Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (Brown)
12,436 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two chronic alcoholics developed acute renal failure from alcoholic myopathy (acute alcohol-induced rhabdomyolysis). Severe muscle pain developed and was associated with transitory oligo-anuric renal failure, requiring dialysis in one patient. In addition to the typical history and clinical symptoms, excessive elevation of muscle enzymes, especially creatine-kinase, and the appearance of myoglobin in serum are characteristic. Brown discoloration of the urine and a falsely positive test for "blood" due to the presence of myoglobin in urine in the absence of red blood cells are also typical. Definite changes can be demonstrated histologically and electromyographically during the acute stage. It is likely that this condition is more frequent than the sparsity of published reports indicates.
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PMID:[Acute renal failure in alcoholic myopathy (author's transl)]. 44 85

We have extended our earlier work (C.F. Beaulieu, J.I. Clark, R.D. Brown III, M. Spiller, and S.H. Koenig, Magn. Reson. Med. 8, 45 (1988] on the magnetic field dependence of 1/T1 (NMRD profiles) of calf lens nuclear homogenates, at 25 degrees C, to 5 degrees C, and to other protein systems as well. These include concentrated solutions of myoglobin and bovine serum albumin, both globular proteins, the first compact and roughly spherical, the other extended, flexible, and with weak internal bonding; chicken lens homogenate, for which the dominant crystallins (lens proteins) are approximately 70% alpha-helical compared with calf crystallins, which are essentially all beta-sheet; and hen egg white, both native and heat-denatured. Our earlier conjectures regarding a reversible change in protein organization of the calf lens crystallins as a function of solute protein concentration is given added support. Our findings suggest that cytoplasmic homogenate can be characterized as a heterogeneous and polymorphic solution of crystallins. At high concentrations the NH moieties of the protein backbone become accessible to solvent with water (not NH proton) exchange rates greater than 10(4) s-1. This conclusion is based on two aspects of the observed NMRD profiles. At low crystallin concentration, the profiles of calf and chicken lens homogenates are similar in form to those of myoglobin and native hen egg white, a form that has been studied previously for a range of diamagnetic globular proteins and has been demonstrated to arise from the rotational thermal motion of the solute molecules. At high crystallin concentrations, the NMRD profiles of the lens homogenates develop a monotonic background (high rates at low fields), much like that of the heat-denatured egg-white sample and those of most tissues. In addition, there is a set of peaks in the central part of the profiles of the concentrated crystallins, seen also in the denatured egg white and some tissues but not in the myoglobin sample, which is known to arise from cross-relaxation interactions between the water protons and (through the intermediary of the NH proton) the 14N quadrupolar levels. The magnitude of these peaks, which is larger by an order of magnitude for native calf lens homogenates than for any tissue, requires that the majority of the NH moieties be accessible to water. Finally, going to 5 degrees C for the native calf lens homogenate takes the sample below the temperature of reversible phase separation, and it becomes opaque.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Relaxometry of lens homogenates. II. Temperature dependence and comparison with other proteins. 273 92

The optical absorption and ligand binding properties of newly reconstituted sperm whale myoglobin were examined systematically at pH 8, 20 degrees C. The conventional absorbance and magnetic circular dichroism spectra of freshly reconstituted samples were identical to those of the native protein. In contrast, reconstituted azide or CO myoglobin initially exhibited less circular dichroism in the Soret wavelength region than native myoglobin. These data support the theory proposed by La Mar and co-workers (La Mar, G. N., Davis, N. L., Parish, D. W., and Smith, R. M. (1983) J. Mol. Biol. 168, 887-896) that protoheme inserts into apomyoglobin in two distinct orientations. The equilibrium and kinetic parameters for O2 and CO binding to newly reconstituted myoglobin were observed to be identical to those of the native protein. Thus, the orientation of the heme group has no effect on the physiological properties of myoglobin. This result is in disagreement with the preliminary report of Livingston et al. (Livingston, D. J., Davis, N. L., La Mar, G. N., and Brown, W. D. (1984) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 106, 3025-3026) which suggested that the abnormal heme conformation exhibited a 10-fold greater affinity and association rate constant for O2 binding. Significant kinetic heterogeneity was observed only for long-chain isonitrile binding to newly reconstituted myoglobin, and even in these cases, the rate constants for the abnormal and normal heme conformations differed by less than a factor of 4.
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PMID:Functional effects of heme orientational disorder in sperm whale myoglobin. 379 32

Serum biomarkers to identify susceptibility to disease in aged humans are well researched. On the other hand, our understanding of biomarkers in animal models of aging is limited. Hence, we applied a commercially available panel of 58 serum analytes to screen for possible biomarkers of aging in 4, 12, and 24 month old Brown Norway rats. We found that serum levels of 5 of the 58 analytes were significantly affected by age: C-reactive protein (CRP), myoglobin, macrophage derived chemokine-2 (MDC), fibroblast growth factor-basic, and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1. Among these analytes, CRP was the only one that increased with aging. The variability of CRP and MDC-2 was relatively low compared to the other analytes of the panel. It is concluded that CRP and possibly MDC-2 are candidates for biomarkers of aging in the BN rat.
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PMID:Serum biomarkers of aging in the Brown Norway rat. 2183 37

An 18-month-old male Brown Norway (BN) rat showed a grayish-white subcutaneous mass in the right cheek. Histologically, the mass was composed of highly pleomorphic cells producing collagen. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that the tumor cells were strongly positive for vimentin and partially positive for Ki-67; however, they were negative for ED-1, ED-2, S-100, cytokeratin, desmin and myoglobin. Ultrastructurally, the cytoplasms of the tumor cells contained well-developed rough endoplasmic reticulum. Thus, the tumor had no characteristic feature other than collagen production and was diagnosed as a fibrosarcoma.
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PMID:Spontaneous fibrosarcoma with pleomorphic appearance in an aged brown norway rat. 2227 36

Brown adipose tissue (BAT) is a key tissue for energy expenditure via fat and glucose oxidation for thermogenesis. In this study, we demonstrate that the myostatin/activin receptor IIB (ActRIIB) pathway, which serves as an important negative regulator of muscle growth, is also a negative regulator of brown adipocyte differentiation. In parallel to the anticipated hypertrophy of skeletal muscle, the pharmacological inhibition of ActRIIB in mice, using a neutralizing antibody, increases the amount of BAT without directly affecting white adipose tissue. Mechanistically, inhibition of ActRIIB inhibits Smad3 signaling and activates the expression of myoglobin and PGC-1 coregulators in brown adipocytes. Consequently, ActRIIB blockade in brown adipose tissue enhances mitochondrial function and uncoupled respiration, translating into beneficial functional consequences, including enhanced cold tolerance and increased energy expenditure. Importantly, ActRIIB inhibition enhanced energy expenditure only at ambient temperature or in the cold and not at thermoneutrality, where nonshivering thermogenesis is minimal, strongly suggesting that brown fat activation plays a prominent role in the metabolic actions of ActRIIB inhibition.
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PMID:Blockade of the activin receptor IIb activates functional brown adipogenesis and thermogenesis by inducing mitochondrial oxidative metabolism. 2258 66