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)

The ability of the trophoblast of the ovine preimplantation blastocyst to take up and metabolise proteins has been investigated using two experimental approaches, microscopical and radiochemical. The ultrastructure of the expanded blastocyst obtained from 14 and 17 day pregnant ewes was examined. The morphology of tissues maintained in culture for 24 h has been compared with that of fresh tissues. After culture, the cellular morphology of the explants was well preserved. Fresh and 24 h cultured tissues were incubated with horse-radish peroxidase and ferritin and these proteins subsequently were found to be localized in coated pits, caveolae and secondary lysosomes of the trophoblast. Comparison of the uptake of [3H]dextran and of 125I-labelled bovine serum albumin indicated that proteins could be taken up by cultured tissue by mechanisms in addition to simple fluid phase endocytosis. During culture of explants of blastocyst with 125I-labelled bovine serum albumin, a large fraction of the radioactivity taken up by the tissue appeared in the TCA-soluble fraction of the culture medium indicating that cultured trophoblast hydrolysed proteins. That amino acids released from captured protein could be used for protein synthesis by the trophoblast was indicated by the labelling of tissue and medium proteins after culturing explants with beta-lactamase labelled with [14C]leucine. A major product (Mr approximately 17 x 10(3) present in the medium was likely to have been ovine trophoblast protein-1. It is concluded that, during the expansion of the ovine blastocyst, the trophoblast has the ability to take up proteins, transport them to lysosomes and degrade them to amino acids which are used for protein synthesis. Thus proteins, as well as free amino acids, present in the histotrophe may be an important source of nitrogen for the sheep conceptus in the critical period just prior to implantation.
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PMID:Morphological and radiochemical evidence for the metabolism of exogenous proteins by the preimplantation sheep blastocyst. 172 46

The present study provides at least partly answers to some of the questions outlined in the introduction (see also Figs. 2 and 3): Endocytosis and intracellular transport of ferritin, HRP and insulin tracers (125I-insulin, native insulin and insulin-gold) was followed by use of EM-autoradiography, immunocytochemistry and cytochemistry. Proteins are internalized into endocytic vacuoles and transferred to the lysosomes for degradation. Tracers were not transferred to the Golgi apparatus. 125I-insulin is internalized by specific receptor mediated endocytosis from the apical plasma membrane, substantiating the hypothesis that specific endocytosis receptors are responsible for reabsorption of certain proteins. The binding sites are localized in endocytic invaginations and in the microvillus membrane. The binding sites in the invaginations are responsible for endocytosis, whereas the function of the microvilli binding sites is unclear, but they possess the ability to migrate in the plane of the microvillus membrane. Binding to specific binding sites and subsequent internalization of insulin takes place with high efficiency corresponding to more than 50% of the perfused load. Not all proteins are reabsorbed with high efficiency e.g. EGF which has similar molecular weight and pI is shown to be reabsorbed with substantially lower efficiency (about 4%). Binding and absorption efficiency of insulin may also change due to alterations in flow rate and perfused loads of protein: The load determines the magnitude of uptake and the flow rate determines the efficiency in binding and uptake. These changes are suggested to be caused by concomitant changes in the mean luminal concentration. The reabsorption process for insulin is efficient and of large capacity, and is only saturable (Michaelis-Menten kinetics) at very high concentrations of insulin. The proximal tubular internalization and degradation of 125I-insulin reach steady state rapidly. The processing can be described by a two-compartment model with t1/2 for transfer of 125I-insulin to lysosomes of 8.5 min and for lysosomal degradation of 72 min. 125I-PYY a linear peptide with similar molecular weight as EGF and insulin is not endocytosed but extracted with high efficiency (75% removed) by degradation by brush border peptidases and a substantial transtubular transport of TCA-precipitable PYY takes place by a paracellular route. A small vesicular transport of colloidal tracers was demonstrated constituting about 0.5% of the endocytosed amount. A method for covalently cross-linking insulin tracers to apical binding sites is described and evaluated. Recycling of apical binding sites was estimated to be very efficient and did not involve lysosomes or the Golgi apparatus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Endocytosis in renal proximal tubules. Experimental electron microscopical studies of protein absorption and membrane traffic in isolated, in vitro perfused proximal tubules. 792 57

Psychiatric manifestations are frequently associated with pernicious anemia including depression, mania, psychosis, dementia. We report a case of a patient with vitamin B12 deficiency, who has presented severe depression with delusion and Capgras' syndrome, delusion with lability of mood and hypomania successively, during a period of two Months. Case report - Mme V., a 64-Year-old woman, was admitted to the hospital because of confusion. She had no history of psychiatric problems. She had history of diabetes, hypertension and femoral prosthesis. The red blood count revealed a normocytosis with anemia (hemoglobin=11,4 g/dl). At admission she was uncooperative, disoriented in time and presented memory and attention impairment and sleep disorders. She seemed sad and older than her real age. Facial expression and spontaneous movements were reduced, her speech and movements were very slow. She had depressed mood, guilt complex, incurability and devaluation impressions. She had a Capgras' syndrome and delusion of persecution. Her neurologic examination, cerebral scanner and EEG were postponed because of uncooperation. Further investigations confirmed anemia (hemoglobin=11,4 g/dl) and revealed vitamin B12 deficiency (52 pmol/l) and normal folate level. Antibodies to parietal cells were positive in the serum and antibodies to intrinsic factor were negative. An iron deficiency was associated (serum iron=7 micromol/l; serum ferritin concentration=24 mg/l; serum transferrin concentration=3,16 g/l). This association explained normocytocis anemia. Thyroid function, hepatic and renal tests, glycemia, TP, TCA, VS, VDRL-TPHA were normal. Vitamin B12 replacement therapy was started with hydroxycobalamin 1 000 ng/day im for 10 days and iron replacement therapy. Her mental state improved dramatically within a few days. After one week of treatment the only remaining symptoms were lability of mood, delusion of persecution, Capgras' syndrome but disappeared totally 9 days after the beginning of the treatment. A neurologic examination was possible because of cooperation. All the tendon reflexes of inferior members were absent. The plantars were in flexion and there was a left inferior member hypoesthesia. The cerebral scan and EEG were normal. Fundic biopsy, realized by fibroscopy, revealed fundic atrophia and intestinal metaplasia compatible with Biermers' disease. The iron deficiency exploration concluded diet deficiency. Mme V. appeared euphoric, her speech was very rapid with play on words and overactivity. This hypomania state totally disappeared 3 days after. Six Months after her hospitalisation, she presented an hypothyroidism (TSH=3,780; T3=1,35; T4=1,08). A thyroid hormones replacement was started and she continued to receive Monthly B12 replacement. Discussion - This case report illustrates psychiatric manifestations of Biermers' disease. The clinical arguments in favour are: white woman, more than 60 Years old, no history of psychiatric problems, atypical symptoms (confusional state with psychiatric symptoms), fluctuation of symptoms (severe depression with confusional state, delusion of persecution and Capgras' syndrome; delusion with lability of mood and hypomania), dramatic improvement after 9 days of vitamin B12 replacement therapy. The biological arguments are: anemia, vitamin B12 deficiency, normal folate level, atrophia and fundic metaplasia, positive antibodies to parietal cells in the serum, association between Biermers' disease and autoimmune disease (Haschimoto thyroidite). Psychiatric manifestations can occur in the presence of low serum B12 levels but in the absence of the other well recognized neurological and haematological abnormalities of pernicious anemia. Mental or psychological changes may precede haematological signs by Months or Years. They can be the initial symptoms or the only ones. Verbank et al. described the case of a patient with vitamin B12 deficiency in whom hypomania, paranoia and depression had been successively presented during a period of 5 Years before anemia have been developed. The case of Mme V. is similar in the succession of severe depression with delusion of persecution and Capgras' syndrome, delusion with lability of mood and hypomania, during a period of two Months. This report seems to be the first one of a sequence of several psychiatric states with pernicious anemia during a period of two Months with normocytosis anemia. To illustrate this illness we reviewed the literature regarding psychopathology associated with B12 deficiency. The most common psychiatric symptoms were depression, mania, psychotic symptoms, cognitive impairment and obsessive compulsive disorder. The neuropsychiatric severity by vitamin B12 deficiency and the therapeutic efficacy depends on the duration of signs and symptoms. Conclusion - We recommend consideration of B12 deficiency and serum B12 determinations in all the patients with organic mental disorders, atypical psychiatric symptoms and fluctuation of symptomatology. B12 levels should be evaluated with treatment resistant depressive disorders, dementia, psychosis or risk factors for malnutrition such as alcoholism or advancing age associated with neurological symptoms, anemia, malabsorption, gastrointestinal surgery, parasite infestation or strict vegetarian diet. In first intention, B12 deficiency should be researched by serum B12 determination (normal 200-950 pg/ml). Studies of methylmalonic acid and homocysteine showed that they are very sensitive functional indicators of cobalamin status especially when other evidence of cobalamin (B12) deficiency was equivocal. Measurement of methylmalonic acid (normal 73-271 nmol/l) and homocysteine (normal 5,4-13,9 micromol/l) should not replace the measurement of serum cobalamin.
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PMID:[Psychiatric manifestations of vitamin B12 deficiency: a case report]. 1502 91

Fe (cellular iron), O (dioxygen, antioxidant inducers, hydrogen peroxide), and P (protein phosphorylation) signals combine to regulate DNA activity (transcription/mRNA synthesis) for antioxidant/Phase II response proteins (e.g., ferritin H, ferritin L, thioredoxin reductase I, NAD(P)H quinone oxido-reductase, heme oxygenase1 and beta-globin) and mRNA activity for proteins of iron transport, storage or oxygen metabolism (e.g., ferritin H, ferritin L, transferrin receptor1, ferroportin, mt-aconitase-TCA cycle and aminolevulinate synthase - heme biosynthesis). Ferritin regulation links the two groups of genetic controls via DNA (ARE-antioxidant response element) and mRNA (IRE-iron responsive element) structures. More is known about the IRE-mRNA and protein repressors, IRPs (iron regulatory proteins/aconitase homologues), than the DNA-ARE and protein repressors, e.g., Bach1. Iron responsive elements are very similar (65-80% sequence identity), but each mRNA has sufficient IRE specificity (>90% phylogenetic sequence conservation), that IRP binding and signal responses vary quantitatively. The structural specificity of each IRE-RNA provides an opportunity for finding small molecule regulators in vitro, and possibly in vivo. The potential of manipulating mRNA function with small molecules targeted to specific RNA regulatory structures, e.g., ferritin mRNA in iron overload, or viral mRNA control structures for replication, is high.
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PMID:Integrating iron and oxygen/antioxidant signals via a combinatorial array of DNA - (antioxidant response elements) and mRNA (iron responsive elements) sequences. 1708 1

Marbling of cattle meat is dependent on the coordinated expression of multiple genes. Cattle dramatically increase their intramuscular fat content in the longissimus dorsi muscle between 12 and 27 months of age. We used the annealing control primer (ACP)-differential display RT-PCR method to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) that may participate in the development of intramuscular fat between early (12 months old) and late fattening stages (27 months old). Using 20 arbitrary ACP primers, we identified and sequenced 14 DEGs. BLAST searches revealed that expression of the MDH, PI4-K, ferritin, ICER, NID-2, WDNMI, telethonin, filamin, and desmin (DES) genes increased while that of GAPD, COP VII, ACTA1, CamK II, and nebulin decreased during the late fattening stage. The results of functional categorization using the Gene Ontology database for 14 known genes indicated that MDH, GAPD, and COP VII are involved in metabolic pathways such as glycolysis and the TCA cycle, whereas telethonin, filamin, nebulin, desmin, and ACTA1 contribute to the muscle contractile apparatus, and PI4-K, CamK II, and ICER have roles in signal transduction pathways regulated by growth factor or hormones. The final three genes, NID-2, WDNMI, and ferritin, are involved in iron transport and extracellular protein inhibition. The expression patterns were confirmed for seven genes (MDH, PI4-K, ferritin, ICER, nebulin, WDNMI, and telethonin) using real-time PCR. We found that the novel transcription repressor ICER gene was highly expressed in the late fattening stage and during bovine preadipocyte differentiation. This information may be helpful in selecting candidate genes that participate in intramuscular fat development in cattle.
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PMID:Identification of differentially expressed genes related to intramuscular fat development in the early and late fattening stages of hanwoo steers. 1792 10