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)

To explore the role of transcriptional factors in the genesis of the senescent phenotype, nuclear extracts from 4- and 30-month-old rat brains were analyzed for the presence of DNA-binding proteins able to interact with double-stranded oligonucleotides containing recognition sites for sequence-specific DNA-binding factors. Gel shift assays revealed that the DNA-binding efficiency of Sp1 is significantly reduced in aged animals compared to young ones, whereas CTF/NF1 and AP1 from young and old rat nuclear extracts bind their DNA targets with the same efficiency. The quantitative analysis of Sp1 by immunoblotting indicated that equivalent quantities and degrees of heterogeneity of Sp1 protein are present in both nuclear extracts, suggesting that the observed difference is not due to a different expression of this transcriptional factor. DNase I footprinting of the heavy chain ferritin gene promoter, which contains a Sp1 binding site, demonstrated that the nuclear extract from 30-month-old rat brain does not protect the region involved in the regulation of the H ferritin gene by Sp1. This results in a reduction of about 50% of the expression of the H ferritin mRNA in aged rat brains. Furthermore, the Sp1 binding sites present in the SV40 early promoter are not protected in a DNase I footprinting assay where a nuclear extract from 30-month-old rat brain was used as a source of DNA binding proteins. Liver nuclear extracts prepared from young and aged rats demonstrated that a decrease of Sp1 binding efficiency is similarly present in this tissue.
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PMID:Sp1 DNA binding efficiency is highly reduced in nuclear extracts from aged rat tissues. 138 57

Phagocyte-mediated oxidant damage to vascular endothelium is likely involved in various vasculopathies including atherosclerosis and pulmonary leak syndromes such as adult respiratory distress syndrome. We have shown that heme, a hydrophobic iron chelate, is rapidly incorporated into endothelial cells where, after as little as 1 h, it markedly aggravates cytotoxicity engendered by polymorphonuclear leukocyte oxidants or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). In contrast, however, if cultured endothelial cells are briefly pulsed with heme and then allowed to incubate for a prolonged period (16 h), the cells become highly resistant to oxidant-mediated injury and to the accumulation of endothelial lipid peroxidation products. This protection is associated with the induction within 4 h of mRNAs for both heme oxygenase and ferritin. After 16 h heme oxygenase and ferritin have increased approximately 50-fold and 10-fold, respectively. Differential induction of these proteins determined that ferritin is probably the ultimate cytoprotectant. Ferritin inhibits oxidant-mediated cytolysis in direct relation to its intracellular concentration. Apoferritin, when added to cultured endothelial cells, is taken up in a dose-responsive manner and appears as cytoplasmic granules by immunofluorescence; in a similar dose-responsive manner, added apoferritin protects endothelial cells from oxidant-mediated cytolysis. Conversely, a site-directed mutant of ferritin (heavy chain Glu62----Lys; His65----Gly) which lacks ferroxidase activity and is deficient in iron sequestering capacity, is completely ineffectual as a cytoprotectant. We conclude that endothelium and perhaps other cell types may be protected from oxidant damage through the iron sequestrant, ferritin.
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PMID:Ferritin: a cytoprotective antioxidant strategem of endothelium. 151 45

Recent data have shown that ferritin, a ubiquitous protein, has a role as a regulator of cellular differentiation. In the present study we have investigated the expression of ferritin mRNAs in cultured C6 cells, a rat glioma cell line, in response to insulin, which has an important role in cellular growth and differentiation. Insulin stimulated steady state levels of both ferritin heavy chain and ferritin light chain mRNAs. An increase in the level of ferritin heavy or light chain mRNA was detected after 2 h of incubation with insulin, and a plateau was reached after 48 h for heavy chain mRNA and after 72 h for light chain mRNA. The responses were dose-dependent and were maximal at 100 nM for both mRNAs. Treatment of cells with actinomycin-D showed that insulin had no effect on the posttranscriptional stability of these mRNAs. Actinomycin-D inhibited insulin-induced accumulation of both mRNAs, suggesting transcriptional stimulation of ferritin genes by insulin. A nuclear run-on assay showed that the insulin-induced increase in ferritin heavy chain mRNA was due to an increase in the rate of gene transcription. We also demonstrated that insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) increased ferritin heavy and light chain mRNA levels in a dose-dependent fashion, and that the maximum effect was obtained at a concentration of 10 nM on both mRNA levels. IGF-I was not only 10-fold more potent, but the absolute level of maximum stimulation was also about 2-fold greater than that for insulin. The combination of insulin (100 nM) and IGF-I (10 nM) showed no additive effect. The results suggested that the ferritin heavy and light chain genes are transcriptionally regulated by insulin and influenced by IGF-I.
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PMID:Transcriptional regulation of ferritin messenger ribonucleic acid levels by insulin in cultured rat glioma cells. 199 66

Interleukin 1 alpha (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF) are two monokines which play a prominent role in the response to inflammation and injury. We recently observed that TNF leads to an increase in the synthesis of the heavy chain of ferritin, suggesting that TNF may be involved in iron homeostasis (Torti et al. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 12638-12644). The experiments reported here demonstrate that in cultured human muscle cells, IL-1 induces ferritin H mRNA and protein as effectively as TNF. TNF and IL-1 were additive in their effects on ferritin H expression, and IL-1 induction of ferritin H was not blocked by anti-TNF antibodies. Ferritin H induction was a specific response not observed with beta or gamma interferon, nor with transforming growth factor beta. Both differentiated myotubes as well as myoblasts responded to IL-1 with the induction of ferritin H. These results suggest that monokine-mediated alterations in the subunit composition of the ferritin molecule may be of biological relevance in the response to inflammation and injury.
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PMID:Interleukin 1 induces ferritin heavy chain in human muscle cells. 235 Mar 50

Highly purified murine granulocyte-macrophage progenitor cells (CFU-GM) were used as target cells to assess the possible direct effects of purified preparations of recombinant murine gamma-interferon, prostaglandin E, recombinant human heavy chain (acidic) ferritin, and recombinant human tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) on progenitor cells in vitro. Target CFU-GM, with cloning efficiencies of up to 84% and containing 0-3% morphologically recognizable accessory cells at the initiation of the culture period, were plated at a density of 100-150 cells/dish in the presence or absence of pure suppressor molecules. Colony formation was stimulated with either crude pokeweed mitogen-stimulated mouse spleen conditioned medium, pure natural murine macrophage colony-stimulating factor, or pure recombinant murine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor. All four suppressor molecules were active in vitro against purified CFU-GM as assessed by their ability to inhibit colony or cluster formation. No apparent difference in the degree of responsiveness to prostaglandin E, gamma-interferon, or human heavy chain (acidic) ferritin was noted in the presence of pokeweed mitogen-stimulated mouse spleen conditioned medium, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, or macrophage colony-stimulating factor. In contrast, TNF-alpha in cultures containing macrophage colony-stimulating factor slightly, but significantly, potentiated colony formation. TNF-alpha also appeared more active at suppressing colony formation at lower concentrations in pokeweed mitogen-stimulated mouse spleen conditioned medium than in granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-stimulated cultures of purified CFU-GM. The results suggest that TNF-alpha, human heavy chain (acidic) ferritin, gamma-interferon, and prostaglandin E can act directly at the progenitor cell level.
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PMID:Effects of hematopoietic suppressor molecules on the in vitro proliferation of purified murine granulocyte-macrophage progenitor cells. 244 53

The domain organization of the zymogen subunits of the first component of human complement C1s, C1r2 and the complex C1s-C1r2-C1s was studied by electron microscopy. In the absence of Ca2+, monomeric C1s was visualized as a dumb-bell-shaped molecule consisting of two globular domains (center-to-center distance 11 nm) connected by a rod. One of the globular domains is assigned to the light chain (B-chain) of the activated molecule, which is homologous to trypsin and other serine proteases. The second globular domain and the rod are assigned to the heavy chain (A-chain) of CIs. The subunit C1r is a stable dimer in the presence or absence of Ca2+. This dimer C1r2 was visualized as composed of two dumb-bells of dimensions similar to those observed for C1s. These are connected near the junctions between the rod and one of the globular domains. This leads to the structure of an asymmetrical X with two inner closely spaced globules (center-to-center distance 7 nm) and two outer globules at a larger distance (14 nm). By comparison with fragment C1rII2, in which part of the A-chain is removed, the inner globular domains were assigned to the catalytic B-chains. This characteristic structure of C1r2 is readily recognized in the central portion of the thread-like 54 nm long C1s-C1r2-C1s complex formed in the presence of Ca2+. By affinity-labeling of C1s with biotin and visualization of avidin-ferritin conjugates in the reconstituted complex, it was demonstrated that C1s forms the outer portion of the complex. A detailed model of C1s-C1r2-C1s is proposed, according to which two C1s monomers bind to the outer globes of C1r2 by contacts between their heavy chains and those of C1r. According to this model the catalytic domains of C1r are located in the center and those of C1s at the very tips of the C1s-C1r2-C1s complex. On the basis of the structure of C1s-C1r2-C1s, we derived a detailed model of the C1 complex (composed of C1q and the tetrameric complex) and we discuss this model with a view to finding a possible activation mechanism of C1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Functional model of subcomponent C1 of human complement. 302 30

Ferritin was isolated from the livers and brains of two groups of rats, one of which was fed aluminum chloride (100 microM) for 1 year in the drinking water. Brain tissue contained about one-third of the amount of ferritin found in the liver. While brain ferritin from normal rats contained 42.1 +/- 14.3 mol of aluminum, that from the aluminum-fed group contained 115.4 +/- 48.3 mol of aluminum per mol of ferritin. Liver ferritin from both groups contained similar amounts of both aluminum and iron, and the amounts were less than that found associated with brain ferritin. Ferritin isolated from the brains of patients who died of Alzheimer disease contained more aluminum and more iron than that from age-matched controls. Human brain ferritin is composed of two types of subunits--about 70% heavy chain (Mr, 22,000) and 30% light chain (Mr, 19,500). The isoelectric focusing pattern of human brain ferritin was considerably different from that of human liver. Only 5 of the 20 brain ferritin bands migrated similarly to the acidic isoferritins from the liver, and the major component of brain ferritin, representing 30% of the total ferritin, had a pI of 8.0.
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PMID:Ferritin: isolation of aluminum-ferritin complex from brain. 347 69

A case of peripheral T-cell lymphoma classified, according to the updated Kiel classification, as a large pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma with a high content of reactive histiocytes and blood hypereosinophilia is reported. Light microscopic examination revealed a diffuse effacement of the lymph node structure by large pleomorphic lymphoma cells mixed with eosinophils and many histiocytes, some of them presenting discrete features of hemophagocytosis. The neoplastic cells were CD3, CD5, CD8 and HLA-DR positive but failed to show CD30 antigen. DNA molecular analysis displayed simultaneous rearrangements of the genes coding for the delta chain of the T-cell receptor and for the Ig heavy chain. Increased serum levels of angiotensin converting enzyme and ferritin were found and probably induced by the reactive histiocytes. Immunoassays (ELISA) with antibodies directed against some cytokines and against the Tac peptide (sIL-2R) were performed. They demonstrated high serum levels of sIL-2R and a slight increase in GM-CSF, but neither IL-5 nor IL-3. The association of blood hypereosinophilia and histiocytic hyperplasia with a peripheral T-cell lymphoma is discussed.
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PMID:A case of pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma with a high content of reactive histiocytes presented with hypereosinophilia. 747 65

A cDNA clone of Echinococcus granulosus has been isolated from an expression library screened with sera from cystic echinococcosis patients. The deduced amino acid sequence shows 56% homology to the heavy chain of human ferritin. E. granulosus ferritin contains 173 amino acid residues and has a calculated molecular weight of 19830 Da and a statistical isoelectric point of 7.6. Functionally important amino acid residues of the ferroxidase centre are conserved in comparison with other ferritins. In vitro-translated E. granulosus ferritin was tested for its diagnostic potential by immunoprecipitation. The antigenic reactivity exhibited a good potential for the further development of E. granulosus ferritin as an immunodiagnostic tool for human hydatidosis.
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PMID:Cloning and immunological characterisation of Echinococcus granulosus ferritin. 750 36

Low density lipoprotein (LDL), if it becomes oxidized, develops several unique properties including the capacity to provoke endothelial cytotoxicity via metal-catalyzed free radical-mediated mechanisms. As were previously have shown that iron-catalyzed oxidant injury to endothelial cells can be attenuated by the addition of exogenous iron chelators such as the lazaroids and deferoxamine, we have examined whether the endogenous iron chelator, ferritin, might provide protection from oxidized LDL. LDL oxidized by iron-containing hemin and H2O2 is toxic to endothelial cells in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. Endothelial cell ferritin content is increased by pretreatment of cells with iron compounds or by the direct addition of exogenous apoferritin; ferritin-loaded cells are markedly resistant to the toxicity caused by oxidized LDL. Iron inactivation by ferritin depends on its ferroxidase activity. When a recombinant human ferritin heavy chain mutant, 222, which is devoid of ferroxidase activity, is added to endothelial cells, unlike the excellent protection afforded by the wild-type recombinant heavy chain, endothelial cells are not protected from oxidized LDL. To assess the in vivo relevance of our observation, we examined human coronary arteries of cardiac explants taken from patients with end-stage atherosclerosis. Large amounts of immunoreactive ferritin are focally detected in atherosclerotic lesions, specifically in the myofibroblasts, macrophages, and endothelium without a notable increase in Prussian blue-detectable iron. These findings suggest that ferritin may modulate vascular cell injury in vivo.
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PMID:Ferritin protects endothelial cells from oxidized low density lipoprotein in vitro. 767 89


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