with a history of recurrent bacterial meningitis, and (3) 19 complement-deficient individuals with prior meningococcal infection. No statistical differences were noted among the three groups for the following parameters: the absolute number and the percentage of lymphocytes; CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD20+, and CD16+ cells; and the CD4+/CD8+ ratio. The concentration of C4 and circulating immune complexes was also similar among the groups. The concentrations of IgG, IgM, and IgA were slightly, but significantly, decreased in the complement-deficient individuals. Of interest, the coefficient of spontaneous and lipopolysaccharide-stimulated activation of neutrophils was significantly depressed in the deficient individuals. We hypothesize that the terminal complement components may participate in maximal neutrophil activation.
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PMID:Immunological evaluation of late complement component-deficient individuals. 164 49

An immunocytochemical technique allowing repeated use of antisera is applied to identify immunoglobulin-containing cells (ICC) of the IgG, IgA, and IgM class in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 298 patients with various neurological disorders. The demonstration of ICC in the CSF is highly indicative of an inflammatory disease (p less than 0.0001; Chi-square test). In the group of noninflammatory disorders ICC are only found in three cases of lymphomas, two dysgerminomas, and one glioblastoma. ICC of all classes are seen in acute viral and bacterial infections of the CNS including tick-borne meningopolyneuritis Bannwarth. IgG-positive ICC predominate in chronic inflammatory disorders like multiple sclerosis and HIV encephalitis. In HIV-positive patients IgA- or IgM-positive cells are strongly indicative of an opportunistic infection of the brain. Persistent high levels of ICC in three patients with bacterial meningitis are associated with a fatal outcome.
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PMID:Class differentiation of immunoglobulin-containing cerebrospinal fluid cells in inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system. 230 66

11 patients with bacterial meningitis, examined during the course of the disease for immunoglobulin (Ig) abnormalities in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), all had an increased CSF IgM index equal to (CSF/serum IgM):(CSF/serum albumin), indicating intrathecal IgM production. Seven patients had a slightly increased CSF IgG index, and 7 a slightly increased IgA index. Six of the 11 patients had an increased IgM index in the presence of normal indices for IgG and IgA. Follow-up revealed the return of these values to normal. Four patients had identical oligoclonal IgG bands in the CSF and serum, probably representing a systemic immune response, but in only one case were oligoclonal bands suggestive of intrathecal IgG production found. No oligoclonal IgA response was demonstrable in the 4 patients examined. Antigen-immunofixation or antigen-absorption studies revealed evidence of a specific, intrathecal IgG antibody response in only 2 patients, while a search for IgG antibodies against aetiologically unrelated bacterial and viral antigens was negative. With the exception of IgM production, therefore, a humoral intrathecal immune response is less common in bacterial than in aseptic meningitis.
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PMID:Immunoglobulin abnormalities in the cerebrospinal fluid during bacterial meningitis. 376 Jan 56

239 matched cerebrospinal fluid and serum samples of 50 patients with bacterial meningitis were investigated during the course of the disease. Special attention was drawn to thecal immunoglobulin (Ig) production, which was determined by Link's index and by Reiber's formula with a modification for IgM and IgA being more sensitive for these two Igs than Link's index. A correlation was found between the duration of local IgM production and the outcome of the disease.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid alterations in bacterial meningitis. 394 84

Attention has recently been focused on bacterial proteases with the capacity to cleave immunoglobulin A (IgA proteases) as possible pathogenic factors in bacterial meningitis, gonorrhoea, and destructive periodontal disease. Here, we describe a method for the rapid purification of a specific IgA1 protease from Bacteroides melaninogenicus. The IgA1 protease was purified 6,172-fold with a yield of 9% by ammonium sulfate precipitation, DEAE-ion exchange chromatography, and separation on a preparative TSK-G 3000SWG high-pressure gel permeation chromatography column. The enzyme was specific for human IgA1 and cleaved a prolyl-seryl peptide bond in the hinge region of the alpha 1 chain between residues 223 and 224. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 62,000, the isoelectric point was 5.0, and the Km was 3.4 X 10(-6). The enzyme was active over a broad pH range and had maximal activity at pH 5.0. B. melaninogenicus IgA1 protease was classified as a thiol protease on the basis of its inhibition by traditional protease inhibitors and the fact that it was active only under reducing conditions.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of an immunoglobulin A1 protease from Bacteroides melaninogenicus. 614 9

The three main immunoglobulin classes obey the basic principles of passive protein transfer at the blood-CSF barrier and the serum-derived portions could therefore be quantified with the help of the permeability marker albumin. The Ig fractions secreted into the CSF by sessile plasma cell clones have been determined in various inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system. The humoral immune response in multiple sclerosis and chronic encephalitis of unknown cause was dominated by IgG antibodies. In most other inflammatory diseases IgA and IgM were concomitantly synthesized, e.g. in neurosyphilis and meningoencephalitis caused by viruses of the herpes group. In tick-borne meningopolyneuritis Bannwarth, only IgM and in bacterial meningitis only IgA may be produced locally. The detection of a secretory immunoglobulin fraction in the CSF may be the sole laboratory parameter in chronic inflammatory processes of the nervous system.
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PMID:Differentiation of the humoral immune response in inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system. 618 10


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