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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (
ferritin
)
17,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dietary, anthropometric, and chronic disease risk factors (CDRF) in vitamin/mineral supplement users (U) and non-users (NU) were measured in a farm population consisting of 162 subjects (46% females and 54% males; 20-79 years of age, mean age: 52 years). Subjects were white, except for two black males. Supplements were used by 62 subjects (38%); 47% of females and 31% of males used supplements; 43% of subjects over 50 years of age and 32% of subjects age 50 or under used supplements. Both dietary intake and energy expenditure were measured using 4-day records. Indices of adiposity included body weight, BMI, and estimated body fat. Total cholesterol (TC), high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), serum
ferritin
, hemoglobin, hematocrit,
zinc
, copper, and vitamin C were based on 12-hr fasting blood samples. Dietary intake (excluding supplements) for vitamin/mineral U was greater than NU for vitamin C (p = 0.006), thiamin (p = 0.01), riboflavin (p = 0.03), niacin (p = 0.02), folic acid (p = 0.001), vitamin B6 (p = 0.01), and magnesium (p = 0.019). Vitamin C levels were significantly higher and the sum of four skinfolds was significantly lower among U than NU. In this population, 24% of males and 18% of females had TC levels over 240 mg%; 8% of both males and females had blood pressures (BP) greater than 140/90 mm Hg, while 49% of males and 46% of females had BP between 120/80 and 140/90; and 71% of males were more than 25% fat, and 56% of females were more than 35% fat. Despite the high prevalence of CDRF, there were no significant differences between supplement U and NU.
...
PMID:Chronic disease risk factors in vitamin/mineral supplement users and nonusers in a farm population. 189 83
The steps involved in iron absorption are poorly understood. Although transferrin and
ferritin
are water soluble, most radioiron in gut homogenates after an intraluminal dose of radioiron is recovered in water-insoluble precipitates. Most radioiron in the precipitates was insoluble in detergents and organic solvents and was characterized as mucins. These isolates bound iron in vitro with a Kd of 9.09 x 10(-5). Similar iron binding was observed with commercial mucins. Iron binding to mucin occurred at acid pH and maintained the iron available for absorption with alkalinization. Similar pH-dependent binding to mucin was observed with
zinc
, cobalt, and lead. Iron competitively inhibited binding of these metals to mucin. However, iron chelates of ascorbate, fructose, and histidine donated iron to mucin at neutral pH. These data provided a role for gastric HCl and intestinal mucin in absorption of iron and metal cations and partial explanation of the competition for absorption between certain metals from the gut lumen. It is postulated that intestinal mucin delivers inorganic iron to intestinal absorptive cells in an acceptable form for absorption.
...
PMID:A role for mucin in the absorption of inorganic iron and other metal cations. A study in rats. 198 14
Plasma
zinc
, iron, copper, and selenium and selected blood proteins were measured in 66 men before (BHW) and after (AHW) a 5-d period of sustained physical and psychological stress called Hell Week. Recovery blood samples were obtained from 26 men 7 d after Hell Week. Dietary intakes were determined BHW and during Hell Week;
zinc
, iron, copper, and selenium intakes during Hell Week averaged 23.6 +/- 3.4 mg/d, 35.4 +/- 3.9 mg/d, 3.0 +/- 0.5 mg/d, and 92.5 +/- 26.7 micrograms/d, respectively. C-reactive protein was detected in only five subjects BHW and in all subjects AHW.
Zinc
, iron, selenium, and albumin decreased by 33%, 44%, 12%, and 9%, respectively, whereas
ferritin
, ceruloplasmin, and creatine kinase concentrations increased AHW by 59%, 8%, and 266%, respectively. Haptoglobin concentrations increased 57% in 30 subjects but decreased 32% in 23 subjects AHW. The biochemical changes were transitory because protein (except
ferritin
) and mineral concentrations were similar to BHW values 7 d after Hell Week. Hell Week induced changes characteristic of an acute-phase response in physically active men.
...
PMID:Biochemical indices of selected trace minerals in men: effect of stress. 198 37
Erythrocyte superoxide dismutase (ESOD) activity reflects copper utilization and the risk of copper deficiency. To investigate the possible effects of inorganic iron on the metabolism of copper in low birth weight infants, we have measured ESOD activities in three groups of infants receiving different iron supplements. Fifty-five low birth weight infants were randomly assigned to receive daily from 28 d either 13.8 mg (HiFe), 7 mg (MidFe), or no elemental iron (NatFe) as iron edetate. At 27 d, 8, 12, and 20 wk postnatal age, infants were weighed and measured and hematologic indices, plasma
ferritin
,
zinc
, and copper concentrations, and ESOD activities were assayed. Anthropometrical and hematologic indices and plasma copper and
zinc
concentrations did not differ among treatment groups at any time, but at 20 wk, plasma
ferritin
concentrations [(micrograms/L) mean; SD] were lower in the NatFe group (17; 2.0) than in the HiFe group (32; 1.9: 95% confidence interval for mean difference 6.6 to 22.0, p less than 0.01). ESOD activities (U/g Hb) were similar in HiFe (1447; 263), MidFe (1552; 322), and NatFe (1538; 382) groups at 27 d, but by 20 wk activities in the HiFe group (1537; 211) were lower than in the MidFe (1789; 403: 95% confidence interval 38 to 466, p less than 0.05) and NatFe (1858; 304: 95% confidence interval 150 to 492, p less than 0.01) groups. The lower ESOD activities found in the HiFe group at 20 wk may reflect altered copper metabolism induced by the iron supplement, but the clinical importance of this observation is unknown.
...
PMID:Reduced erythrocyte superoxide dismutase activity in low birth weight infants given iron supplements. 203 79
To provide clues to the causes of liver cancer in China, we studied the correlation of certain dietary and biochemical markers with liver cancer mortality across 65 Chinese counties. Mortality rates were significantly linked to the county-wide prevalence of hepatitis-B surface antigen positivity. Rates were also higher in counties with high plasma levels of total cholesterol and high consumption of liquor, rapeseed oil, and mouldy corn, while inverse associations were observed for wheat consumption. All of the observed associations, except those with cholesterol and rapeseed oil, were more pronounced in men than in women. No significant correlations with liver cancer mortality were found for consumption of several other foods; plasma levels of retinol, beta-carotene, alpha-tocopherol, selenium,
zinc
and
ferritin
; or urine levels of aflatoxin B1. Although causal inferences cannot be derived, this ecological study suggests that chronic infection with hepatitis-B virus contributes to the substantial variation in liver cancer mortality in China, and provides leads for further studies into the role of dietary and nutritional determinants.
...
PMID:Correlates of liver cancer mortality in China. 206 44
Erythrocyte basic
ferritin
(EF) concentration was determined in 64 normal subjects, 123 patients with anemia and 12 patients with leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. There was a significant difference between males and females. Other iron indices, including plasma iron (PI), total iron binding capacity (TIBC),
zinc
protoporphyrin (ZnPP) and plasma
ferritin
(PF) were also determined in all the subjects and bone marrow iron stain was determined in the 135 patients. The lowest EF concentration was seen in patients with iron deficiency anemia, being significantly lower than that in normal subjects. EF concentration in patients with iron deficiency erythropoiesis was also lower than that in normal subjects and at the same time significantly different from that in patients with iron deficiency anemia. EF concentration increased prior to PF concentration in patients with iron deficiency anemia who had been treated for a period of 1-8 weeks. EF concentration in patients with anemia of chronic diseases had a significant difference as compared with that in normal subjects and in patients with iron deficiency anemia, but EF concentration in those patients who were accompanied by iron deficiency was similar to that in patients with simple iron deficiency anemia. EF concentration in some iron overloaded patients (aplastic anemia, megaloblastic anemia, MDS etc.) was significantly higher than that in normal subjects. It was demonstrated that there was a good correlation between EF concentration and bone marrow sideroblastic iron in the rank correlation analysis of the iron indices in 135 patients (rs 0.893, P less than 0.01). PF concentration had the best correlation with marrow iron (rs 0.948, P less than 0.01).
...
PMID:[Evaluation of erythrocyte basic ferritin in the diagnosis of anemia]. 208
We retrospectively reviewed the radiographic findings of 86 children with chronic diarrhoea and/or short stature. Radiographic small intestine examination showed morphologic changes characteristic for the malabsorption syndrome in 58 children with coeliac disease on a gluten-containing diet. In addition, 32 (55%) of these children showed "intestinal adaptation" or "jejunalization" (increase in the number and thickness of the folds). In the control group (28 children, cross-matched) 11 (39%) presented non specific radiological changes while the others presented a normal mucosal pattern. No features of "intestinal adaptation" were noted. No significant differences between CD patients with and without "intestinal adaptation" were found in the evaluation of the nutritional status, including serum levels of albumin, iron, transferrin,
ferritin
and
zinc
, and in the results of the one-hr xylose test and 72-hr faecal fat absorption test, and anti-gliadin antibody levels (IgA and IgG). No significant correlation was noted between the duration of gluten-containing diet and the presence of "intestinal adaptation". It appears that "intestinal adaptation" lends specificity to the radiographic small intestine examination, also in paediatric practice.
...
PMID:Radiological changes of the ileum in children with coeliac disease: is "intestinal adaptation" a specific radiographic sign? 210 Nov 65
Carcinogenic metal levels in serum and tissue samples were measured in patients with bronchopulmonary or colorectal cancer. The cadmium and nickel tissue levels in the patients with lung cancer were significantly higher than in the controls. A statistical correlation was found between chromium and cadmium, as well as between cadmium and nickel in patients with colorectal cancer. In addition, prior to the operation, the tumor markers alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), carbohydrate antigen (Ca 19-9), polypeptide histidio antigen (TPA) and
ferritin
were analyzed. Their average concentrations were correlated with the existing concentrations of the metals. This was done for both types of cancer. Tumor marker detection showed an increase of CEA and TPA in patients with colorectal cancer. A statistical correlation was observed between AFP and
zinc
tumor tissue.
...
PMID:Comparative analysis of certain metals and tumor markers in bronchopulmonary cancer and colorectal cancers. Metals and tumor markers in the neoplastic process. 210
HeLa cells incubated in serum-free medium accumulated 59Fe ("non-transferrin iron") when incubated with either 59Fe-citrate, 59Fe-nitrilotriacetate, or 59Fe dissolved in Tricine ascorbate. Accumulation of iron was time-, concentration-, and Ca2+-dependent and was saturable. Uptake of non-transferrin (non-Tf) iron was transferrin-independent because of the fact that uptake occurred at pH 5.5, a pH at which transferrin binds iron poorly and at which transferrin is not internalized by cells. Uptake of non-Tf iron was less affected than uptake of transferrin iron by 1) exposure of cells to trypsin, a maneuver that cleaves Tf receptors, or 2) incubation of cells with phenylarsine oxide, an agent that inhibits both fluid- and receptor-mediated internalization. After exposure of cells to non-Tf iron at 37 degrees C, most of the cell-associated radioactivity was recovered in heme and
ferritin
, demonstrating that iron gained access to intracellular compartments and was not simply adsorbed to the cell surface. Uptake of non-Tf iron could be partially blocked by Cu2+ in a dose-dependent manner, while the accumulation of transferrin-bound iron was unaffected by Cu2+. Other transition metals, such as
Zn2+
, Cd2+, and Mn2+ were able to inhibit the uptake of non-Tf iron to different degrees. The accumulation of 109Cd was inhibited by incubation of cells with non-Tf iron, Cu2+, or Mn2+. The extent of inhibition was concentration- and metal-dependent. A number of cultured cell lines including HeLa, human skin fibroblasts, and Chinese hamster ovary cells demonstrated uptake of non-Tf iron and 109Cd. Additionally, an endosome acidification mutant of Chinese hamster ovary cells, which exhibited an increase in non-Tf iron uptake, also exhibited an increase in the uptake of Cd2+. These observations suggest that the characteristics of the non-Tf iron transport system in HeLa cells are similar if not identical to those reported for perfused rat liver (Wright, T. L., Brissot, P., Ma, W.-L., and Weisiger, P. A. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 10909-10914) and suggest the existence of a family of transition metal transport systems, each with a different metal specificity.
...
PMID:Characterization of a transferrin-independent uptake system for iron in HeLa cells. 210 43
Effects of physical training on fasting erythrocyte and plasma
zinc
distributions were studied on seven previously sedentary male students. The training consisted of running over 5 km, 6 times/week for 10 weeks. Maximum aerobic capacity (VO2max) and 12 min walk-run performance increased significantly (p less than 0.01) after training. The erythrocyte concentrations of total
zinc
and of
zinc
derived from carbonic anhydrase I (CA-I) rose significantly (p less than 0.05) after training, whereas no such effects were noted in CA-II-derived
zinc
, Cu2Zn2 superoxide dismutase-derived
zinc
, and other
zinc
. On the other hand, no effect of training was found in total or alpha 2-macroglobulin-bound
zinc
in plasma, although albumin-bound
zinc
concentration declined significantly (p less than 0.05). Following the training period, however, the response to a VO2max test of the van Beaumont quotient (J Appl Physiol 1973;34:102-6) for total plasma
zinc
had decreased significantly (p less than 0.05), suggesting a relative reduction of the circulating exchangeable
zinc
. In addition, there were significant (p less than 0.05) decreases in plasma iron and
ferritin
concentrations after training, indicating latent iron deficiency anemia. These results may suggest that the changes in CA-I-derived
zinc
and/or albumin-bound
zinc
portend
zinc
deficiency during running training and that sports anemia precedes hypozincemia in athletes.
...
PMID:Training effects on blood zinc levels in humans. 212 94
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