Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0338671 (Steroids)
9,479 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Monoclonal antibodies to pregnanediol-3-glucuronide were produced and characterized. One of three clones investigated provided antibody suitable for a direct urinary enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The ELISA uses a pregnanediol-thyroglobulin conjugate adsorbed onto the wells of a standard 96-well microtiter plate. Pregnanediol-3-glucuronide in standards or diluted urine competes with the immobilized steroid for antibody-binding sites. After washing, mouse monoclonal antibody bound to the plate is probed with antimouse immunoglobulin peroxidase. After further washing, o-phenylenediamine substrate is added and, finally, the absorbance is read at 492 nm. The ELISA shows excellent performance and agreement with the previous gas chromatographic method. The ELISA is ideal for aiding the assessment of ovarian function in the routine laboratory.
Steroids 1990 Jul
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to pregnanediol-3-glucuronide: application to a direct enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of urine. 221 99

Epilepsy complicates severe head trauma. Development of persistent seizures appears to correlate with the extent of trauma. Although early reports suggested that prophylactic administration of antiepileptic drugs would prevent epileptogenesis, controlled studies have failed to corroborate this assumption. Head trauma initiates a sequence of responses that includes altered blood flow and vasoregulation, disruption of the blood-brain barrier, increases in intracranial pressure, focal or diffuse ischemia, hemorrhage, inflammation, necrosis, and disruption of fiber tracts. The presence of an intracranial hematoma has a robust association with the development of post-traumatic epilepsy. Extravasation of blood is followed by hemolysis and deposition of heme-containing compounds into the neuropil, initiating a sequence of univalent redox reactions and generating various free radical species, including superoxides, hydroxyl radicals, peroxides, and perferryl ions. Free radicals initiate peroxidation reactions by hydrogen abstraction from methylene groups adjacent to double bonds of fatty acids and lipids within cellular membranes. Intrinsic enzymatic mechanisms for control of free radical reactions include activation of catalase, peroxidase, and superoxide dismutase. Steroids, proteins, and tocopherol also terminate peroxidative reactions. Tocopherol and selenium are effective in preventing tissue injury initiated by ferrous chloride and heme compounds. Treatment strategies for prevention or prophylaxis of post-traumatic epilepsy must await absolute knowledge of mechanisms. Antioxidants and chelators may be useful, given the speculation that peroxidative reactions may be an important component of brain injury responses. However, potential treatment strategies involving gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) agonists, NMDA receptor antagonists, and barbiturates need further scientific assessment.
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PMID:Post-traumatic epilepsy: cellular mechanisms and implications for treatment. 222 73

Prostaglandin H synthase (PHS) from ram seminal vesicle microsomes was found to catalyze the release of tritium (3H) from estradiol (E2) regiospecifically labeled in position C-2 or C-4 of ring A but not from positions C-17 alpha, C-16 alpha, or C-6,7. Formation of 3H2O from ring A of E2 is dependent upon native enzyme supplemented with either arachidonic acid, eicosapentaenoic acid, or hydrogen peroxide and proceeds very rapidly as do other cooxidation reactions catalyzed by PHS-peroxidase. The 3H-loss from ring A of E2 reflecting oxidative displacement of this isotope by PHS increases linearly up to 100 microM under our conditions (8-45 nmol/mg x 5 min). Loss of tritium in various blanks is negligible by comparison. Indomethacin (0.07 and 0.2 mM) inhibited the PHS-dependent release of 3H2O from estradiol but less efficiently than it inhibited DES-cooxidation measured in parallel incubations under similar conditions. Addition of EDTA (0.5 mM) had no effect on the regiospecific transfer of 3H from E2 or on DES-oxidation; ascorbic acid (0.5 mM) or NADH (0.33 mM) clearly inhibited both reactions and to a similar extent. These data suggest that estradiol-2/4-hydroxylation can be catalyzed by PHS in vitro probably via its peroxidase activity and point to PHS as an enzyme that could contribute to catechol estrogen formation in vitro by tissue preparations in the presence of unsaturated fatty acids or peroxides.
Steroids 1987 Jun
PMID:Prostaglandin H synthase catalyzes regiospecific release of tritium from labeled estradiol. 313 54

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for 11-deoxycortisol is described for the first time. 11-Deoxycortisol-thyroglobulin conjugate is adsorbed onto the wells of a 96-well ELISA plate and competes with 11-deoxycortisol in the standards or plasma extract for antibody binding sites. After washing, immobilized primary antibody is probed with peroxidase-labeled goat anti-rabbit IgG. The ELISA plate is further washed and o-phenylenediamine added, color developed and the absorbance read at 492 nm. The ELISA shows good agreement with our existing 11-deoxycortisol radioimmunoassay (RIA) and has similar specificity and performance which allow its use in the routine steroid laboratory for assessing pituitary adrenal function by the metyrapone test.
Steroids 1986 Jun
PMID:A competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for plasma 11-deoxycortisol (17,21-dihydroxy-4-pregnene-3,20-dione). 361 14

A new, enzyme-linked, immunosorbent assay for testosterone is described. The assay uses horseradish peroxidase coupled to testosterone as the tracer and offers the same sensitivity and reliability but greater convenience than radioimmunoassay. The assay is also simpler and more rapidly completed than previously described assays for testosterone.
Steroids 1985 Dec
PMID:A simple enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for testosterone. 384 26

Treating immature female rats with estradiol sc, 1 mcg in saline or .1 mcg in oil for 2 days, induced a peroxidase in the uterus which converted carbon-14 labeled estradiol into water soluble products in vitro. Uterine extracts prepared by Klebanoff's method were incubated for 1 hour at 38 degrees C with labeled estradiol, hydrogen peroxide, dichlorophenol, and bovine serum albumin in sodium ponsphate buffer. After extracting the medium with ether, the radioactivity in both phases was determined and the steroids in the ether phase were identified by thin layer chromatography. .1 mcg estradiol injected in saline did not affect either yield of estrone or water soluble metabolites. .1 mcg estradiol given in oil or 1 mcg in saline increased both the yield of soluble metabolites over fourfold and the percent conversion of estradiol to estrone sevenfold (oil) and twofold (saline). Thus estradiol is metabolized in the uterus; this metabolism may be a local control for duration of estrogen action.
Steroids 1972 Jul
PMID:Estrogen-induced metabolism of estradiol-17 in the rat uterus: a possible mechanism for the termination of estrogen action. 504 3

The purposes of this study were to develop an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for determination of progesterone in unextracted whole milk and to apply it to pregnancy diagnosis. Paper fibers covalently coupled to antibody specifically and competitively bound 3H-progesterone and 11 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone hemisuccinate-horseradish peroxidase and were stable for 9 mo at -20 degrees C. The sensitivity, recovery, precision, and cross reactivity of the EIA and a radioimmunoassay (RIA) of milk progesterone were evaluated, and showed that this EIA was comparable to the RIA. Milk samples were collected once daily for one estrous cycle from ten lactating Holstein cows and the progesterone levels were determined by RIA. Milk progesterone in 70 samples measured by EIA were highly correlated (r = 0.90) with the values of RIA for the same samples. Milk samples for pregnancy diagnosis by EIA of milk progesterone were obtained daily from days 20 to 24 after 115 artificial inseminations of 85 lactating Holstein cows. Pregnancy diagnosis by EIA was confirmed by rectal palpation at 30 to 60 days after insemination or return to estrus. The accuracy based on single, two, three, four, and five consecutive samples was from 67.2 to 80.0%, 77.3 to 84.0%, 79.2 to 87.5%, 82.0 to 85.4%, and 85.4%, respectively, for pregnancy diagnosis; and from 95.0 to 98.3% for nonpregnancy.
Steroids 1983 Feb
PMID:Development of a direct enzyme immunoassay of milk progesterone and its application to pregnancy diagnosis in cows. 636 87

A competitive enhanced luminescent enzyme immunoassay for serum progesterone is described, which is based on a 11 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone 11-hemisuccinyl-horseradish peroxidase conjugate and a black polystyrene microtitre plate sensitised with anti-progesterone IgG. Bound label was determined using a mixture of 4-iodophenol, luminol and peroxide, and the light emitted from the wells of the plate quantitated using a luminescent plate reader. The assay was sensitive (detection limit 0.5 pg), precise (CV 2.7 - 9.0% in the concentration range 4.3-67.7 nM) and showed good correlation (r = 0.99) with a conventional radioimmunoassay.
Steroids 1984 Oct
PMID:An enhanced chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay for serum progesterone. 640 58

We report a highly sensitive enzyme immunoassay for dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and its sulfate (DHEA-S) using horseradish peroxidase as the label enzyme. Separation of free and bound DHEA-peroxidase conjugate was by insolubilized antibody, prepared by coupling purified IgG of goat anti-rabbit IgG serum with Sepharose 4B or a polystyrene tube. The enzyme activity was measured by the chemiluminescence reaction using luminol and hydrogen peroxide as substrate. The faint chemiluminescence was measured by a photon counter. The sensitivity was 25 pg/assay tube for DHEA and 100 pg/assay tube for DHEA-S. Upon comparison, results obtained by radioimmunoassay and this method showed good agreement ; r = 0.86 for free DHEA, r = 0.92 for acid-hydrolyzed DHEA-S and r = 0.91 for solvolyzed DHEA-S. The present method is applicable in the routine determination of DHEA and DHEA-S in biological fluid.
Steroids 1981 Oct
PMID:Chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay of dehydroepiandrosterone and its sulfate using peroxidase as label. 645 29

A competitive, sensitive, and rapid enzyme-linked immunoadsorbent assay (ELISA) was developed for the determination of estriol in saliva and in plasma. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was used as the label enzyme; separation between free and bound steroid was carried out by insolubilized antibody prepared by adsorbing purified IgG of rabbit anti-6-oxoestriol-6-(O-carboxymethyl)oxime-BSA on polystyrene balls. The enzyme activity was measured by a colorimetric reaction using o-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride and hydrogen peroxide as substrate. The sensitivity of the assay was 12 pg/tube. In order to compare ELISA to RIA estriol estimations in different biological fluids, we selected six women during normal pregnancy, from the 30th to the 40th week of gestation. Salivary estriol was assayed by direct and extraction methods, while the corresponding plasma samples of the same subjects were analyzed only for unconjugated estriol by an extraction method. A good agreement was found between the results obtained by RIA and ELISA: r = 0.897, p less than 0.001 between direct RIA and direct ELISA in saliva; r = 0.909, p less than 0.001 between extraction RIA and direct ELISA in saliva; and r = 0.916, p less than 0.001 between extraction RIA and extraction ELISA in plasma. A good correlation (r = 0.793, p less than 0.001) was present between plasma samples by RIA and saliva samples by ELISA (direct method). These results indicate that: ELISA is a reliable method for the determination of estriol in plasma and saliva. Saliva samples can be used for the assay of estriol and therefore for the assessment of fetal conditions during pregnancy.
Steroids 1984 May
PMID:ELISA for salivary and plasma estriol in pregnancy. 653 83


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