Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty-five canine skin neoplasms studied using immunocytochemistry, included 22 histiocytomas, 18 amelanotic melanomas, 14 cutaneous lymphosarcomas, six
mast cell
tumors, and five transmissible venereal tumors. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections were stained using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC) immunoperoxidase technique for reactivity with S-100 protein, kappa and lambda immunoglobulin light chains, alpha-1-antitrypsin, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, leukocyte common antigen (LCA), neuron-specific enolase, keratin, cytokeratin,
muramidase
, and vimentin. Detection of S-100, kappa and lambda light chains, neuron-specific enolase, and vimentin were most useful for screening these neoplasms. None of the markers examined was consistent in staining histiocytomas. While reactivity of S-100 (ten cases) and neuron-specific enolase (ten cases) was detected in some amelanotic melanomas, lambda light chain immunoglobulin (eight cases) was relatively consistent in cutaneous lymphomas. Mast cell neoplasms reacted with avidin and, therefore, were positive, even on negative control sections. Vimentin reacted strongly on all amelanotic melanomas and transmissible venereal tumors examined. These antibodies are helpful adjuncts in the differential diagnosis of canine skin tumors.
...
PMID:Diagnostic immunohistochemistry of canine round cell tumors. 313 15
The lysozyme (
muramidase
) activity was measured in the sera of 84 dogs with neoplastic disease. Neoplasms included 32 lymphomas, 13 primary bone neoplasms, 5 melanomas, 5 thyroid neoplasms, 9 soft tissue sarcomas, 5
mast cell
sarcomas, and 15 carcinomas. The sera from 21 healthy dogs served as control. Dogs with neoplastic disease had significantly (P less than 0.005) higher serum lysozyme activity than did the healthy controls. For lymphosarcoma, dogs with clinical signs of systemic disease had significantly higher serum lysozyme activity than did dogs without clinical signs. For bone neoplasms, dogs with metastatic disease had higher serum lysozyme activity than did dogs without metastasis. Increased lysozyme activity may be a useful marker of macrophage-mediated host responses to neoplasms in dogs.
...
PMID:Serum lysozyme (muramidase) activity in dogs with neoplastic disease. 679 92
Eleven female patients with adult-onset Still's disease were followed for 7-36 years (mean 20.2 years) after the onset of their illness. Ten of these patients had a chronic course characterized by remissions and exacerbations of arthritis associated with fever and rash. Five patients had terminal interphalangeal involvement, and carpal ankylosis was demonstrated on x-ray film in 10. Two patients developed a widespread polyarthritis, and
renal amyloidosis
was diagnosed 10 years after disease onset in the most severely affected patient. In 4 patients studied during an exacerbation of the disease, circulating immune complexes were detected by the staphylococcal A binding assay, but not by the C1q binding assay. Synovial fluid analysis in 1 patient revealed a low C3 level and total hemolytic complement (CH50) together with immune complexes and IgG rheumatoid factor. Immune complexes were not identified in the characteristic Still's rash by immunofluorescence or electron microscopy, although
mast cell
degranulation, neutrophil lysis, and perivascular fibrin deposition were reminiscent of immune complex--mediated vascular injury. The clinical and laboratory features as well as the long-term course of adult- and juvenile-onset systemic Still's disease are similar, but further studies of genetic markers and immunopathology are required to establish a common pathophysiology.
...
PMID:Adult-onset Still's disease. Twenty-year followup and further studies of patients with active disease. 709 64
The sporulation-related gamma-D-glutamyl-(L)meso-diaminopimelic-acid-hydrolysing peptidase I of Bacillus sphaericus NCTC 9602 has been analysed by proton-induced X-ray emission. It contains 1 equivalent Zn2+ per mol of protein. As derived from gene cloning and sequencing, the B. sphaericus Zn peptidase I is a two-module protein. A 100-amino-acid-residue N-terminal domain consisting of two tandem segments of similar sequences, is fused to a 296-amino-acid-residue C-terminal catalytic domain. The catalytic domain belongs to the Zn
carboxypeptidase A
family, the closest match being observed with the Streptomyces griseus carboxypeptidase [Narahashi (1990) J. Biochem. 107, 879-886] and with the family prototype, bovine
carboxypeptidase A
. The catalytic domain of the B. sphaericus peptidase I possesses, distributed along the amino-acid sequence, peptide segments, a triad His162-Glu165-His307 and a dyad Tyr347-Glu366 that are equivalent to secondary structures, the zinc-binding triad His69-Glu72-His196 and the catalytic dyad Tyr248-Glu270 of bovine
carboxypeptidase A
respectively. The N-terminal repeats of the B. sphaericus peptidase I have similarity with the C-terminal repeats of the Enterococcus hirae
muramidase
2, the Streptococcus (now Enterococcus) faecalis autolysin and the Bacillus phi PZA and phi 29 lysozymes, to which a role in the recognition of a particular moiety of the bacterial cell envelope has been tentatively assigned. Detergents enhance considerably the specific activity of the B. sphaericus peptidase I.
...
PMID:Characterization of the sporulation-related gamma-D-glutamyl-(L)meso-diaminopimelic-acid-hydrolysing peptidase I of Bacillus sphaericus NCTC 9602 as a member of the metallo(zinc) carboxypeptidase A family. Modular design of the protein. 850 90
Renal interstitial fibrosis is the final common pathway leading to end-stage renal disease in various nephropathies including
renal amyloidosis
. However, the role of mast cells (MCs) in the fibrotic process of
renal amyloidosis
is not fully understood. We compared the distribution of MCs in renal biopsies from 30 patients with AA type
renal amyloidosis
and 20 control cases. Immunoreactivity of renal MCs to anti-tryptase and anti-chymase was studied. Interstitial myofibroblasts were stained with anti-alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) antibody, and inflammatory cells were identified by anti-CD45, -CD20, and -CD68 mAbs. Positively stained cells were counted, and the relative interstitial and fractional areas of anti-alpha-SMA stained cells were measured. Anti-CD29 mAb was used to detect beta1 integrin and anti-basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) mAb for the growth factor on MCs. MCs were rarely found in control samples. In contrast, samples showing amyloid deposition contained numerous tryptase-positive (MCT) (940.17 +/- 5.4 versus 6.74 +/- 1.1/mm2) but fewer chymase-positive (MCTC) cells (20.7 +/- 2.86 versus 1.7 +/- 0.76/mm2) in the renal interstitium. There was a significant relationship between interstitial MCT and creatinine clearance (r = -0.72), and between interstitial MCT and glomerular amyloid-index (GAI) (r = 0.723) and interstitial amyloid area (r = 0.824). Accumulation of MCs correlated significantly with the number of T lymphocytes (MCT: r = 0.694). There was also a significant relationship between
mast cell
(MC) number and the fractional area of alpha-SMA positive interstitium (r = 0.733) and interstitial fibrotic area (r = 0.6). Double immunostaining demonstrated intracytoplasmic presence of beta1 integrin on 87% of MCT and correlated significantly with the interstitial amyloid area (r = 0.818, P = .001) and T-cell number (r = 0.639, P = .002). bFGF was also detected on 85.5% of MCTC correlating well with the interstitial alpha-SMA-area (r = 0.789). Our results indicate that MCs constitute an integral part of the overall inflammatory process and play a crucial role in interstitial fibrosis in
renal amyloidosis
.
...
PMID:Increased density of interstitial mast cells in amyloid A renal amyloidosis. 1100 43
Eighteen renal biopsy specimens obtained from patients with AA-type
renal amyloidosis
(AA) and 11 from patients with AL-type
renal amyloidosis
(AL), for whom both light and electron microscopy as well as immunofluorescence microscopy and full clinical data were available, were examined quantitatively. The cases were selected on the basis of immunohistochemical studies. As a control, we used 10 biopsy specimens from the kidneys removed because of trauma. Morphometric investigations were carried out by a computer image analysis system to find an answer to the question of whether mast cells can correlate with tubulointerstitial fibrosis in AA and AL
renal amyloidosis
, and to examine the relationship between mast cells and interstitial alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) expression and interstitial infiltrates. The morphometric study revealed that the mean values of the interstitial tryptase-positive cells, expression of alpha-SMA, interstitial volume, CD68+, CD45RB+, CD43+ and CD20+ cells were increased in AA as compared with the AL group, most of them significantly. Most of these parameters were also significantly increased in both AA and AL patients as compared with the control group. In both the AA group and the AL group, there existed some significant positive correlations between interstitial tryptase-positive cells and interstitial expression of alpha-SMA, interstitial volume and CD68+ cells. Interestingly, in AA cases, but not in AL cases, we noted a significant relationship between interstitial tryptase-positive cells and CD43+ cells. Our findings demonstrate that mast cells belong to the constitutive cell types in the interstitium in
renal amyloidosis
, in particular in amyloid type A. In addition, in both the AA group and the AL group, the significant positive correlations between interstitial
mast cell
count and relative interstitial volume and interstitial expression of alpha-SMA suggest that these cells play a role in the development of interstitial fibrosis.
...
PMID:Quantitative analysis of interstitial mast cells in AA and AL renal amyloidosis. 1216 98
The cuticle is the outermost layer of the avian eggshell, whose protein constituents remain virtually unknown. We hypothesize that cuticle components play a major role in microbial resistance, since eggs with incomplete or absent cuticle are more susceptible to bacterial contamination. In this study we extracted proteins from the outermost non-calcified layer of the cuticle of chicken eggs and subjected them to LC/MS/MS proteomic analysis. We identified 47 cuticle proteins with high confidence and reproducibility. Two proteins, similar to Kunitz-like protease inhibitor and ovocalyxin-32 (a
carboxypeptidase A
inhibitor), were the most abundant of the cuticle proteins. A number of proteins known to have antimicrobial activity in the egg were detected (
lysozyme C
, ovotransferrin, ovocalyxin-32, cystatin, ovoinhibitor) as well as possible new candidates (myeloperoxidase, ovocalyxin-36 and members of the SERPIN family). This is the first comprehensive report of cuticle proteome, a starting point to determine cuticle function and the molecular basis of its antimicrobial properties.
...
PMID:Proteomic analysis provides new insight into the chicken eggshell cuticle. 2270 29