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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endotoxin (
lipopolysaccharide
, LPS) and LPS antibody in the blood were studied in 61 cases of ulcerative colitis (U.C.) by radioimmunoassay. Lysozyme (LZM) concentration was also studied by the turbidimetric method. As a result, it was found that the blood LPS value as well as serum LZM concentration reflects the clinical observations. The case of endotoxemia in the active phase group showed a positive correlation between the LPS value and LZM concentration. LPS antibody which could not be detected in many cases of the active phase, had a high titer in cases of remission with a long history of the disease. These results would suggest that in U.C. with damaged intestinal mucosal barrier, LPS originating from intestinal flora enters into the blood and aggravates the disease and further that this invading LPS releases LZM into the blood. The same studies were performed on 7 cases of
Crohn's disease
and the same result was obtained.
...
PMID:A study of endotoxemia in ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. I. Clinical study. 15 Feb
Serum tumor necrosis factor (TNF) levels in 33 patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) were measured by using a sensitive enzyme immunoassay. Four of five
Crohn's
diseases (CD) and nine of twenty eight ulcerative colitis (UC) had elevated levels of serum TNF. In active CD or UC, a greater fraction of patients studied had significantly increased serum TNF levels (3/3 for CD and 8/11 for UC). Production of TNF by peripheral blood monocytes when stimulated by
lipopolysaccharide
was also increased in these patients and correlated with their serum TNF levels. These results suggest that TNF may have some pathoetiological meaning in IBD.
...
PMID:Serum tumor necrosis factor activity in inflammatory bowel disease. 151 30
Cytokines released from activated mononuclear leukocytes are involved in triggering the acute phase response and many of the inflammatory manifestations of ulcerative colitis and
Crohn's disease
. The ability of circulating monocytes from patients with ulcerative colitis and
Crohn's disease
to generate the cytokines interleukin 1 beta (IL 1 beta) and tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha), both spontaneously and in response to stimulation by
lipopolysaccharide
, was compared. IL 1 beta generation in response to
lipopolysaccharide
was significantly higher in
Crohn's disease
than in ulcerative colitis and normal controls, with a dramatic increase in patients with active disease. There was a significant reduction in
lipopolysaccharide
stimulated TNF alpha generation in ulcerative colitis patients compared with
Crohn's disease
and normal control subjects. IL 1 beta and TNF alpha release correlated significantly with serum C reactive protein and serum alpha 1 acid glycoprotein in
Crohn's disease
. The ability of conditioned medium from monocytes in
Crohn's disease
to enhance release of alpha 1 acid glycoprotein from the liver cell line HepG2 in culture was assessed. There was a significant positive correlation between TNF alpha and IL 1 beta presence in the supernatant and alpha 1 acid glycoprotein production. The differences in the cytokine profile in patients with
Crohn's disease
compared with ulcerative colitis suggest an intrinsic difference in the ability to produce cytokines in patients with these two forms of inflammatory bowel disease, and may explain features such as the enhanced ability to generate a brisk C reactive protein response in
Crohn's disease
.
...
PMID:Peripheral blood monocyte cytokine production and acute phase response in inflammatory bowel disease. 162 58
Inflammatory bowel diseases lead to a systemic acute-phase response. Monocyte activation plays a central role during systemic acute-phase response via secretion of inflammatory cytokines. We determined the activation of peripheral-blood monocytes in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases by measuring their interleukin-6 (IL-6) secretion. Blood was obtained from patients with active
Crohn's disease
before treatment [mean
Crohn's disease
activity index (CDAI) = 332 +/- 34] and from patients after treatment with prednisolone (mean CDAI index = 139 +/- 20). The mean serum IL-6 levels measured by a hybridoma growth assay (B9) were 23 +/- 4 U/ml before therapy and fell to 16 +/- 3 U/ml after treatment with prednisolone. Healthy persons and patients with inactive
Crohn's disease
usually had serum IL-6 levels below the detection limit of 4 U/ml. An ex vivo whole-blood system was used to measure IL-6 secretion by peripheral-blood monocytes with and without stimulation. Spontaneous IL-6 secretion in this system was about 9 U/ml in patients with
Crohn's disease
and below the detection limit of 4 U/ml in healthy controls. Moderate stimulation of blood cells [100 pg/ml
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
)] from patients with active
Crohn's disease
before and after treatment led to mean IL-6 concentrations of 1,160 +/- 514 and 131 +/- 54 U/ml, respectively. Maximal stimulation of peripheral blood before and after therapy by
LPS
(100 ng/ml) led to mean IL-6 concentrations of 5,570 +/- 1,660 and 6,220 +/- 1,630 U/ml, respectively. Thus, administration of glucocorticoids led to a rapid down-regulation of IL-6 synthesis by peripheral-blood monocytes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Activation of monocytes during inflammatory bowel disease. 171 13
This study investigated the relationship between zinc status and prostaglandin E2 and interleukin-1 beta production by cultured monocytes in patients with
Crohn's disease
. Monocyte zinc was significantly decreased in both 12 inpatients and 22 outpatients compared with controls (P less than 0.001) but lymphocyte and polymorphonuclear cell zinc were normal. When cultured monocytes from 10 outpatients with
Crohn's disease
were stimulated with
lipopolysaccharide
, prostaglandin E2 production increased markedly, coupled with a fall in monocyte zinc. In matched controls, prostaglandin E2 production was significantly less and monocyte zinc remained stable. No difference in interleukin-1 release was noted between patients and controls. The addition of prednisolone to cell cultures suppressed prostaglandin E2, interleukin-1 synthesis, and monocyte zinc did not change. Zinc chloride augmented prostaglandin E2 production in patients, but not controls, and interleukin-1 remained stable. These results demonstrate a link between low monocyte zinc concentration and excessive prostaglandin production in patients with
Crohn's disease
.
...
PMID:Monocyte zinc and in vitro prostaglandin E2 and interleukin-1 beta production by cultured peripheral blood monocytes in patients with Crohn's disease. 202 65
The polymerase chain reaction was used to detect the presence of a plasmid essential for the growth of Chlamydia trachomatis. As few as 10 copies of the plasmid in the initial reaction mix were detectable using this technique. In contrast, chlamydial DNA was not detectable in the knee joints of nine patients with definite sexually acquired reactive arthritis (SARA) or nine patients with suspected SARA. Five patients with an undifferentiated seronegative lower limb oligoarthropathy, one with
Crohn's disease
and another with post-enteric reactive arthritis had evidence of intra-articular chlamydial antigens as judged by fluorescein-labelled monoclonal antibody staining of joint material but, again, no chlamydia plasmid DNA was detected. The nature of the immunofluorescent staining seen in some of these samples remains to be elucidated. It could be due to the presence of chlamydial outer membrane protein or
lipopolysaccharide
antigens in the joints, either free or in immune complexes, or it may be artefactual. Our results indicate that viable C. trachomatis is not present in the joints of the patients in this study even in the presence of chlamydial antigen detected by fluorescence antibody testing.
...
PMID:Chlamydial DNA is absent from the joints of patients with sexually acquired reactive arthritis. 235 4
Infection with a species of Mycobacterium has been implicated in the pathogenesis of
Crohn's disease
. Therefore, we attempted to determine whether a specific serum antibody response to mycobacteria occurs in patients with the disease. We tested sera of patients with active
Crohn's disease
and several control groups in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for reactivity with two mycobacterial antigens: (a) lipoarabinomannan, a highly immunogenic somatic
lipopolysaccharide
present in the cell walls of all species of the Mycobacterium genus, and (b) a protoplasmic antigenic preparation from M. sp strain linda, the mycobacterium that has been specifically implicated in
Crohn's disease
. We found no significant elevation in immunoglobulin A, immunoglobulin G, or immunoglobulin M antibody levels to these two antigen preparations in the
Crohn's disease
patients. Moreover, no subset of patients (sex, age,
Crohn's disease
activity index, location of disease, duration of disease, operations, or response to treatment) had elevated antibody levels. As virtually all known chronic infectious diseases have an associated serologic response to the etiologic agent, our findings greatly diminish the likelihood that
Crohn's disease
is caused by an infection with a mycobacterium.
...
PMID:Serum antibodies to mycobacterial antigens in active Crohn's disease. 245 16
The expression of interleukin 2 receptor by macrophages from normal and inflamed terminal ileum and colon has been studied by using two monoclonal antibodies. In tissue sections from normal ileum and colon, scattered positive lymphocytes and only occasional weakly positive macrophages were seen. In ileal and colonic
Crohn's disease
or ulcerative colitis many positive macrophages and lymphocytes were seen in the lamina propria. These findings were confirmed by staining cytospin preparations of isolated intestinal mononuclear cells. The isolated macrophages were able to phagocytose opsonized zymosan and the majority were able to undergo a respiratory burst when triggered with opsonized zymosan or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), suggesting that they were activated. Stimulation with interferon-gamma or
lipopolysaccharide
did not increase the number of macrophages staining with the antibodies to the interleukin 2 receptor. Therefore we postulate that a large majority of the macrophages expressing interleukin 2 receptor in inflammatory bowel disease are a recently recruited population of cells.
...
PMID:Interleukin 2 receptor expression by macrophages in inflammatory bowel disease. 326 18
A number of the activities currently ascribed to the mediator interleukin 1 (IL-1) are relevant to chronic inflammatory bowel disease. Using the mouse thymocyte stimulation assay, lymphocyte-activating factor (LAF) activity was measured in plasma samples and supernatants from cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 16 patients with
Crohn's disease
, six with ulcerative colitis, and 10 healthy subjects. Results were compared with disease activity, drug therapy, granulocyte count, and plasma levels of zinc and C-reactive protein (CRP). Very low levels of LAF were detected in a few plasma samples from each of the subject groups. Mononuclear cells from healthy subjects produced LAF only when cultured with
lipopolysaccharide
, but stimulated cells from patients produced greater amounts. Moreover, cells from six patients with
Crohn's disease
, not receiving steroids, produced LAF spontaneously.
Crohn's disease
patients also had low plasma zinc but elevated levels of CRP and granulocytes. This enhanced production of LAF in vitro may reflect a primary cellular defect in
Crohn's disease
, or a secondary consequence of monocyte activation.
...
PMID:Interleukin 1 in Crohn's disease. 349 97
We have examined the relationships among activation of blood coagulation, generation of monocyte procoagulant activity, and clinical activity in patients with
Crohn's disease
. Subclinical activation of blood coagulation was measured using a radioimmunoassay for fibrinopeptide A. Fibrinopeptide A levels were strongly correlated with the level of disease activity as measured by the
Crohn's disease
activity index. Patients with active disease who were successfully treated either medically or surgically demonstrated a reduction of fibrinopeptide A levels. Failure of fibrinopeptide A to return to the normal range predicted an early relapse. Monocyte tissue factor generation was assessed in both unstimulated and
lipopolysaccharide
-stimulated mononuclear cell cultures obtained from the peripheral blood of patients with
Crohn's disease
. A strong correlation (r = 0.89) was observed between plasma fibrinopeptide A levels and monocyte tissue factor generation. These results suggest that monocyte procoagulant generation may contribute to the activation of blood coagulation in this inflammatory bowel disease. Moreover, fibrinopeptide A levels in
Crohn's disease
may provide a useful quantitative measure of inflammatory activity.
...
PMID:Activation of blood coagulation in Crohn's disease. Increased plasma fibrinopeptide A levels and enhanced generation of monocyte tissue factor activity. 379 69
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