Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Serum ferritin concentrations were measured in 651 Black male miners who originated from rural areas throughout southern Africa and who were aged between 17 and 57 years. The mean serum ferritin concentration of 229 microgram/l was above the normal range reported for White subjects, and in 52,8% of the subjects the values were greater than 200 microgram/l. The serum ferritin concentration rose with age, as did the proportion of subjects in each age group who exhibited high values (more than 200 microgram/l). The lowest mean ferritin concentration (112 microgram/l) as well as the lowest proportion of high values (22,9%) were found in subjects from the most northerly area studied. Similarly, the highest mean proportion of high values (66,3%) was seen in the most southerly group studied. Calculations from the present data suggest that the degree of iron overload is currently greater in rural than in urban Black male subjects.
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PMID:Serum ferritin concentrations in black miners. 46 14

1. A high proportion of the ferritin in normal serum binds to concanavalin A. Binding is prevented by the addition of alpha-D-methylglucoside to the reaction mixture. 2. Ferritin in extracts of normal heart, liver and spleen or serum ferritin from patients with massive hepatic necrosis does not bind to concanavalin A. 3. Isoelectric focusing of preparations of serum ferritin from patients with primary haemochromatosis shows that the ferritin fraction binding to concanavalin A consists, predominantly, of the more acidic isoferritins. 4. These findings suggest that carbohydrate residues may be added to ferritin during its secretion into the plasma. Glycosylation may account for the heterogeneity of serum ferritin on isoelectric focusing. 5. Direct release of intracellular ferritin from damaged tissue may be indicated by an increase in the proportion of circulating ferritin which does not bind to concanavalin A. Such an increase has been found in sera from patients with iron overload.
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PMID:Binding of human serum ferritin to concanavalin A. 47 86

Recurrences of CNS infarction often lead to progressive neurologic disability in sickle cell anemia. To prevent such reccurrence, a periodic blood transfusion program was begun in 1969. Currently, 27 patients are on this regimen. Before inclusion in the program, 12 patients had had one to nine CNS recurrences each. Since the program was started, two patients have had transient CNS ischemia. There were no other recurrences and none of the patients have shown progression of neurologic abnormalities. In addition, there was a striking decrease in bacterial infection and pain. We conclude that periodic transfusions are effective in preventing recurrent CNS infarction in sickle cell anemia. The benefits must be weighed against the potentially serious problem of iron overload, as evidenced by moderately elevated serum ferritin values.
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PMID:Periodic transfusions for sickle cell anemia and CNS infarction. 51 76

Three prototype tridentate ligands (i.e., pyrazinecarboxaldehyde thiosemicarbazone, sodium pyrazinecarboxaldehyde dithiocarbazonate, and pyrazinecarboxaldehyde 2'-pyrazinylhydrazone) were prepared and evaluated for their relative abilities to remove iron from model systems designed to mimic particular aspects of chronic transfusional iron overload. These compounds were synthesized by condensation of pyrazinecarboxaldehyde with the appropriate substituted hydrazide. Iron-binding properties were determined, and the ability to remove iron from the proteins transferrin and ferritin was ascertained. An in vivo model system employing iron-loaded mice was used to demonstrate that all three compounds were effective at reducing tissue iron levels.
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PMID:Synthesis and evaluation of the thiosemicarbazone, dithiocarbazonate, and 2'-pyrazinylhydrazone of pyrazinecarboxaldehyde as agents for the treatment of iron overload. 53 78

In a group of haemodialysis patients who were iron loaded secondary to parenteral iron administration a slight but significant increase in red cell size was noted when compared to a normal population. This macrocytosis was not related to serum B12 or folate levels, or to the reticulocyte count. On stopping iron therapy both mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and mean corpuscular haemoglobin (MCH) values declined significantly as did serum ferritin and iron levels. Bone marrow smears were of normal or increased cellularity. When iron therapy was discontinued there was a steady fall in serum ferritin levels without a drop in haemoglobin values suggesting that the excess iron was available for haemopoiesis. These findings suggest that the increase in red cell size in this group of patients may have been induced directly by iron overload.
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PMID:Iron induced increase in red cell size in haemodialysis patients. 54 85

Ferritin is an iron storage protein which has been shown to be present in blood serum only recently. An immunoradiometric determination of ferritin in 324 subjects with different iron stores is reported. In healthy men and women a ferritin concentration of 131 microgram/l (SD: 1,59) and 67 microgram/l (SD: 1,79) was found respectively. In male and female blood donors as well as patients with iron deficiency and iron overload significant differences of serum ferritin concentration could be demonstrated. In clinical practice the determination of serum ferritin is a valuable method for the estimation of body iron stores.
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PMID:[Ferritin. Radioimmunological determination in serum and clinical significance (author's transl)]. 59 79

Homozygous beta-thalassaemia is a disease in which there is a progressive iron overload from infancy to death in early adulthood. Liver biopsies from 10 patients in various stages of this disease were examined by electron microscopy. A number of round or oval lysosomal structures, containing lamellae different from myelin figures, were seen in all patients, including those with minimal iron overload. Ferritin molecules were seen either in relationship with the lamellae forming arrays, or in paracrystalline arrangement, or with no organized form. There were practically no ferritin molecules in sub-cellular compartments other than cell sap and lysosomes. The density of cell sap ferritin was constant beyond infancy, but the number of iron-laden lysosomes increased with age. The stages in the process of iron seclusion, seen even in advanced phases of iron overload, are described. Ferritin is thought to accumulate in lysosomes by a transmembraneous movement, but other explanations are considered.
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PMID:Ferritin in human liver cells of homozygous beta-thalassaemia: ultrastructural observations. 60 78

The biochemical diversity of the various porphyris often leads to incomplete investigation of photosensitive patients and porphyria may be excluded wrongly on the basis of normal urinary porphyrins alone. Establishing a biochemical referral centre for photosensitive patients suspected of having porphyria led to the diagnosis of 5 cases of porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) and 2 cases of erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) among 34 patients referred by dermatologists over a period of 12 months. Iron overload was conformed in 3 the PCT patients by plasma ferritin assay. Studies on the available families of the two EPP patients revealed elevated red cell protoporphyrin levels in several clinically asymptomatic relatives.
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PMID:The detection of porphyria in photosensitive patients. 64 17

Human tissues contain ferritin molecules with a range of isoelectric points but immunoassays for detecting serum ferritin have generally employed antibodies to the more basic liver or spleen proteins. To study the distribution of more acidic ferritins in tissues and serum acidic ferritin has been isolated from normal human heart and a two-site immunoradiometric assay for this protein developed. This assay gives little cross-reaction with spleen ferritin. Tissue ferritins have been fractionated by anion exchange chromatography and assayed with both spleen and heart antibodies. The spleen ferritin assay detects the more basic ferritin and the heart ferritin assay the more acidic ferritin. Acidic ferritins were found in heart, kidney, reticulocytes and HeLa cells. In sera from normal subjects and patients with iron overload, myocardial infarction, leukaemia and carcinoma only low concentrations of heart ferritin were found, although in the pathological sera spleen ferritin concentrations were generally raised. Circulating ferritin contains only a small proportion of molecules with the immunological characteristics of acidic heart ferritin.
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PMID:An immunoradiometric assay for the acidic ferritin of human heart: application to human tissues, cells and serum. 64 67

The relationship between serum ferritin and duodenal ferritin was examined in normal subjects and in patients with iron deficiency, secondary iron overload, or idiopathic hemochromatosis (IHC). A positive correlation between serum ferritin and duodenal ferritin concentrations was found in all groups. In the iron-overload conditions, duodenal ferritin concentration was lower at all levels of serum ferritin in comparison with normal and iron-deficient subjects. Patients with secondary iron overload did not differ from those with IHC, which indicates that any decrease in duodenal ferritin concentration was secondary to the excess body iron stores. Purified duodenal ferritin from normal subjects and patients with iron-overload conditions showed the same two distinct isoferritins by isoelectric focusing. After the oral administration of iron, two additional isoferritins were detected. These resembled the major isoferritins of liver.
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PMID:Duodenal ferritin content and structure: relationship with body iron stores in man. 66 70


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