Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02774 (Gc-globulin)
196 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

All seven pure yolk sac tumors of gonadal and extragonadal origin tested showed a bright positive fluorescence for alpha-fetoprotein in the tumor tissue. A positive reaction was seen in both the tumor cells and the hyaline globules. In all cases, however, the positive fluorescence was distributed in some focal areas of the tumor tissue. Certain tumor cells showed a strong granular intracytoplasmic fluorescence, whereas others showed a weak or a negative fluorescence. The fluorescence-positive tumor cells were located mainly in the areas rich in fluorescence-positive hyaline globules. Besides alpha-fetoprotein, certain plasma proteins--albumin, alpha-1 antitrypsin, and transferrin--were also demonstrated in all five yolk sac tumors tested. The pattern of the distribution of positive fluorescence was basically similar to that of alpha-fetroprotein. Other plasma proteins--orosomucoid, haptoglobin, Gc-globulin, alpha-2 macroglobulin, hemopexin, and ceruloplasmin--were present in certain tumors, and were distributed mainly in a limited number of hyaline globules. Both IgG and IgA were present in two tumors of ovarian origin. The immunoglobulins were for the most part present in extracellular hyaline globules, suggesting that these are taken up from the circulation. Test for fibrinogen, beta-lipoprotein, IgM, IgE, beta-1C/beta-1A and beta-1E globulins were negative or questionable. In a hepatoblastoma, tests for alpha-fetoprotein were positive, but those for other plasma proteins were negative. Fine granular fluorescence was seen in each hepatocellular tumor cell. Mesenchymal elements were virtually unstained.
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PMID:Immunofluorescent demonstration of alpha- fetoprotein and other plasma proteins in yolk sac tumor. 6 8

Sera were sampled from 83 people (pre- and post-menopausal women and men). Climacteric symptoms of 23 women were treated with conjugated estrogen. Sera were sampled serially until the 21st day of estrogen administration. Serum concentrations of 40 protein components were measured by micro single radial immunodiffusion. The serum proteins were classified into 5 types according to changes after menopause and estrogen therapy, respectively. Type 1 (decreased after menopause and increased by estrogen; alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 2-HS - glycoprotein, beta 2-glycoprotein III, Gc-globulin, alpha 1-lipoprotein and alpha 2-AP-glycoprotein), type 2 (unchanged and increased; ceruloplasmin), type 3 (increased and decreased; alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, haptoglobin, serum amyloid P-component, Zn-alpha 2-glycoprotein, beta-lipoprotein and C1-components), type 4 (unchanged and decreased; hemopexin, antithrombin III, beta 2-glycoprotein I, prealbumin and retinol-binding-protein), type 5 (unchanged by estrogen; immunoglobulin M (IgM), IgG and others). Estrogen replacement therapy restored pre-menopausal levels of serum proteins, types 1 and 3. However, estrogen therapy was associated with significantly abnormal levels of proteins, types 2 and 4 in post-menopausal women. Serum levels of type 1 proteins and some type 5 proteins (IgM, alpha 1B-glycoprotein, C9-component and alpha 2-macroglobulin) were higher in pre-menopausal women than in men, whereas type 3 proteins were the opposite.
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PMID:Changes in 40 serum proteins of post-menopausal women. 186 40

Crossed immunoelectrophoresis (X-IEP) revealed several abnormalities in serum proteins from patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), tuberculosis (TB), and cystic fibrosis (CF). The two quite different kinds of pulmonary disease, one acute (ARDS) and the other chronic (TB and CF) exhibited serum changes specific for each disease and abnormalities associated with inflammation and pathogenesis, in general. In ARDS sera, most proteins were extremely low, presumably due to leakage into the lungs through damaged tissue, while the acute-phase proteins, orosomucoid, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and haptoglobin, were markedly high when compared to the overall protein pattern. The extremely high alpha 1-antichymotrypsin values were not seen in corresponding TB and CF sera. Numerous TB patients had elevated alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and haptoglobin, but only the alpha 1-antitrypsin population mean was significantly different from normal. Gc-globulin, ceruloplasmin, and beta-lipoprotein were higher and alpha 1-lipoprotein and inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor lower than normal. All other quantitative serum changes were not statistically significant. Surprisingly, all TB patients belonged to the Gc-1-1 genotype in contrast to the Gc-1-1, Gc-1-2, Gc-2-2 polymorphisms of the other populations. CF homozygote sera revealed statistically significant increases in the acute-phase proteins, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and haptoglobin, while orosomucoid, transferrin, IgA, and IgG tended to be higher than normal. The tendency for higher levels of transferrin indicated possible iron deficiency in some patients. In contrast, prealbumin, alpha 1-lipoprotein, and inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor were significantly depressed in CF patients. CF heterozygotes shared the decrease of alpha 1-lipoprotein with the patients while exhibiting small but significant depressions of alpha 2-macroglobulin and IgG. Though not statistically significant, lowered concentrations of alpha 1-antitrypsin were evident for the heterozygotes.
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PMID:Protein abnormalities in adult respiratory distress syndrome, tuberculosis, and cystic fibrosis sera. 243 15

Serum proteins in normal and ARDS bronchoalveolar lavages were analyzed using crossed immunoelectrophoresis. Normal lavages demonstrated relatively few proteins (albumin, alpha 1-antitrypsin, transferrin, and haptoglobin) in low concentrations. In contrast, substantial amounts of all identifiable serum proteins were detected in ARDS lavages. IgA was apparently locally produced. Two of the largest proteins, beta-lipoprotein (mol wt greater than 2 million) and IgM (mol wt approximately 900,000) were found to be complexed as evidenced by their coprecipitation in a single spike in ARDS lavage. Electrophoretic modifications of ARDS albumin and alpha 1-antitrypsin precipitation peaks and partial identity spurring of the alpha 1-lipoprotein peak with other precipitation loops indicated possible complex formation between these proteins and other possibly pathogenic lung fluid constituents. Similarly, modifications of orosomucoid and Gc-globulin peaks indicated possible molecular alterations resulting from interactions with other components. The relatively few protein modifications exhibited in ARDS lavages together with alpha 1-antitrypsin-protease complex formation confirm the relative absence of substantial proteolytic activity in ARDS edema fluids obtained within 12 hr of the onset of the syndrome demonstrated in previous studies.
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PMID:Crossed immunoelectrophoretic analysis of ARDS lavage proteins. 379 28

Twenty-seven independent polymorphic loci were detected by two-dimensional electrophoresis (2DE) of serum, erythrocytes, and fibroblasts in two large families and analyzed for linkage to classical genetic markers. We detected seven serum, four erythrocyte, and 17 fibroblast protein loci that exhibited charge variation in these two families and in a sample of unrelated individuals. The genetic basis of protein variants was confirmed by quantitative gene-dosage dependence and by conformance to Mendelian transmission in the two families, except for four rare variants for which transmission analysis was not possible. Linkage analysis demonstrated that each of the variants represent products of independent loci, with the exception of erythrocyte locus (RBC4), which we also detected in fibroblasts (NC27). Two allozyme polymorphisms, glyoxalase-1 (GLO1) and phosphoglucomutase-3 (PGM3) were specifically identified here based on genotypic concordance and molecular mass. Unknown fibroblast protein (NC22) may be linked to apolipoprotein E (lod score = 2.8 at theta m = theta f = 0), while a serum protein locus (SER1) may be linked to alpha-haptoglobin (lod score = 2.54 at theta m = .20, theta f = .01). Six of seven polymorphic serum loci were previously located on two-dimensional gels: alpha-1 antitrypsin (PI), Gc-globulin (GC), alpha-2 HS glycoprotein (HSGA), alpha-haptoglobin (HP), and two apolipoproteins (APOE and APOA4). Six of 17 polymorphisms detected in fibroblasts were positionally identical to polymorphic loci seen in lymphocytes. These studies indicate a minimum level of average protein charge heterozygosity of approximately 2.2% for the most predominant human cellular proteins and of 5.6% for the most predominant proteins of serum.
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PMID:Twenty-seven protein polymorphisms by two-dimensional electrophoresis of serum, erythrocytes, and fibroblasts in two pedigrees. 386 81

The beta-D-galactoside-specific lectin from Allomyrina dichotoma reacts with serum proteins which contain the corresponding carbohydrate moieties. By affinity chromatography of human serum using the insolubilized lectin coupled to Sepharose, it is possible to fractionate human serum proteins in 2 groups: those which react with the lectin (alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, haptoglobin, etc.) and those which do not (albumin, Gc-globulin, etc.). IgG is the only serum protein that can be found in both groups.
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PMID:Affinity chromatography of human serum proteins using immobilized lectin from Allomyrina dichotoma. 402 67

Urine was collected from 6 healthy male adults at rest and from 20 male adults after a marathon race (25 miles). The concentrated urines were quantitatively analyzed, by single radial immunodiffusion, for their content in 12 different plasma proteins: tryptophan-rich prealbumin, albumin, alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein, alpha(1)-antitrypsin, ceruloplasmin, haptoglobin, Gc-globulin, transferrin, hemopexin, beta(2)-glycoprotein I, gammaA-globulin, and gammaG-globulin.Albumin, gammaA-globulin, and gammaG-globulin represent the major part of the plasma proteins detected in normal urine excreted by humans at rest (12, 0.5, and 2.5 mg respectively, out of a total excretion of 17.5 mg of plasma proteins per 24 hr). The other plasma proteins were excreted at a lower rate (< 0.4 mg/24 hr). The relative content of tryptophan-rich prealbumin, alpha(1)-antitrypsin, Gc-globulin, transferrin, and gammaG-globulin was lower in normal urine than in normal serum, whereas that of alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein, beta(2)-glycoprotein I, and gammaA-globulin was higher. The ratio of gammaG-globulin to gammaA-globulin was 4.9:1. When plotted on a logarithmic scale, no direct relationship between the molecular weight of a protein and the value of its renal clearance could be observed.Strenuous exercise increased (up to 50-fold) the excretion of plasma proteins which represent 82% of the total proteins found in urine, instead of 57% in urine collected from humans at rest. There was particularly a significant rise of tryptophan-rich albumin, albumin, alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein, transferrin, gammaA-globulin, and gammaG-globulin (0.26, 127, 11.8, 3.3, 1.2, and 2.0 mug respectively, out of a total excretion of 167 mug of plasma proteins per min). The ratio of gammaG-globulin to gammaA-globulin was 16:1. After exercise, the renal clearance of proteins increased from 2 to 40 times, but, as for the urine of normal subjects at rest, no direct relationship between molecular weight and renal clearance could be observed.
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PMID:Quantitative immunological determination of 12 plasma proteins excreted in human urine collected before and after exercise. 417 Mar 90

Immunologic analyses of urinary proteins in patients with gestosis and related obstetrical conditions were performed and urinary protein patterns were compared with blood plasma protein patterns. Many kinds of proteins could be detected in urine of patients with gestosis beside albumin. Therefore, "proteinuria" should be chosen to characterise this state instead of the term "albuminuria". Generally speaking, when a total volume of protein contained in urine increases, its types or subfractions also increase in urine. Next to albumin, the most commonly detected proteins in urine of patients with gestosis were transferrin, IgG, inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor, alpha 1-antitrypsin, IgA, alpha 2-HS-glycoprotein, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, Gc-globulin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, hemopexin, ceruloplasmin, prealbumin, haptoglobin, anti-thrombin III, Cl-inactivator, IgM, and alpha 2-macroglobulin, in the descending order of their occurrence. Proteins that promptly became negative in urine of gestosis patients after delivery were inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitor, IgA, and ceruloplasmin. On the other hand, proteins most apt to persist in urine were albumin, alpha 2-HS-glycoprotein, and IgG. Generally speaking, lower molecular weight proteins were likely to persist in urine after delivery. Simultaneous determination of blood plasma and urinary proteins was performed for 18 kinds or subfractions of protein. A prognostic value of renal protein clearance was discussed.
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PMID:A study on proteins contained in urine of gestosis patients. 641 21

The presence of the glycoproteins haptoglobin and hemopexin in human plasma albumin (HPA) solutions were demonstrated to be responsible for the formation of polymers and aggregates during heat treatment for 10 h at 60 degrees C. Apart from haptoglobin and hemopexin three other contaminating proteins were identified as transferrin, Gc-globulin and beta 2-glycoprotein. During heat treatment the antigenicity of haptoglobin and hemopexin changed markedly and more than 90% of the antigens appeared as aggregates in the void volume during the following size chromatography. Without loss of albumin haptoglobin and hemopexin were removed from the HPA preparation by lectin (concanavalin A) affinity chromatography. The haptoglobin- and hemopexin-depleted HPA preparation did not form aggregates or polymers during heat treatment.
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PMID:Identification and removal of polymer- and aggregate-forming proteins in human plasma albumin preparations. 780

In vitro treatment of mouse peritoneal cells with 1 micrograms lysophosphatidylcholine (lyso-Pc)/mL in serum free-0.1% egg albumin-supplemented RPMI 1640 medium for 30 min, followed by 3 h cultivation in a medium supplemented with human serum, resulted in a greatly enhanced Fc-receptor-mediated phagocytic activity of macrophages. Vitamin D-binding protein (group-specific component [Gc]) of alpha 2-globulin fraction was shown to be the sole serum glycoprotein required for the generation of a potent macrophage-activating factor. When a mixture of lysophosphatidylcholine (lyso-Pc)-treated nonadherent and adherent cells were cultured in a medium supplemented with a small amount of purified Gc protein (1 ng/mL), a greatly enhanced activation of macrophages was demonstrated. The generation of macrophage-activating factor from purified Gc protein was far more efficient than that from whole serum, indicating that a serum component is inhibitory to the activation process of macrophages. While three other major serum glycoproteins (alpha 2-macroglobulin, alpha 2-HS-glycoprotein and haptoglobin) were neither stimulatory nor inhibitory to lyso-Pc-primed macrophage activation, serum albumin (competitively with Gc protein) appeared to be inhibitory to the process of macrophage activation.
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PMID:Vitamin D-binding protein (group-specific component) is the sole serum protein required for macrophage activation after treatment of peritoneal cells with lysophosphatidylcholine. 822 94


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