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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Homogenization of guinea pig liver in isotonic sucrose solution followed by the separation of the subcellular fractions by differential centrifugation releases the liver L-asparaginase (L-asparagine amidohydrolase, EC 3.5.1.1) activity into the supernatant fraction. Electron micrographs of the liver L-asparaginase-antibody complexes, precipitated from the clear supernatant phase by addition of L-asparaginase-specific antiserum, show membrane-liek structures and some amorphous material. The attachment of L-asparaginase to the membrane-like structures is indicated by the ferritin-labeled antibody technique. The immunoprecipitates possess low activities of 5'-nucleotidase, alkaline phosphodiesterase I, NADPH cytochrome c reductase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and acid phosphatase. This observation suggests that L-asparaginase found in the liver supernatant fraction is associated with cytomembrane components. Analysis of guinae pig serum L-asparaginase-antibody complexes is polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate gives three distinct protein bands. These bands correspond to heavy and light chains of rabbit immunoglobulins and the L-asparaginase subunits. Analysis of the liver L-asparaginase-antibody complexes by the above procedure shows similar but more diffuse protein bands.
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PMID:Evidence for the association of L-asparaginase with cytomembrane components in the guinea pig liver soluble fraction. 81 93

The detailed reversible binding isotherms of sodium dodecyl sulfate (NaDodSO4) with 13 different initially native proteins are reported; the data were obtained at 20 degrees C and pH 7.1, ionic strength 0.033, with amounts bound with some proteins up to 1.1 g per g of protein. Although the isotherms of some of the proteins do not vary widely, extreme variations between certain classes are found. Thus, for example, hemoglobin and myoglobin both have high affinities and high binding capacities, while gamma-globulin, apoferritin, and transferrin have low initial affinities, and change drastically at higher concentrations. The protein-NaDodSO4 complexes solubilize the water-insoluble dye dimethylaminoazobenzene (DMAB) as effectively as micelles of pure NaDodSO4 when only small amounts (0.2 to 0.5 g/g of NaDodSO4) are bound. In most cases this effectiveness falls progressively as larger amounts are bound, and may even cease altogether at limits characteristic of the individual protein. With some of the latter, a second region of renewed solubilization occurs when substantially higher amounts of NaDodSO4 are present. In all cases, solubilization by ordinary micelles in normal amount occurs when the free NaDodSO4 concentration exceeds the critical micelle concentration, but the binding of NPADodSO4 to the protein also increases, in competition with formation of micelles. With some, but not all proteins the NaDodSO4 bound at concentrations above the cmc also solubilizes DMAB. In such cases the solubilizations by the protein-NaDodSO4 complexes and by the simple micelles are additive. The significance of the differences in binding and solubilizing encountered among these proteins is discussed in terms of surface structure, cooperativity of binding, and protein composition. No certain correlations with content of most amino acids, subunit structure, solubility, and hydrophobicity have been found, but there is a weak inverse dependence of solubilizing effectiveness on molecular size and indications of a strong dependence on content of cationic groups.
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PMID:Differences in the solubilizing effectiveness of the sodium dodecyl sulfate complexes of various proteins. 83 11

Fifty piglets from birth to 14 days of age were used to investigate iron binding substances of neonatal intestinal mucosa, and to evaluate the effects of these substances in neonatal iron absorption. 59Fe-labeled ferric citrate with a molecular weight of 1,500 was injected directly into the ligated duodenum. Approximately 65% of radioiron in the whole homogenate of scraped intestinal mucosa was precipitate by centrifugation for 30 minutes at 10,000 X g. Over 70% of the radioiron of the supernatant applied to Sephadex G-200 column was eluted and separated into three radioiron fractions. These iron binding substances were identified as ferritin, transferrin and a low molecular weight form by elution characteristics on chromatography and by immunological technique. Although ferritin radioactivity was the major fraction of peak 1 (73%), transferrin activity was only 54% of the whole radioiron of peak 2. The sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) extract of saline insoluble particles from the mucosa applied to Sepharose 4B column eluted as a single peak near the point corresponded with the ferritin peak. Although the ferritin peak contained a higher percentage of the 59Fe than the transferrin peak at birth, the percentage of ferritin decreased and percentage of transferrin increased with age. A SDS soluble iron binding substance was found in the insoluble particles of mucosa of newborn as well as nursing piglets. Since SDS, as well as saline soluble, iron binding proteins were detected in the newborn intestinal mucosa, neonatal cell membrane and cytoplasma may have an active iron transfer system. Thus, it seems likely that neonatal mucosal cell has two active iron transport mechanisms: endocytosis and transport across the plasma membrane.
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PMID:Iron binding substances in the intestinal mucosa of neonatal piglets. 84 85

A Triton X-100 solubilized macromolecular complex of transferrin and a membrane constituent can be isolated by gel chromatography from rabbit reticulocytes previously incubated with 125I-labeled transferrin. The apparent molecular weight of this complex is close to that of ferritin, or about 445 000. On sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis the complex displays two glycoprotein subunits, of molecular weights 176 000 and 95 000 in addition to transferrin. A transferrin-binding fraction with a molecular weight near 400 000, containing these subunits, can also be identified in membranes of nonincubated reticulocytes. The corresponding membrane fraction from mature erythrocytes, which have lost transferrin-binding activity, displays both protein subunits, but the 176 000 molecular weight component fails to give a PAS stain for carbohydrate. Treatment of reticulocytes with Pronase, which destroys the ability of the cells to form specific complexes with transferrin, degrades both components. We believe these results are consistent with the hypothesis that the primary transferrin receptor of the rabbit reticulocyte is a glycoprotein of molecular weight in the range 350 000-400 000, comprised of a combination of two subunits with molecular weights 176 000 and 95 000, respectively. Transferrin-binding activity appears to depend on the carbohydrate moiety of the 176 000 subunit.
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PMID:Transferrin receptor of the rabbit reticulocyte. 84 17

Ferritin extracted from rat heart containes two species separable by gel electrophoresis. These were purified and examined for structural characteristics. As in gel electrophoresis, cardiac ferritin preparations yielded only two bands on isoelectric focusing in gels, with pI values of 4.6 and 4.8. After separation by preparative electrophoresis, the two species were found to have a different amino acid composition from each another and from liver ferritin. Similarly, peptide maps showed several components not found in liver ferritin. On dissociation and electrophoresis with sodium dodecyl sulfate, heart ferritins were found to contain subunits of the same sizes as in other rat ferritins but also some larger components. Since cardiac ferritins have apparent molecular weights greater than those of other ferritins, it is concluded they probably contain more subunits, and possibly some of larger size not present in ferritins of other tissues.
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PMID:Structural features of rat cardiac ferritins. 84 69

Concanavalin A (Con A) is taken up by endocytosis in mature erythrocytes of newborn humans but not in adult red cells. Thin sections of neonatal cells incubated with ferritin-conjugated Con A at 37 degrees show ferritin clusters on invaginations at the surface and in intracellular vesicles, but such invaginations and vesicles are absent with adult cells. The endocytosis induced by ferritin-conjugated Con A is inhibited at 0 degrees, and by methyl-alpha-D-mannopyranoside at 37 degrees. Succinylation of Con A, which is known to convert it from the tetrameric to dimeric form, renders Con A inactive in cell agglutination and endocytotic vesicle formation, presumably by reducing the number of oligosaccharide chains simultaneously bound by a single Con A molecule. Ferritin-conjugated succinyl Con A binds to neonatal erythrocytes but does not induce endocytosis; if, however, antibodies to ferritin are now added, endocytosis occurs. These results are consistent with a greater lateral mobility of at least a fraction of Con A recptors in the membrane of the intact neonatal erythrocyte compared to the adult. The results also support the hypothesis that the clustering of receptors is obligatory for endocytosis to occur. No discernible difference was found in the sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel patterns of the membrane proteins of the neonatal and adult cells.
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PMID:Clustering and endocytosis of membrane receptors can be induced in mature erythrocytes of neonatal but not adult humans. 106 94

In an attempt to understand the variability of the hematologic response to oral sodium cyanate, iron metabolism was studied in a group of 39 patients with sickel cell disease. Eleven of the 39 patients were found to have no stainable iron in the marrow despite the fact that patients with sickle cell disease are generally considered to have hemosiderosis. The mean per cent saturation and total iron-binding capacity were in the low-normal range in sickle cell patients whether or not stainable iron was present in the bone marrow aspirate. Serum ferritin concentrations, on the other hand, were found to be high in both groups (greater than 500 mu g/liter) when compared to controls (60 mu g/liter). The high serum ferritin levels denoted significant total-body iron deposition which may be unavailable for normal metabolic processes. One patient with no stainable iron in the bone marrow aspirate did respond to iron therapy alone with an increase in hemoglobin concentration. Serum ceruloplasmin levels were also found to be high in sickle cell disease patients. The ability to respond to oral cyanate therapy was correlated with the amount of stainable iron in the bone marrow aspirate. These studies emphasize the necessity of a reevaluation of iron metabolism in the pathophysiology and treatment of sickle cell disease.
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PMID:Iron metabolism, sickle cell disease, and response to cyanate. 117 92

Renal erythropoietin production is dependent on local oxygen content of blood which activates so called "oxygen sensors". Taking into consideration altered local renal blood supply in patients with arterial hypertension in the course of arteritis (HA) and from the other side contribution of the renin-angiotensin system in both pathogenesis of hypertension and regulation of erythropoietin production it seemed plausible to undertake this study. The aim of the study was to determine whether and in what extent patients with HA and healthy subjects differ in EPO secretion and whether EPO serum level is related in this patients to renin response to dietary sodium restriction and upright position of the body. 18 patients with HA and 12 healthy subjects were investigated. In all subjects haematocrit value, haemoglobin concentration, erythrocyte count, sodium, potassium, creatinine, iron, ferritin serum levels, total iron binding capacity, plasma renin activity (PRA), erythropoietin serum level and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) were measured in basic conditions (normal sodium diet). Additionally PRA, EPO and MAP were measured after dietary sodium restriction to 10-20 mmol Na/24 hrs for three days and upright position of the body for three hours. Patients with HA had insignificantly lower serum EPO concentrations than healthy subjects and both studied groups did not differ in haematocrit value and determinants of iron metabolism except of significantly higher ferritin concentration in HA. After dietary sodium restriction and upright position of the body significant rise in PRA and no significant changes in EPO level were found in studied groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The role of erythropoietin in blood pressure regulation in patients with arteritis]. 130 May 62

Acutely, hemin sensitizes endothelial cells to oxidants but chronically protects the endothelium through the induction of ferritin. By releasing its heme, methemoglobin can sensitize endothelial cells in a fashion similar to free hemin. Furthermore, prolonged incubation with the endothelium allows methemoglobin to induce heme oxygenase and ferritin and concomitantly to modulate oxidant-mediated cytotoxicity. Methemoglobin but not hemoglobin, metmyoglobin or cytochrome c induces heme oxygenase and ferritin. Heme needs to be released from methemoglobin, since sodium cyanide, haptoglobin, and hemopexin inhibit the induction of these proteins. Neutrophils can oxidize hemoglobin to methemoglobin, which can subsequently induce both heme oxygenase and ferritin. We speculate that in shock with disseminated intravascular coagulation, marginated PMNs oxidize hemoglobin to heme-releasing methemoglobin. If critical defenses such as haptoglobin and hemopexin are overwhelmed, heme enters the endothelin cells, sensitizing them to oxidant damage. Endothelial cell adaptation via heme-induced heme oxygenase and ferritin production might limit ultimate progression to pulmonary and other vascular leak syndromes.
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PMID:Endothelial cell heme oxygenase and ferritin induction by heme proteins: a possible mechanism limiting shock damage. 130 86

Human H-ferritin homopolymer was denatured in sodium dodecyl sulphate and injected in mice to obtain antibodies for dissociated H-subunit. The antisera and Moabs obtained were specific for the denatured H-chain with no cross-reactivity with assembled ferritins in immunoblotting experiments. In contrast the Moabs for native recombinant H-ferritin are specific for the assembled ferritin molecules with weak cross-reactivity with the denatured H-subunits. The epitope recognized by one of the anti-denatured H-chain Moabs was mapped on the C-terminal helix of ferritin. The antibodies were used to study H-ferritin conformation in cells. In immunocytochemistry experiments the antibodies for denatured H-ferritin stained HeLa and K562 cells weakly, with a different intensity and pattern to those obtained with anti-native H-ferritin antibody. In human bone marrow smears the anti-denatured ferritin antibodies stained only reticuloendothelial cells, and did not recognize the H-ferritin rich immature erythroblasts. It is concluded that assembled and denatured H-ferritins are immunogenically distinct, and that erythroid and reticuloendothelial cells within the bone marrow contain H-ferritin in different conformations.
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PMID:Antibodies for denatured human H-ferritin stain only reticuloendothelial cells within the bone marrow. 138 4


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