Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0409974 (lupus)
22,386 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Calorie restriction (CR) and supplementation with fish oil (FO) are known to increase the life span and diminish histological evidence of glomerulonephritis in lupus prone (NZB x NZW)F1 (B/W) mice. Cellular proliferation is an important pathological element in the development of lupus nephritis, and we have examined the expression of thrombin receptor (TR) and the mitogenic agents PDGF-A and -B. Weanling B/W mice were fed either ad libitum or a calorie restricted (CR; 40% less calories than ad libitum) diet supplemented with either 5% (w/w) corn oil (CO) or FO. CR animals consumed 2.7-3.0 g of wet food per day versus 4.5-5.0 g for the ad libitum animals. Renal RNA was extracted from young (3.5-4.0 months of age) and old (8-10 months of age) mice. Densitometric analysis (reference gene GAPDH) of blots from Northern (PDGF-A and -B) and ribonuclease protection assays (TR) produced the following data: (i) in young mice no signal was detected for PDGF-A, -B and TR in all four groups, while the signals were readily detectable in old mice; (ii) in old mice low and similar levels of PDGF-B were detected, and neither CR nor the source of lipid altered its expression; (iii) CR significantly inhibited PDGF-A and TR expression in both CO (ad libitum versus CR; PDGF-A, 3.25-fold, P < 0.025; TR, 3.7-fold, P < 0.01) and FO (ad libitum versus CR; PDGF-A, 4.56-fold, P < 0.01; TR, 3.6-fold, P < 0.025) groups; (iv) although FO (versus CO) produced a trend towards decreased expression, results were not statistically significant. We conclude that suppression of renal disease in lupus-prone mice by CR is accompanied by decreased expression of PDGF-A and the thrombin receptor.
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PMID:Calorie restriction decreases platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-A and thrombin receptor mRNA expression in autoimmune murine lupus nephritis. 909 12

In conclusion, a revised view of the contact system has been presented. This system has little to do with the initiation of hemostasis. Like lupus anticoagulants, deficiencies of contact proteins give prolonged APTTs but may be risk factors for thrombosis. BK from kininogens is a potent modulator of vascular biology inducing vasodilation, tissue plasminogen activator release, and prostacyclin liberation. Kininogens, themselves, are selective inhibitors of alpha-thrombin-induced platelet activation preventing alpha-thrombin from cleaving the cloned thrombin receptor after arginine41. Kininogens' alpha-thrombin inhibitory activity exists in intact kininogens, BK, and all of BK's breakdown products. HK also is the pivotal protein for contact protein assembly on endothelium. It is the receptor for prekallikrein which when bound to HK becomes activated to kallikrein by an endothelial cell enzyme system independent of activated forms of plasma factor XII. Prekallikrein activation on endothelial cells results in kinetically favorable single chain urokinase and plasminogen activation. Thus the "physiologic, negatively charged surface" for contact system activation is really the assembly of these proteins on cell membranes and activation by membrane-associated enzymes.
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PMID:Contact activation: a revision. 919 36

Endothelial cells form a multifunctional cell lining that covers all of the inner surface of blood vessels and regulates several important physiological and pathological reactions. These include inflammation/immune reaction, blood vessel tonus, hemostasis/thrombosis, angiogenesis and so on. Thus, abnormalities of endothelial function may play crucial roles in the development of angitis syndrome, thrombosis/embolism, bleeding disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), and neovascularization in some pathological states including tumor growth and diabetic retinopathy. Research on endothelial cells now forms a new frontier termed 'Endotheliology'. Recent advances of the functional and structural aspects of endothelial cells are reviewed here mainly from the viewpoint of endothelial regulation of coagulation and the fibrinolytic system. First we show that the natural endothelial membrane protein thrombomodulin is localized not only on apical endothelial surface but also in caveolae. Since it has been reported that such factors involved in coagulation/fibrinolysis as tissue factor, tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), thrombin receptor and urokinase receptor are also localized in the caveolae, this membrane structure may act as a special component to regulate coagulation/fibrinolysis on the endothelial membrane surface. Next we demonstrate the signaling pathway of the thrombin receptor. Thrombin cleaves the N-terminus of the receptor as a substrate, exposing a new N-terminus. This newly exposed N-terminus acts as a ligand and activates platelets, endothelial cells and vascular smooth-muscle cells. We have identified that the signal from the thrombin receptor activates NF-kappaB through the activation of protein C kinase, tyrosine kinase and MAP kinase, and results in proliferation of the cells. We have also shown that the receptor is over-expressed on platelets from diabetes patients.
Lupus 1998
PMID:Biology of endothelium. 981 71

Thrombomodulin (TM), a high affinity thrombin receptor present on endothelial cell membrane, plays an important role as a natural anticoagulant. It acts as a cofactor of thrombin-catalyzed activation of protein C, and inhibits the procoagulant functions of thrombin. TM is also located in other cells (keratinocytes, osteoblasts, macrophages,...) where it might be involved in cell differentiation or in inflammation. In the presence of cytokines, activated neutrophils and macrophages, endothelial TM is cleaved enzymatically, releasing soluble fragments which circulate in the blood and are eliminated in urine. Plasma TM level (pTM) can be measured using a two-site enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). pTM level is regarded as a molecular marker reflecting injury of endothelial cells. It is often increased in case of diffuse endothelial damage as in disseminated intravascular coagulation, diabetic microangiopathy, Plasmodium falciparum and rickettsial infections. pTM is also a predictive marker of hypertensive complications in pregnancy. In several systemic inflammatory diseases, pTM levels are correlated to the activity of the disease.
Lupus 1998
PMID:Thrombomodulin: an overview and potential implications in vascular disorders. 981 88