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)

Two patients, a 62-year-old man and a 50-year-old woman, both with deep-seated atypical endothelial tumors within the wide concept of histiocytoid hemangioma, are reported. In case 1, the tumor involved the brachial vein, and, in case 2, a medium-sized vein of the anterior neck. In both cases the involved vein was occluded. Angiography in case 1 suggested a tumor that was enclosed by the same fibrous sheath, the conjunctiva vasorum, that enclosed the occluded vein and its concomitant artery. Both tumors were solid, without conspicuous vascular differentiation by light microscopy. Such differentiation, however, was evident from the electron-microscopic examination, which showed tumor cells with endothelial features forming primitive vascular structures. Positive lectin histochemistry (Ulex Europeus I) and positive immunohistochemistry for factor-VIII-related antigen, actin, and vimentin also gave strong support for the endothelial differentiation of the tumor cells. Immunohistochemical studies of markers for histiocytic (alpha 1-antitrypsin, ferritin, lysozyme), epithelial (cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen), and neuroectodermal (S-100 protein) and skeletal muscle (myoglobin) differentiation were negative. At follow-up, after 7 years and 2 years, respectively, there were no signs of local recurrence or metastasis.
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PMID:Atypical hemangioendothelioma of venous origin. A clinicopathologic, angiographic, immunohistochemical, and ultrastructural study of two endothelial tumors within the concept of histiocytoid hemangioma. 393 54

Native ferritin was injected into the rete testis of rats, and seminiferous tubules infused with the tracer were collected 6 h later and prepared for electron microscopic analysis. As a result of internalization of the tracer by Sertoli cells, label was found within 12-66% of the secondary lysosomes, depending on the stage of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. The Zeiss MOP-3 instrument was used on selected electron microscope photographs to measure a number of morphometric parameters. Applying appropriate formulae and a computerized program, it was possible to determine the absolute numbers of labeled and unlabeled secondary lysosomes per Sertoli cell for each one of the 14 stages of the cycle. Knowing the duration of these stages, it was also possible to evaluate the turnover kinetics and life span of lysosomes for each stage of the cycle. The percentage of ferritin-labeled lysosomes, regarded as an index of the endocytic activity of Sertoli cells, remained low in stages II to VIII, increased abruptly during stage IX, stayed high during stages X to XIV, and decreased to a low level during stage I of the following cycle. Correspondingly, the turnover of secondary lysosomes was relatively slow and their life span relatively long during stages II through VIII, while the turnover of lysosomes was faster and their life span shorter during stages X through XIV-I of the cycle. During stage IX, there was a sharp drop in the number of lysosomes per Sertoli cell associated with a fast rate of disappearance and a remarkably short life span of less than 4 h for the lysosomes. These features, characteristic of stage IX, are explained by the rapid fusion of lysosomes with residual bodies, which are phagocytosed by Sertoli cells at this particular stage of the cycle. The accelerated endocytosis taking place during stages IX through XIV of the cycle may explain the reduction of the surface area of the adluminal plasma membrane of Sertoli cells as well as the reduction in volume of the tubular lumen observed during these stages. Thus, the demonstrated cyclic endocytic activity of Sertoli cells and several other cyclical events taking place within seminiferous tubules correlate well.
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PMID:Cyclic endocytic activity and kinetics of lysosomes in Sertoli cells of the rat: a morphometric analysis. 395 37

We have constructed a random nonapeptide library in the N-terminal region of the major coat protein VIII of bacteriophage f1, with two cysteines flanking the insert, and preliminary data suggest that many of the clones display at least some of their peptides in cyclized form. This library was used to select oligopeptides binding to the monoclonal antibody (mAb) H107, recognising the assembled native conformation of recombinant human H-subunit ferritin (H Fer), whose three-dimensional structure is known. Comparison of the selected oligopeptides with one another allowed us to derive two consensus sequences characterized by conserved amino acid (aa) residues. Analysis of the distribution of the aa side chains exposed on the surface of H Fer reveals that most of the aa defining both consensus sequences are present either at the end of the big loop or at the end of the A helix. These two regions of the H Fer, though separated in the linear sequence, are very close in the folded molecule. Interestingly, each consensus sequence derived from the selected phage-displayed peptides is characterized by aa present both at the end of the big loop and at the end of the A helix. These two H Fer regions are good candidates for mimicry by the selected peptides and therefore for constituting part of the H107 epitope. To provide support to this hypothesis, we constructed several H Fer mutants carrying point mutations in different positions of these two regions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Mimicking of discontinuous epitopes by phage-displayed peptides, I. Epitope mapping of human H ferritin using a phage library of constrained peptides. 768 1

Anaemia is one of the most common disorders in pregnancy. The most common cause is iron deficiency. Iron deficiency anaemia is relatively easy to diagnose using a serum ferritin of <15 ng/ml. However, because ferritin is an acute phase reactant, the diagnosis of iron deficiency anaemia in hospitalised or ill patients may be difficult, since serum ferritin may be normal or raised, even in the face of iron deficiency. Soluble transferrin receptor assay (STfR) may be useful in these situations because it reflects the degree of iron requirement in relation to supply, and it is not an acute phase reactant. This study was undertaken to detect subclinical anaemia in pregnant women and to correlate STfR assay with the current diagnostic tests for iron deficiency anaemia. One hundred and fifty-three consenting pregnant women seen at the antenatal clinic at King Edward VIII Hospital (KEH) were recruited. Women on haemantinics, who had renal failure, haemoglinopathy and blood transfusion in the past 3 months, were excluded. An ELISA technique was used for the assay of STfR while standard methodology was used for the other biochemical and haematological assays (FBC, urea, creatinine, c reactive protein and iron studies). One hundred and fifty subjects were included in the final analysis. Seventy-two (48%) had varying degrees of iron deficiency anaemia. In 70% (105) of the samples analysed, serum ferritin and STfR agreed on the presence/absence of iron deficiency anaemia. STfR and S:F were 75% and 86% sensitive; 63% and 82% specific, respectively. The calculated positive and negative predictive values are: STfR 64% and 75%; S:F 84% and 87%; Hb 58% and 57%; mean corpuscular volume 91% and 55%, respectively. Ferritin remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of iron deficiency anaemia. However, because ferritin is an acute phase reactant, soluble transferrin receptor assay may be a better test in ill and hospitalised patients where ferritin may be normal or elevated, despite iron deficiency.
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PMID:Soluble transferrin receptors in anaemia of pregnancy. 1252 53

Beta-thalassemia/hemoglobin (Hb) E is a hereditary hemolytic anemia with varying degrees of severity. Severely affected patients are treated with blood transfusion and/or splenectomy in order to maintain an optimum level of hemoglobin for normal growth and physical activities. As thrombosis has been observed among splenectomized patients, we have investigated alterations in coagulation and fibrinolysis in beta-thalassemia/Hb E patients. Plasma levels of prothrombin, fibrinogen, factors V, VII, VIII, IX and XI, protein C, protein S, thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) and prothrombin fragment 1+2 were determined in 61 patients (21 non-severe non-splenectomized, 18 severe non-splenectomized, 22 severe splenectomized) and 28 healthy individuals. Serum levels of D-dimer, ferritin, aspartate transaminase and alanine transaminase were also measured. All severe patients received regular blood transfusion. Prothrombin fragment 1+2 and D-dimer were significantly elevated in splenectomized patients compared to the healthy control subjects, whereas levels of proteins C, protein S, TAFI, fibrinogen, and factors V and VIII in the splenectomized groups were statistically lower than those in control group. There are no statistical differences for the other parameters measured between patients and controls. Coagulation tests showed only significantly reduction in TAFI and factor V and VIII levels in severe splenectomized group in comparison with severe non-splenectomized patients. These results demonstrate the existence of a low grade consumptive coagulopathy among blood-transfused splenectomized patients with severe clinical manifestations, indicating that these patients may have a higher risk for thrombosis than comparable patients with intact spleen.
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PMID:Hemostatic alterations in splenectomized and non-splenectomized patients with beta-thalassemia/hemoglobin E disease. 1738 94

The endocytic activity taking place at the apex of Sertoli cells was analyzed by using various tracers to demonstrate fluid-phase and adsorptive endocytosis. Native ferritin and protein-gold complexes, used to demonstrate fluid-phase endocytosis, were internalized by Sertoli cells at all stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. At 5 min after injection, the tracers were found in the large spherical or C-shaped vesicles seen in the apical processes; at 15 and 30 min, the tracers accumulated in light multivesicular bodies, and at 60 min in dense multivesicular bodies and lysosomes. At later time intervals, an increasing number of lysosomes contained the tracers. Following injection of cationic ferritin or concanavalin A-ferritin, these tracers, used to demonstrate adsorptive endocytosis, were found to be found to the plasma membrane of Sertoli-cell apical processes but were not collected by the large cytoplasmic apical vesicles, multivesicular bodies, or lysosomes. As an exception, a few special multivesicular bodies seen in the large apical processes which encapsulate the heads of late spermatids at stage VII of the cycle contained these tracers. During stage VIII of the cycle, the residual bodies which detach from the mature spermatids are phagocytosed by Sertoli cells. Such residual bodies do not contain their own hydrolytic lysosomal enzymes. However, it was observed that the lysosomes which form as a result of the fluid-phase endocytic activity of the Sertoli cells fuse with the phagocytosed residual bodies and by means of their hydrolytic enzymes contribute to the rapid disintegration of these bodies. Thus, during stage VIII of the cycle, the Sertoli cells integrate two distinct processes, i.e., fluid-phase endocytosis and phagocytosis.
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PMID:Nature and function of endocytosis in Sertoli cells of the rat. 2072 21

Gliomas are rare entities in the cerebellopontine angle (CPA) in adults. The authors present clinical, neuroradiological, serological, and neuropathological findings in a 60-year-old man with an extraaxial CPA glioblastoma arising from the proximal portion of cranial nerve VIII. The patient presented with progressive left-sided deafness and left-sided facial palsy lasting less than 2 months and progressive dysarthria and dysphagia lasting 2 weeks. Preoperative neuroimaging suggested the diagnosis of CPA meningioma with "dural-tail" sign and involvement of the internal auditory canal. Serological examination showed an increase in the malignant markers of ferritin and neuron-specific enolase, which suggested underlying malignancy. The tumor was subtotally removed, and it was confirmed to be completely separated from the brainstem and cerebellum. Cranial nerves VII and VIII were destroyed and sacrificed. Transient severe bradycardia occurred during surgery due to entrapment of the caudal cranial nerve complex by the tumor in such an infiltrative way. The neuropathological examination revealed a glioblastoma. The patient underwent no further treatment and died of cachexia 2 months postoperatively. To the authors' knowledge, this represents the first case of a primary glioblastoma in the CPA in an adult. A high index of suspicion along with reliance on clinical assessment, radiological findings, and serum detection of specific malignant markers is essential to diagnose such uncommon CPA lesions.
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PMID:Primary glioblastoma of the cerebellopontine angle in adults. 2178 Aug 57