Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P00790 (PGA)
2,475 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The current study presents evidence that all human serum contains a class of high-affinity folate binders (KA=2.8 X10(10 liters/mole), which migrate as a single peak on gel filtration. Failure of previous studies to detect this characteristic in all but a minority of subjects is attributable to its variable, often total, saturation. Direct measurement of the total folate binding capacity (TFBC) has been made possible by dissociation of endogenous folate-binder complexes at acid pH, removal of free folate by coated charcoal, and radiofolate tagging. This procedure does not appear to significantly denature the binders, which release and rebind similar quantities of 3H-PGA. In 20 normal subjects, TFBC ranged from 100 to 325 pg/ml (mean+/-SE = 174+/-16), and was always at least 33% saturated. In three clinical conditions, all associated with elevated unsaturated folate binding capacity, three different patterns emerged when TFBC was also measured. Uremic subjects had significantly elevated mean TFBC with normal saturation. In cirrhotic subjects, mean TFBC approximated normal, but saturation was significantly decreased. In pregnancy, two groups were seen: one with increased TFBC and the other with a normal TFBC, some of whom had decreased saturation. Lactobacillus casei serum folate level was about 30 times greater than the TFBC; there was no correlation between the two measurements.
Blood 1976 Dec
PMID:Total folate binding capacity of normal human plasma, and variations in uremia, cirrhosis, and pregnancy. 1 60

Chemical modification of standard gammaglobulin with enzyme treatment (pepsin) or stabilization (beta-propiolactone) is able to influence elimination, fragmentation and organ distribution of intravenously administered gammaglobulins as shown in 36 dogs after i.v. application of allogenic and xenogenic gammaglobulin preparations. Pepsin-gammaglobulin was eliminated and fragmented most rapidly. Gammaglobulin concentrations of all preparations in the skin showed as slower decrease than comparable blood concentrations. The highest skin concentrations 10 days after i.v. application were found for beta-propiolactone gammaglobulin with 6.2 +/- 1.6 microgram/g compared to a blood level of 7.9 +/- 0.9 microgram/ml.
Arch Dermatol Res 1977 Dec 27
PMID:[Concentration of intravenously administered gammaglobulin preparations in dog skin (author's transl)]. 7 82

Pepsin 1, the ulcer-associated pepsin, occurred significantly more frequently in the gastric juice of those patients with duodenal ulcer who did not secrete A, B, or H antigens into gastric juice than in those secreting these antigens. This observation may explain the increased proportion of such non-secretors among patients with duodenal ulceration. In patients with gastric ulcer and non-ulcer dyspepsia, and in a miscellaneous group of patients, there was no association of pepsin 1 secretion with secretor status, suggesting that the association noted in duodenal ulceration is an indirect rather than a direct one. No increase of pepsin 1 occurred in group O patients with peptic ulcer, so that the increased proportion of such patients in peptic ulcer does not arise from differences in pepsin 1 secretion.
J Med Genet 1979 Dec
PMID:Hereditary aspects of duodenal ulceration: pepsin 1 secretion in relation to ABO blood groups and ABH secretor status. 11 57

Calcium and folic acid absorption were studied in 28 adult male epileptics on chronic anticonvulsant therapy. In 16 patients on diphenylhydantoin alone, calcium absorption was abnormal in 9. In 12 patients on both diphenylhydantoin and phenobarbital, calcium absorption was abnormal in 3 patients. Folic acid (3H-PGA) absorption was normal in all but one patient, while serum folate (less than 6.4 ng/ml) was reduced in all patients. Hypocalcemia (less than 8.5 mg/100 ml) occurred in only 2 patients, while serum alkaline phosphatase was elevated in 7 patients. These findings support the proposal that rickets and osteomalacia reported in patients on chronic anticonvulsant therapy results from reduced calcium absorption. The effect of these drugs appears to be the acceleration of the metabolism of vitamin D and an increase in the excretion of polar metabolites. This may result in reduced levels of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol and 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol which are necessary for normal absorption of calcium. Since calcium absorption may be impaired secondary to a relative vitamin D deficiency, a supplemental increase in vitamin D intake by patients on anticonvulsant drugs is recommended.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1975 Dec
PMID:Calcium and folic acid absorption in patients taking anticonvulsant drugs. 17 36

The NAD+-linked 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase (PGDH) of swine lung was purified to a high specific activity by affinity chromatographies on prostaglandin (PG)-and NAD+-Sepharose. The affinities of the enzyme for various synthetic analogues of PGA, E, F, and I and their inhibitory effects on the enzymatic reaction were examined. The modification of the alkyl side chain of PG, particularly at C-15 or C-16, reduced the affinity of the enzyme for these PG analogues. Furthermore, 14-methyl-13,14-dihydro-PGE1 and 16-cyclopentyl-omega-trinor-15-epi-PGE2 were potent inhibitors of PGDH.
J Biochem 1978 Dec
PMID:Studies on 15-hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase with various prostaglandin analogues. 21 66

Prostaglandins (PG) have been shown to raise the level of cyclic AMP (cAMP) in various tissues, and to increase permeability. Whether both events are linked, is at present a matter of speculation. We have investigated the effects of PGE1, E2, A1, A2, F1alpha and F2alpha on an isolated rat mesentery placed in a diffusion cell (surface area : 2 sq.cm). The PGs (5 microgram/ml) increased the passage of (I 125) - Albumin across the mesentery. In other experiments, diks of rat mesentery (surface area : 2 sq.cm) have been incubated in assay tubes, and cAMP levels measured by a binding protein assay. We have observed an excellent correlation between increases in permeability and cAMP levels (r=0.961). In order of increasing potency on both parameters, the PGs may be classified as follows : PGF, PGA and PGE. In the rat mesentery, under the influence of prostaglandins, increases in permeability and in cAMP levels are apparently connected.
Prostaglandins 1978 Dec
PMID:The role of various prostaglandins on the correlation between permeability to albumin and cAMP levels in the isolated mesentery. 21 45

Pepsin-soluble collagen was isolated from bovine vitreous humor. This collagen showed only one alpha-chain in disc electrophoresis, migrating in the alpha1-chain position and between the alpha- and beta-components some colored bands were visible. The disc electrophoretic patterns of the cyanogen bromide peptides of pepsin-soluble vitreous body collagen and pepsin-soluble type II collagen revealed no identity.
Albrecht Von Graefes Arch Klin Exp Ophthalmol 1977 Dec 31
PMID:[Comparison of the cyanogen bromide peptides of vitreous body collagen and type II collagen (author's transl)]. 34 37

Plasma prostaglandins were studied by radioimmunoassay on alternate days during the menstrual cycle in fourteen normal women. No cyclic patterns were found for A-like prostaglandins using an assay which measured 13,14-dihydro-PGA. Mean subject values of PGA-like prostaglandin ranged from 367 to 904 pg/ml and varied significantly among women. Prostaglandin E determinations showed an upward trend beginning 8 days before the LH peak. PGE subject means varied significantly and ranged from 182 to 362 pg/ml. Prostaglandin F did not exhibit a cyclic pattern. The average concentration of PGF for individual women ranged from 58 to 153 pg/ml, showing significant variance. The physiologic implications of the results are discussed as well as recommendations for the design of future studies.
Obstet Gynecol 1977 Dec
PMID:Plasma prostaglandins in the normal menstrual cycle. 92 52

A transverse transcondylar osteotomy of the distal femur was fixed with an axially placed absorbable fracture fixation screw made of polyglycolide (PGA) in 25 rabbits. Changes at the tissue-implant interface accompanying degradation of the screw were examined histologically, histomorphometrically, and microradiographically seven, 20, 40, 80, and 250 days after implantation. At seven days postimplantation, a layer of fibroblasts was seen surrounding the implant, and new bone formation was discernible in the host tissues adjacent to this membranous structure. At 20 days postimplantation, the geometry of the screw was still intact and the tissue-implant boundary was distinct. The first signs of invasion of vascular granulation tissue into the implant were observed 40 days after implantation, at which time the osteotomies were united. The apparent walling-off response by formation of new trabecular bone outlining the PGA profile continued, with the greatest mean trabecular bone volume fraction at the interface, 23.9%, measured at 40 days. A significant decrease in the new bone volume occurred between 40 and 80 days postimplantation. The intensity of the foreign-body reaction seen was histologically moderate. The giant cell count was highest at 80 days postimplantation, when the migratory activity of phagocytic cells had transported intracellular particulate polymeric debris 400-800 microns away from the original tissue-implant boundary. At 250 days postimplantation, no birefringent polymeric material could be seen in the specimens. No contraindications for the clinical application of PGA implants emerged in this study.
Clin Orthop Relat Res 1992 Dec
PMID:The tissue-implant interface during degradation of absorbable polyglycolide fracture fixation screws in the rabbit femur. 133 36

Parathyroid tumors may occur in a sporadic fashion or, more rarely, as part of a familial syndrome (such as familial multiple endocrine neoplasia type I). The MENI gene has been mapped by linkage analysis to chromosome 11 at band q11-q13, and presumably acts as a tumor suppressor gene. In the present study, which is an extension of our previous studies, we examined 41 parathyroid tumors from patients with familial multiple endocrine neoplasia type I and 61 sporadic parathyroid tumors with markers on chromosome 11, to assess the extent of allelic loss in those tumors. Twenty-four of the MENI-associated tumors (58%) and 16 of the sporadic parathyroid tumors (26%) displayed allelic loss from chromosome 11. The region of overlap of the allelic losses in the MENI-associated tumors enables us to place the MENI gene between PGA centromerically and INT2 telomerically, a region spanning about 7.5 cM. Taken together with locus ordering by linkage analysis, this clearly localizes the MENI gene telomeric to the PGA locus. Our inability to detect allelic loss on chromosome 11 in some parathyroid tumors suggests the existence of other genes involved in the development and/or progression of this subgroup of presumably monoclonal tumors; or that localized events involving the 11q tumor suppressor gene have occurred in some parathyroid tumors whose detection is beyond the sensitivity of our analysis; or that at least some of the specimens analyzed were in fact primarily hyperplastic parathyroid tissue.
Cancer Res 1992 Dec 15
PMID:Allelic loss from chromosome 11 in parathyroid tumors. 136 Aug 70


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