Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two hundred and forty-one cases of isolated ACTH deficiency have been reported in Japan since 1969. Pituitary hormone responsiveness to stimulation tests before and after hydrocortisone supplementation was investigated in these cases. Plasma ACTH level showed no or little change in response to lysine vasopressin, metyrapone, CRF or insulin-induced hypoglycemia in 97.3-100% of the cases. Serum GH level changed little or not at all in response to GRF, insulin-induced hypoglycemia, glucagon, 1-dopa and arginine in 26.9, 29.3, 40.0, 50.0 and 56.1%, respectively. Serum TSH and prolactin (PRL) levels showed hyperresponse to TRH in 34.7 and 35.6%, respectively. After hydrocortisone therapy, GH secretion was more responsive than before therapy in 78.9% of the cases. After supplementation, TSH level was less responsive to TRH stimulation than before therapy in 59.3% of the cases. After hydrocortisone supplementation, TSH response to TRH decreased in 75% of ACTH-deficient patients without primary hypothyroidism but did not decrease in more than half of those with primary hypothyroidism. TSH response to TRH decreased after supplementation in 76.5% of the patients with TSH hyperresponsiveness before therapy, and increased after therapy in 66.7% of those with normal TSH responses before therapy. After supplementation, PRL response to TRH was less than that before therapy in 43.5% of ACTH--deficient patients, and greater than that before therapy in 30.4%. PRL response to TRH decreased after therapy in 66.7% of the patients with PRL hyperresponsiveness before therapy, and increased in 63.6% of those with normal PRL response before therapy. Primary hypothyroidism and Hashimoto's thyroiditis were complicated in 21.6 and 11.6%, respectively, of the 241 patients with isolated ACTH deficiency. In patients who had TSH hyperresponsiveness and/or high basal TSH levels and PRL hyperresponsiveness and/or high basal PRL levels, primary hypothyroidism was complicated in 58.4 and 42.3%, respectively. Hashimoto's thyroiditis was complicated in 29.8 and 20.5%, respectively, of these patients. Pituitary cell antibody (PCA) was detected in 36.6% of ACTH-deficient patients who were examined. Pituitary cell surface antibody (PCSA) to AtT-20 cells and GH3 cells was detected in 50.0 and 28.0% of the examined cases, respectively. The prevalence of PCA and PCSA did not differ between TSH-hyperresponsive patients and those with normal TSH basal levels and response, whereas PCA and PCSA were significantly more prevalent in PRL-hyperresponsive patients than in those with normal PRL levels and response. An empty sella was found in 30.2% of the examined case.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Hyperresponsiveness of TSH and prolactin and impaired responsiveness of GH in Japanese patients with isolated ACTH deficiency]. 133 97

This report describes a new method for detecting and quantitating those immunoglobulins G (IgG) in serum that are related to Graves' disease. The method is based on previous observations which indicate that the guinea pig fat cell membrane (FCM) is capable of binding Graves'-specific IgG, but does not bind the IgG common to Graves' disease and Hashimoto's disease, such as antimicrosomal antibodies. Crude FCM preparations were iodinated by a lactoperoxidase technique and were then treated with Triton X-100 to yield a solubilized radioiodinated FCM (SFCM) preparation. SFCM, which retained bovine (b) TSH binding and Graves'-IgG binding properties, provided a radioactively labeled receptor with which to test for the presence of fat cell-binding IgG (FBI) in immunoprecipitates prepared by reacting these IgG with antibody against the Fc fragment of human IgG. FBI values (percentage of added SFCM bound to immunoprecipitate; mean + SD) in IgG from 16 patients with thyrotoxicosis caused by Graves' disease (6.0 +/- 1.7) were completely separated from those in IgG from 16 normal subjects (0.4 +/- 0.3). IgG from 2 hypothyroid patients with Hashimoto's disease, which were strongly positive in the TSH binding inhibition (TBI) assay, yielded FBI values within the range in Graves' disease, but values in TBI-negative IgG from 15 other patients with Hashimoto's disease were normal (0.0 +/- 0.9). Moderately false positive FBI values were found in the IgG of 15 patients with rheumatoid arthritis or systemic lupus erythematosis, all rheumatoid factor positive, 3 of which were also TBI positive. In IgG from Graves' disease and those from patients with TBI-positive collagen-vascular disease, binding of SFCM was inhibited by bTSH in a dose-dependent manner. As with binding of TSH to thyroid plasma membranes, similar but less potent inhibition of binding of IgG to SFCM was produced by LH, FSH, and hCG, but not by insulin, glucagon, PRL, or ACTH. FBI values in TBI-negative IgG from patients with collagen-vascular disease were also decreased by TSH, but higher concentrations of bTSH were required. In 40 IgG from among the various clinical groups tested, a significant correlation was found between FBI values and TBI activity (r = 0.48; P less than 0.01). In addition, among 10 IgG from Graves' disease and 6 from collagen-vascular disease patients, a very close correlation (r = 0.89; P less than 0.001) was noted between their TBI activity and the extent to which their FBI values were decreased by a standard concentration of bTSH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Detection and measurement of fat cell-binding immunoglobulins: a new method applicable to the diagnosis and study of Graves' disease. 299 73

We report a 79-year-old woman case of slowly progressive IDDM (SPIDDM) with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and Hashimoto disease. High titer of anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase antibody (GAD) with a value of 16,400 U/ml (normal value: less than 5 U/ml) and deteriorated secretion of insulin, and clinical course led to the diagnosis of SPIDDM. Both anti-islet cell and anti-insulin antibodies were negative. One year prior to the diagnosis, at 78 years of age, she was newly diagnosed with NIDDM and had been medicated with sulfonylurea and voglibose, resulting her glucose levels well-controlled. Four months before admission, a gradual increase of plasma glucose was noticed, while oral hypoglycemic agents were fully administrated. On admission, her glycemic control was revealed as follows; a fasting blood glucose level of 458 mg/dl and an HbA1 C level of 14.3%. Urinary CPR was 22.5 micrograms day. Her insulin secretion was proved not to be induced with intravenous glucagon injection. Hyperinsulinemic euglycemic glucose clamp test showed the normal glucose uptake ratio; 9.5 mg/kg/min. Moderate doses of subcutaneous insulin (20 units daily) were effective on her diabetes control. She was newly diagnosed with Hashimoto disease that required thyroid hormone replacement 50 micrograms per day after having developed NIDDM. High titer of anti-thyroglobulin antibody (46.9 U/ml) and anti-thyroid peroxidase antibody (81.5 U/ml) were observed. The patient had been medicated for RA with anti-inflammatory drugs since her early seventieth. Rheumatoid factor was elevated to 127.7 IU/L and, anti-nuclear antibody (x 80) and anti-DNA antibody (x 80) were present. It may be of interest that a specific phenotype of HLA; A24 (9) and DR9 recognized to be susceptible to IDDM was detected in the high-elderly onset SPIDDM. Taken together HLA typing with her history of both RA and Hashimoto disease, our case may provide the information to the mechanism of pathogenesis of SPIDDM. Furthermore, to out knowledge, this is the first case of SPIDDM in the aged; 75-year-old or more.
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PMID:[Slowly progressive IDDM with rheumatoid arthritis and Hashimoto disease in high elderly]. 977 59