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)

Ferritin binds a large quantity of Be2+ (Price D.J. and Joshi, J.G. J. Biol. Chem. 258 (1983) 10873) as well as other divalent metal ions. Therefore the ability of this protein to protect enzymes against or reverse the inhibition by metal ions was studied. Evidence presented here shows that the inhibition by Be2+ of the enzymes Na+K+ATPase, alkaline phosphatase and phosphoglucomutase is reversed by ferritin. Be2+ can be transferred reversibly between phosphoglucomutase and ferritin depending upon the relative concentrations of the 2 proteins. Ferritin also reactivated phosphoglucomutase inhibited by Zn2+, Cu2+, or Cd2+. Incubation of ferritin containing Be2+ with 4-10 fold molar excess of phosphoglucomutase (with respect to Be2+) removed 90% of the Be2+ from ferritin. The rates of inactivation of phosphoglucomutase by Be2+ donated by apoferritin or ferritin were identical. Based upon these observations it is suggested that Be2+ bound to the protein shell and to the iron core are in equilibrium with each other with the equilibrium favoring ferritin-Be2+ complex.
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PMID:Ferritin: protection of enzymatic activity against the inhibition by divalent metal ions in vitro. 633 Sep 34

An ELISA with covalently fixed antigens was used to measure and define ferritin-labeled antibodies. In the presented model, RIG covalently fixed to glass tubes served as antigen. Twenty ferritin-labeled SWaRIG conjugates were prepared with different molar ratios of antibody: ferritin: glutaraldehyde. At various dilutions, their ability to react with the antigen was compared. The amount of FRT in the reactive conjugates was measured using alkaline phosphatase-labeled antibodies against ferritin. The covalent binding of antigens to glass surfaces resulted in a low unspecific binding as shown previously. Besides, these glass tubes with antigens immobilized on their inner surface could be used more than once. This aspect of it renders this test particularly suitable for systems where rare or expensive antigens are used. The range of O.D. values reflecting the amount of reactive SWaRIG/FRT detected in 20 different conjugates (dil 1:1000) was spread over a good range which allowed a specification of optimal conditions for FRT labeling of antibodies. It is concluded that in addition to an electron microscopic evaluation of the conjugates, this assay may be very helpful in defining optimal conditions for the coupling procedure.
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PMID:Optimal conditions for the preparation of ferritin-labeled antibodies defined by binding to their antigen in an ELISA. 638 30

Separation of the external membranes from freshly converted mechanical schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni was achieved by osmotic shock under hypertonic conditions, followed by mechanical shearing and ultracentrifugation. Prior to treatment, the schistosomula were surface labeled by introduction of N-DNP-epsilon-aminocaproylphosphatidylethanolamine molecules into their lipid bilayer followed by anti-DNP antibodies and stained with either 125I-protein-A or ferritin labeled secondary anti-DNP antibodies. This label provided a membrane marker by which the purity of the preparation could be assessed at each stage. Fluorescence staining with FITC-conjugated secondary antibodies prior to treatment revealed that the homogeneously stained membrane of the intact schistosomula became swollen and ruptured after the osmotic shock. The isolated membrane pellet was intensely fluorescent. Electron microscopical examination revealed mostly vesicles, some of them with organized multilayer assembly. The vesicles were ferritin labeled, indicating that they originated from the outer surface membrane of the schistosomula. A 100 fold enrichment in the alkaline phosphatase activity and about 300 fold enrichment in acetylcholinesterase activity in the membrane preparations, as compared to the intact schistosomula, was found. The isolated tegument was analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The pattern obtained showed three major bands, of molecular weights 69 000, 45 000 and 12 000 alongside with a large number of minor bands. Immunoprecipitation of the isolated 125I-labeled membrane antigens with antisera from chronically infected mice revealed these three major bands together with three other bands of molecular weight 38 000, 23 000 and 16 000.
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PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of the tegumental outer membrane of schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni. 652 92

An ultracytochemical investigation was performed to study the origin of pinocytic vesicles and canalicular structures within endothelial cells (EC) of the injured mammalian blood-brain barrier (BBB). To accomplish this goal, two electron-dense tracers, native ferritin (NF) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP), were used in conjunction with the detection of alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity, a known marker of EC plasmalemma of brain micro-blood vessels. Brain ECs from (1) mice subjected to crude leptomeningeal damage for 1, 2, or 3 days and (2) cats subjected to cold lesion injury for 1, 4, or 24 h were evaluated for tracer transport and AP activity. Fine structural analysis of leaking segments of micro-blood vessels from damaged cerebral cortex or basal ganglia demonstrated pinocytic vesicles, deep invaginations of the luminal plasmalemma and elongated, tubular profiles, all containing tracer. Because we observed in ECs from both experimental models of brain injury a positive reaction for AP activity in the luminal plasmalemma, in its deep invaginations, in delimiting membranes of pinocytic vesicles, and in tubulo-canalicular structures, we conclude that all types of transport structures derive from the same 100A thick exoplasmic plasmalemmal membranes. Further, besides the pinocytic vesicular transport system (PTS), the canalicular transport system (CTS) appears to serve as an additional important mechanism for macromolecular transport across the damaged mammalian BBB.
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PMID:Ultracytochemical studies of vesicular and canalicular transport structures in the injured mammalian blood-brain barrier. 665 Jan 37

M cells in Peyer's patch follicle epithelium endocytose and transport luminal materials to intraepithelial lymphocytes. We examined (1) enzymatic characteristics of the epithelium covering mouse and rat Peyer's patches by using cytochemical techniques, (2) distribution of lectin-binding sites by peroxidase-labeled lectins, and (3) anionic site distribution by using cationized ferritin to develop a profile of M cell surface properties. Alkaline phosphatase activity resulted in deposits of dense reaction product over follicle surfaces but was markedly reduced over M cells, unlike esterase which formed equivalent or greater product over M cells. Concanavalin A, ricinus communis agglutinin, wheat germ agglutinin and peanut agglutinin reacted equally with M cells and with surrounding enterocytes over follicle surfaces. Cationized ferritin distributed in a random fashion along microvillus membranes of both M cells and enterocytes, indicating equivalent anionic site distribution. Staining for alkaline phosphatase activity provides a new approach for distinguishing M cells from enterocytes at the light microscopic level. Identical binding of lectins indicates that M cells and enterocytes share common glycoconjugates even though molecular groupings may differ. Lectin binding and anionic charge similarities of M cells and enterocytes may facilitate antigen sampling by M cells of particles and compounds that adhere to intestinal surfaces in non-Peyer's patch areas.
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PMID:Cytochemical analysis of alkaline phosphatase and esterase activities and of lectin-binding and anionic sites in rat and mouse Peyer's patch M cells. 665 Apr 35

Serum ferritin and biochemical liver tests (serum bilirubin, serum aspartate transaminase, serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GT), and serum alkaline phosphatase) were recorded at regular intervals from admission to recovery in six patients with acute viral hepatitis. There was a proportional, significant decrease in ferritin bilirubin, and transaminase were reached simultaneously, whereas gamma-GT and alkaline phosphatase remained elevated for a slightly longer time. The correlations between corresponding measurements of ferritin and biochemical liver tests were as follows: ferritin and alkaline phosphatase, r = 0.72, P less than 0.001; ferritin and bilirubin, r = 0.68, P less than 0.001; ferritin and transaminase, r = 0.53, P less than 0.001; ferritin and gamma-GT. r = 0.50, P less than 0.001. In viral hepatitis serum ferritin offers no diagnostic advantage compared with already established tests for hepatocellular damage.
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PMID:Serum ferritin in acute viral hepatitis. 671 75

Endocrine abnormalities in patients with chronic renal failure are well documented. The present study aimed to assess the influence of long-term erythropoietin (EPO) therapy on endocrine abnormalities in hemodialyzed patients. Two groups of hemodialyzed patients, each of which comprised 17 subjects, were examined. The first group was treated by EPO (EPO group) while the second one did not receive this hormone (No-EPO group). A complete biochemical and hormonal check-up was performed before and at the 3, 6, 9, and 12 month points of the study period. Normal values for the estimated parameters were obtained in appropriately selected sex- and age-matched healthy subjects. After EPO therapy, an increase of the hematocrit value from 21.8 +/- 0.9 to 32.6 +/- 0.9% was observed, which was accompanied by a significant decline of plasma ferritin and saturation of transferrin. In patients of the No-EPO group, a significant although less marked rise of the hematocrit value (21.4 +/- 0.4 to 24.2 +/- 0.6%) was also noticed. EPO therapy did not change plasma levels of electrolytes (Na, K, Ca, inorganic phosphate), osteocalcin, creatinine, glucose, and alkaline phosphatase as well as plasma concentrations of calcium-related hormones (PTH, calcitonin, 1,25[OH]2D3), vasopressin, and triiodothyronine. EPO treatment induced a significant decrease in somatotropin, prolactin, follitropin, lutropin, ACTH, cortisol, plasma renin activity, aldosterone, noradrenaline, adrenaline, dopamine, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, and gastrin plasma levels and an increase in plasma insulin, estradiol, testosterone, atrial natriuretic peptide, thyrotropin, and thyroxine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Function of endocrine organs in hemodialyzed patients of long-term erythropoietin therapy. 762 22

We studied the effect of chronic exposure (6 weeks and 6 months) of mice to drinking (tap) water containing 1.76% (0.06 M) aluminum lactate on some cytochemical properties of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The plasmalemma-bound enzymatic activities of alkaline phosphatase (AP) and Ca(2+)-activated adenosine triphosphatase (Ca(2+)-ATPase) were studied at the ultrastructural level. Anionic sites were localized with cationized ferritin in a pre-embedding procedure and with cationic colloidal gold in a post-embedding procedure applied to brain samples embedded in Lowicryl K4M. Intravenously injected Evans blue and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) were used for evaluation of the functional state of the BBB. The results indicate that chronic exposure to aluminum does not noticeably affect barrier function of the endothelium of cerebral cortex blood microvessels. Focal leakage of larger than capillary microvessels (presumably arterioles and venules) was observed only in a few areas, such as the basal ganglia and amygdaloid nuclei. The localization of both enzymatic activities (AP and Ca(2+)-ATPase) in microvessels remained essentially unchanged. The localization of anionic sites was also unchanged except on the luminal surface of the endothelium of a few blood microvessels located in areas of the brain where leakage of the injected HRP was noted. In these vessels the injected HRP was often attached to the luminal surface of the endothelial cells, suggesting its increased stickiness. These data, compared with our previous observations on brain microvascular endothelial cells growing in vitro, indicate that cytotoxicity of aluminum is evidently less pronounced in the living organism, presumably due to action of detoxicating and regulatory mechanisms.
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PMID:Ultracytochemical studies of the effects of aluminum on the blood-brain barrier of mice. 828 66

The effects of horse serum on the immunoassay of horse ferritin were investigated using two sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) systems. In System A, affinity-purified antibody to horse spleen ferritin and its conjugate with alkaline phosphatase were used as the first and second antibodies, respectively. In System B, whole antiserum and its conjugate with the enzyme were used. The recoveries of horse spleen ferritin added to horse sera were very low in either system (50-71% in System A; 42-79% in System B). However, heat treatment of the sera at 75 degrees C for 15 min improved the recoveries (90-96%) in System A, whereas the recoveries in System B were not sufficiently improved by the same treatment (75-83%). The apparent concentrations of ferritin in adult and newborn horse sera increased after heat treatment of the samples. From these results, it is concluded that horse serum contains the heat-unstable substance(s) which inhibits the immunoassay of horse ferritin.
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PMID:Inhibitory effects of horse serum on immunoassay of horse ferritin. 846 26

Sarcoidosis, once thought to be a variant of tuberculosis, is currently listed as a disease of unknown etiology. The present study was initiated by unpublished observations that Schaumann bodies-the laminated inclusions often encountered in sarcoid granulomas-cross-reacted with commercial polyclonal antibodies to Mycobacterium bovis, Mycobacterium duvalii and Mycobacterium paratuberculosis. Given the broad cross-reactivity of many mycobacterial antigens, those findings lacked specificity but warranted in depth probing of the immunoprofile of the bodies, particularly for specific mycobacterial antigens. Formalin-fixed tissue from eight patients with an established diagnosis of sarcoidosis was studied with panels of antibodies against both common cytoplasmic proteins and various mycobacterial antigens, using a labeled streptavidin-biotin-alkaline phosphatase technique. Our findings indicate that Schaumann bodies are indeed residual bodies of heterophagic mycobacterial derivation. They immunostained intensely for the lysosomal proteins muramidase and CD68, variably for some cytoskeletal proteins (tubulin, desmin, vimentin) and not at all for cytokeratin, muscle actin, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin and ferritin. Both cross-reactive and species specific antigenic determinants of M. tuberculosis complex were shown to be present. Affinity absorption with killed intact bacilli H37 Rv resulted in virtually equal loss of binding by all polyclonal antimycobacterial antibodies to cross-reactive ligands in Schaumann bodies. In addition, the bodies were clearly labeled with the monoclonal antibodies TB68 and TB71, known to recognize species specific epitopes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex. Although obtained on a small number of cases, our findings uphold Schaumann's original postulate that the laminated calcific inclusions represent remnants of "transformed tubercle bacilli".
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PMID:Cross-reactive and species specific Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigens in the immunoprofile of Schaumann bodies: a major clue to the etiology of sarcoidosis. 872 Apr 56


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