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)

Transformation for capsular-types (A and B) between four Staphylococcus aureus strains was attempted using a serum-soft agar technique to distinguish the capsular-type. DNA preparations from the Smith diffuse strain (capsular-type A) transformed strain NS58C (unencapsulated variant of capsular-type B) to type A. The strain NS58C required Ala- and His-, however, the two transformants tested were Ala+ and His+. These properties coincided with those of the donor strain just as the following characters of the transformants, which are quite different from the untransformed recipient cells: i) negative clumping factor reaction, ii) diffuse-type growth in serum-soft agar, and iii) high mouse virulence. The change to capsular-type A was antigenically comfirmed by electronmicroscopy using ferritin conjugated anti-capsular antibody.
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PMID:Encapsulation by transformation of strains of Staphylococcus aureus determined by the serum-soft agar technique. 37 20

A method for the purification of ferritin from rainbow trout liver by heat extraction and gel filtration is described. The number of iron atoms varied from 500 to 2000 in purified ferritin. The neutral sugar composition detected was 86 mol of glucose, 24 mol of fucose, 12 mol of galactose, and 8 mol of mannose per mol of ferritin and apoferritin. Release of iron was achieved using low molecular weight chelating agents. The order of effectiveness of chelators was nitrilotriacetate greater than EDTA greater than citrate. Removal of the iron does not imply reduction of Fe3+. The rate of release of iron increased with decreasing pH. The slowest release was at pH 7.5. The endogenous chelator is not only sulphydrylic but seems to include carbohydrates that participate in the binding of Fe2+. Trout ferritin exhibits heterogeneity upon isoelectric focusing; four isoferritins with pI values of 4.5 to 4.85 were detected. This heterogeneity represents polymorphic, not polymer, forms. The amino acid composition differs from that of ferritins from other species. High concentrations of glutamic and aspartic acids, alanine, leucine, glycine, and lysine were detected along with low concentrations of methionine and cysteine.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of ferritin from the liver of the rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri R.). 179 41

The structure and crystal chemical properties of iron cores of reconstituted recombinant human ferritins and their site-directed variants have been studied by transmission electron microscopy and electron diffraction. The kinetics of Fe uptake have been compared spectrophotometrically. Recombinant L and H-chain ferritins, and recombinant H-chain variants incorporating modifications in the threefold (Asp131----His or Glu134----Ala) and fourfold (Leu169----Arg) channels, at the partially buried ferroxidase sites (Glu62,His65----Lys,Gly), a putative nucleation site on the inner surface (Glu61,Glu64,Glu67----Ala), and both the ferroxidase and nucleation sites (Glu62,His65----Lys,Gly and Glu61,Glu64,Glu67----Ala), were investigated. An additional H-chain variant, incorporating substitution of the last ten C-terminal residues for those of the L-chain protein, was also studied. Most of the proteins assimilated iron to give discrete electron-dense cores of the Fe(III) hydrated oxide, ferrihydrite (Fe2O3.nH2O). No differences were observed for variants modified in the three- or fourfold channels compared with the unmodified H-chain ferritin. The recombinant L-chain ferritin and H-chain variant depleted of the ferroxidase site, however, showed markedly reduced uptake kinetics and comprised cores of increased diameter and regularity. Depletion of the inner surface Glu residues, whilst maintaining the ferroxidase site, resulted in a partially reduced rate of Fe uptake and iron cores of wider particle size distribution. Modification of both ferroxidase and inner surface Glu residues resulted in complete inhibition of iron uptake and deposition. No cores were observed by electron microscopy although negative staining showed that the protein shell was intact. The general requirement of an appropriate spatial charge density across the cavity surface rather than specific amino acid residues could explain how, in spite of an almost complete lack of identity between the amino acid sequences of bacterioferritin and mammalian ferritins, ferrihydrite is deposited within the cavity of both proteins under similar reconstitution conditions.
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PMID:Influence of site-directed modifications on the formation of iron cores in ferritin. 194 61

Ferric citrate induces ferritin synthesis and accumulation in soybean (Glycine max) cell suspension cultures [Proudhon, Briat & Lescure (1989) Plant Physiol. 90, 586-590]. This iron-induced ferritin has been purified from cells grown for 72 h in the presence of either 100 microM- or 500 microM-ferric citrate. It has a molecular mass of about 600 kDa and is built up from a 28 kDa subunit which is recognized by antibodies raised against pea (Pisum sativum) seed ferritin and it has the same N-terminal sequence as this latter, except for residue number 3, which is alanine in pea seed ferritin instead of valine in iron-induced soybean cell ferritin. It contains an average of 1800 atoms of iron per molecule whatever the ferric citrate concentration used to induce its synthesis. It is shown that the presence of 100 microM- or 500 microM-ferric citrate in the culture medium leads respectively to an 11- and 28-fold increase in the total intracellular iron concentration and to a 30- and 60-fold increase in the ferritin concentration. However, the percentage of iron stored in the mineral core of ferritin remains constant whatever the ferric citrate concentration used and represents only 5-6% of cellular iron.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of an iron-induced ferritin from soybean (Glycine max) cell suspensions. 226 18

To define an iron overload index independent of liver cell damage, the mean annual levels of alanine aspartate transaminase (ALAT) and serum ferritin and their ratios were determined. Ferritin/ALAT ratio values were compared between two groups of patients with acute or chronic hepatitis without iron overload, and one group of thalassaemic patients with iron overload. The two groups without iron overload exhibited ferritin/ALAT ratio values of 2 and 1.2 respectively; a ratio value higher than 10 was always observed in those patients with iron overload. The ferritin/ALAT ratio is correlated with the degree of iron overload. This ratio increases in regularly-transfused patients without chelation treatment. It generally remains stable or decreases after initiation of iron chelation therapy. The ferritin/ALAT ratio thus appears useful in the follow-up of patients subjected to a long-term transfusional treatment particularly when acute or chronic liver cell damage may interfere with iron overload by increasing serum ferritin values.
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PMID:Use of the ferritin/alanine aspartate transaminase ratio as an iron overload marker independent of liver cell damage. 261 15

The mortality and morbidity in abdominal surgery were investigated in two groups of patients, one with empty (N = 228) and the other with normal (N = 220) iron stores before operation. The estimation of body iron stores by measurements of serum ferritin concentration assumes that the only reason for a low ferritin value is an empty iron store. The results showed that the period of hospital treatment was shorter and the number of complications, especially infections, fewer, in patients with normal as compared to empty iron stores before the operation (p less than 0.001). These differences were especially striking in patients subjected to gastric or large bowel surgery. The results were not explained by differences in sex, age, serum albumin, or clinical anemia. The complications were not predictable from preoperative serum albumin, alkaline phosphatase, or alanine amino transferase levels. Among patients with postoperative complications those with preoperative empty iron stores also had a lower preoperative blood hemoglobin concentration (127 +/- 10 g/liter) than those with normal preoperative iron stores (136 +/- 9 g/liter). Thus it is speculated that the mechanisms behind postoperative complications due to preoperative empty iron stores might be a decrease in tissue oxygenation, resulting in an increased fatigue while working, decreased contractile capacity of the respiratory muscles, and a decrease in immune function. Thus a measurement of serum ferritin concentration and correction of empty iron stores is recommended before abdominal surgery.
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PMID:Empty iron stores as a significant risk factor in abdominal surgery. 339 23

The peptide subunit pentapeptide H-L-Ala-D-Glu(L-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala-OH)-NH2 of peptidoglycan was localized in the cell walls of several Gram-positive bacteria employing the indirect immunoferritin technique. Specific antibodies to the D-alanyl-D-alanine moiety of non-crosslinked peptide subunit pentapeptide were raised in rabbits by immunization with synthetic immunogen albumin-(CH2CO-Gly-L-Ala-L-Ala-D-Ala-D-Ala-OH)39. Specificity of these antibodies for the peptide subunit pentapeptide and not for the peptide subunit tetrapeptide was corroborated in a Farr-type radio-active hapten binding assay. Specificity of labelling with ferritin was established by immunoelectron microscopic controls, and by the excellent correlation between specific labelling of cells with ferritin and the particular peptidoglycan primary structure of bacterial strains investigated. Cells of Lactobacillus gasseri, Streptococcus pyogenes and Staphylococcus aureus revealing non-crosslinked peptide subunit pentapeptides in their peptidoglycans could specifically be labelled. Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bacillus subtilis, on the contrary, missing such pentapeptides, failed in labelling. The implication of this method to possibly localize the points of attack of penicillin or cycloserine is discussed.
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PMID:Immunoelectron microscopic studies on the localization of peptidoglycan peptide subunit pentapeptides in bacterial cell walls. 392 45

In this study, alanine was shown to be the N-terminal amino acid of a basic protein of low molecular weight that was isolated from either human or guinea pig brain. Antibodies prepared against the guinea pig protein were labeled with either fluorescein or ferritin. Studies with the labeled antibodies showed that an immunohistochemically similar protein is found in the myelin sheaths of central and peripheral nervous tissues of chicken and frog and a variety of mammalian species. Loss of integrity of the myelin during processing was shown to enhance markedly the antigen-antibody reaction.
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PMID:Localization of a basic protein in the myelin of various species with the aid of fluorescence and electron microscopy. 532 6

Neutrophils stimulated by the chemotactic factor formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenyl-alanine (FMLP) undergo a transient change in surface properties that permits the cells to adhere more readily to surfaces and to each other. This transient change can be monitored by light scattering as stimulated neutrophils form aggregates while stirred in a platelet aggregometer. Maximum change in light scattering occurs within 1 min and correlates with an increase in the percentage of cells that are in aggregates of four or more cells and a decrease in the percentage of single cells. With time (3-5 min), small aggregates disappear and single cells reappear. The transient change in adhesiveness is accompanied by a persistent change in cell shape; the cells become polarized and protrude ruffles from one sector of the cell surface. During aggregation the cells adhere to one another with smooth sides together and ruffles pointed outward. During disaggregation the cells dissociate laterally with the simultaneous internalization of membrane in the region opposite the ruffles. Particle bound to the surface by charge (thorotrast, cationized ferritin) are concentrated and internalized in this region. The change in cell shape from round to ruffled occurs within seconds, suggesting that membrane is added to the cell surface from an intracellular store. We therefore quantified surface membrane by electron microscopy morphometry and measured a 25% increase within 10 s of adding FMLP. The source of new membrane appeared to be the specific granule membrane since the kinetics of granule discharge (between 30% and 50% of all release occurs in the first 10 s) correlate with the appearance of new membrane. Furthermore, the amount of membrane that appears at the cell surface at 10 s correlates with that lost from intracellular granules in that time. Chemotaxin-induced aggregation thus begins with granule discharge and membrane addition followed by protrusion of ruffles. Adherence is maximal at 60 s and the gradual loss of adhesiveness that follows is associated with uropod formation and enhanced endocytic activity.
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PMID:Degranulation, membrane addition, and shape change during chemotactic factor-induced aggregation of human neutrophils. 714 87

Serum ferritin concentrations have been measured in 124 patients with homozygous beta thalassaemia who were between 2 and 21 years old, had received 11--504 units of blood but had not undergone splenectomy. There were highly significant correlations between serum ferritin concentration and both the amount of blood transfused and alanine amino-transferase (ALT) activity. However, multivariate analysis showed that units of blood and ALT activity together only accounted for about 30% of the variation in serum ferritin concentration. Little of the remaining variation could be explained by other variables related to iron metabolism or liver damage. The concentration of concanavalin A binding ferritin increased rapidly with the number of units of blood up to 100 units but thereafter showed no further increase with number of transfusions. The concentration of non-binding ferritin was more closely related to transfusion load. These results suggest that the secretion of glycosylated ferritin from reticuloendothelial cells reaches a maximum with increasing iron accumulation, perhaps reflecting a maximum rate of synthesis. Ferritinaemia in patients with transfusional iron overload therefore seems to be the result of the combined effects of increased ferritin synthesis and the release of intracellular ferritin from damaged cells. A simple relationship between serum ferritin and iron stores cannot be assumed when ferritin concentrations exceed 4000 microgram/l or in patients who have received more than 100 units of transfused blood.
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PMID:Binding of serum ferritin to concanavalin A: patients with homozygous beta thalassaemia and transfusional iron overload. 744 26


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