Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0206061 (interstitial pneumonia)
6,105 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In March of 1991, a disease that affected pregnant sows and caused a high mortality in unweaned piglets was detected in Spain. Based on the clinical signs observed, mystery swine disease, which had been described recently in Germany, Holland and Belgium, was suspected. From the samples obtained from the affected farm, a filtrable agent (0.22 micron) was isolated on cell culture. It produced cytopathic effects, its replication was intracytoplasmic, it was sensitive to chloroform, and cross-reacted with a Lelystad reference serum. When inoculated into pregnant sows, the agent produced inappetence for 2-4 days, without hyperthermia. One of the sows aborted at 100 days of gestation; the two others had delayed parturitions (days 115 and 116). There was a mixture of healthy piglets, mummified fetuses, stillbirths and weak piglets. Microscopic examination of the lungs of healthy piglets killed at 8 and 12 days of life revealed the presence of interstitial pneumonia. The sera from the three sows at 39 days after infection cross-reacted with the Lelystad virus (titres > or = 1/640), whereas pre-inoculation sera did not recognize it (titres < or = 1/10). This is the first report from Spain of the isolation of an agent (antigenically related to the Lelystad virus), capable of reproducing the disease previously designated as mystery swine disease.
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PMID:Porcine epidemic abortion and respiratory syndrome (mystery swine disease). Isolation in Spain of the causative agent and experimental reproduction of the disease. 148 58

Neonatal gnotobiotic piglets were inoculated with tissue homogenates and low- and high-passage cell culture material to determine if the lesions of the newly described porcine postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) could be reproduced. For this, 17 3-day-old gnotobiotic piglets were inoculated intranasally with pelleted chloroform-treated, filtered extracts from cell cultures, filter-sterilized homogenates of lymphoid tissue from PMWS-affected piglets, or control materials. Piglets were maintained in germ-free isolators for up to 5 weeks after infection prior to euthanasia and collection of samples for analysis. All piglets inoculated with the viral inocula developed lesions typical of PMWS, including generalized lymphadenopathy, hepatitis, nephritis, interstitial pneumonia, myocarditis, and gastritis. Porcine circovirus (PCV), as well as porcine parvovirus (PPV), was detected in tissues by virus reisolation, polymerase chain reaction analysis, or immunohistochemistry. All infected piglets developed moderate to high titers of antibody to PCV and moderate titers to PPV. No lesions, virus, or virus-specific antibodies were detected in sham-inoculated or uninoculated control piglets. These studies demonstrate that the lesions of PMWS can be experimentally reproduced in gnotobiotic piglets using filterable viral agents derived from pigs with PMWS and provide an experimental basis for further investigation into the pathogenesis and control of this emerging infectious disease in swine.
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PMID:Reproduction of lesions of postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome in gnotobiotic piglets. 992 5

The mutation (g.1286T>C) of the pulmonary surfactant-associated protein C gene (SFTPC) leads to the I73T substitution in the precursor protein (pro-SP-C) and results in interstitial lung disease with the histological pattern of non-specific interstitial pneumonia and pulmonary alveolar proteinosis. Central for the disease is the abnormal processing of the SP-C pro-protein to mature SP-C; however little is known about the nature of intermediates and processing products. We report here the application of high resolution Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) mass spectrometry to the characterization of processing intermediates of hydrophobic pulmonary surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C in intra- alveolar surfactant material of a patient with I73T mutation. SP-C and SP-B processing forms were separated from broncho-alveolar lavage fluid using chloroform/methanol extraction and sodium dodecyl sulfate poly acrylamide gel electrophoreis, detected by Western blot and identified by electrospray- and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-FT-ICR mass spectrometry. The mass spectrometric and immuno-analytical results show the intra-alveolar accumulation of an aberrant C-terminal SP-C processing products in which the mature SP-C protein part is missing and aberrant processing intermediates of SP-B.
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PMID:Aberrant processing forms of lung surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C revealed by high-resolution mass spectrometry. 1913 26