Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q8NB91 (FAB)
3,573 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three structurally diverse iron (III) sequestering compounds (siderophores) were isolated from the supernatants of early stationary phase iron-deficient cultures of vegetative mycelia of the cultivated mushroom, Agaricus bisporus (ATCC 36416). The compounds were purified as their ferric chelates to homogeneity by gel permeation, cation exchange, and low-pressure reversed phase C18 chromatographies, and characterized as trihydroxamic acids. The chelates were identified as ferrichrome, ferric fusarinine C, and an unusual compound, des (diserylglycyl) ferrirhodin (DDF) by HPTLC cochromatography and electrophoresis against authentic samples, hydrolysis and amino acid analysis, and FAB-MS and 1H NMR spectroscopy. The iron transport activities of the three compounds (and of some structurally similar exogenous compounds) in young mycelial cells were determined by time- and concentration-dependent kinetic assays and inhibition experiments (CN-, N3-) using 55Fe(3+)-labeled chelates. 55Iron (III) uptake mediated by all three compounds was found to be via high affinity, energy-dependent processes; transport effectiveness was in the order: ferrichrome > DDF >> ferric fusarinine C. The relative uptake of iron by lambda-cis ferrichromes was: ferrichrome > ferrirhodin >> ferrichrome A; transport activity by the delta-cis fusarinines was: ferric fusarinine C > tris cis-(and trans-) fusarinine iron (III) >> ferric N1-triacetylfusarinine C.
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PMID:Siderophore-mediated iron (III) transport in the mycelia of the cultivated fungus, Agaricus bisporus. 144 67

Lactoferrin is a protein present in many fluids of the human organism and in the secondary granules of polymorphonuclear cells (PMN). In the blood stream lactoferrin favours the segregation of PMN by mediating and amplifying the immune response, and realizes a negative feedback control on the Colony Forming Unit Granulocyte/Macrophage (CFU-GM) proliferation. At intestinal level it promotes iron absorption and prevents bacterial overgrowth. The antibacterial effect of lactoferrin is used clinically to prevent bacterial infections in neutropenic patients submitted to chemotherapy for leukemic diseases type M1, M2, M4 and M5, according to FAB criteria. In patients affected by chronic pancreatitis the lactoferrin concentration, in duodenal juice, is found to be significantly higher than in normal subjects. This finding suggests a pathogenetic role of the protein in chronic pancreatitis.
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PMID:[Lactoferrin]. 178 84

An HPLC-based method capable of separating desferrioxamine (DFO) and its iron chelating metabolites from uv-absorbing species present in biological fluids has been developed. This method relies on the use of nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) as the complexing agent in the mobile phase, instead of EDTA, previously used in HPLC methods. The use of NTA ensures that iron contamination present in buffers and bound to the column does not interfere with analysis. The disadvantages of using EDTA are discussed. The identity of the iron chelating metabolites of DFO present in the urine of patients with beta-thalassemia major has been established using FAB mass spectrometry. The metabolism of DFO, reported in this study, takes place almost exclusively at the N-terminal region of the molecule and is in many respects similar to the degradation of the amino acid lysine. In addition, a metabolite which corresponds to N-hydroxylation of the terminal amino group has been identified.
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PMID:Separation and identification of desferrioxamine and its iron chelating metabolites by high-performance liquid chromatography and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry: choice of complexing agent and application to biological fluids. 211 39

Pyoverdins were isolated and characterized respectively from the cultures of Pseudomonas tolaasii NCPPB 2192 (pyoverdins Pt, Pt A, and Pt B) and Pseudomonas fluorescens CCM 2798 (Pyoverdins Pf/1, Pf/2, Pf, Pf/3/1, and Pf/3/2) each grown in iron-deficient conditions. Their structures were established by using FAB-MS, NMR, and CD techniques. These siderophores are chromopeptides, and all but one (pyoverdin Pf/3/3) possess at the N-terminal end of their peptide chain the same chromophore that has been reported in pyoverdin Pa from Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 15692 [Wendenbaum, S., Demange, P., Dell, A., Meyer, J. M., & Abdallah, M. A. (1983) Tetrahedron Lett. 24, 4877-4880] and pseudobactin B 10 from Pseudomonas B10 [Teintze, M., Hossain, M. B., Barnes, C. L., Leong, J., & Van der Helm, D. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 6446-6457] which is derived from 2,3-diamino-6,7-dihydroxyquinoline. In pyoverdins Pt this chromophore is bound to a linear peptide chain D-Ser-L-Lys-L-Ser-D-Ser-L-Thr-D-Ser-L-OHOrn-L-Thr-D-Ser-D-OHOrn (cyclic) which has its C-terminal end blocked by cyclic D-N delta-hydroxyornithine. In pyoverdins Pf, the peptide chain is also linear, SerCTHPMD-Gly-L-Ser-D-threo-OHAsp-L-Ala-Gly-D-Ala-Gly-L-O HOrn(cyclic), and contains an unusual natural amino acid which is the result of the condensation of 1 mol of serine and 1 mol of 2,4-diaminobutyric acid, forming a cyclic amidine. The pyoverdins Pt differ only in substituent bound to the nitrogen on C-3 of the chromophore, which is succinic acid in pyoverdin Pt A, succinamide in pyoverdin Pt, and alpha-ketoglutaric acid bound to the chromophore by its C-5 carbon atom in pyoverdin Pt B. Similarly, pyoverdin Pf/1, pyoverdin Pf/2, pyoverdin Pf (the major compound), and pyoverdin Pf/3/2 are substituted respectively by L-malic acid, succinic acid, L-malic amide, and succinamide. Pyoverdin Pf/3/3 has the same chromophore as azotobactin, the peptidic siderophore of Azotobacter vinelandii. These pyoverdins are very similar to pseudobactin B 10, the siderophore of Pseudomonas B10: they are linear peptides containing three bidentate groups strongly chelating Fe(III) and blocked at their N-terminal end by the catecholic chromophore and at their C-terminal end by cyclic N delta-hydroxyornithine. They differ therefore from other pyoverdins such as those from P. aeruginosa ATCC 15692 which contain a partly cyclic peptide [Briskot, G., Taraz, K., & Budzikiewicz, H. (1989) Liebigs Ann. Chem., 375-384].
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PMID:Bacterial siderophores: structures of pyoverdins Pt, siderophores of Pseudomonas tolaasii NCPPB 2192, and pyoverdins Pf, siderophores of Pseudomonas fluorescens CCM 2798. Identification of an unusual natural amino acid. 212 1

Myelodysplastic syndromes (SMD) were studied in 58 patients (37 men, 21 women; mean age 61 years, range 18-81) who were grouped according to FAB criteria (Table 1). None of them showed a secondary SMD to medullary toxic agents or cytostatic treatments although 5 presented concomitant neoplastic disease. Morphologic alterations in peripheral blood smears and bone marrow were registered by 3 hematologists working independently. The intracellular and extracellular iron deposits were evaluated in every case with Perls; peroxidase activity was determined in 16 patients and intraleucocitary alkaline phosphatase reaction was carried out in 17 patients. Twenty five patients (43%) had refractory anemia (RA); 10 (17%) sideroblastic anemia; 13 (25%) refractory anemia with excess of blasts (AREB); 3 (5%) AREB in transformation (AREB-T) and 7 myelomonocytic leukemia (LMMC). Clinical manifestations at diagnosis are described in Table 2. In the observation period there were cases of anemia requiring transfusion, bacterial infections, muco-cutaneous hemorrhage and hemorrhagic episodes in the central nervous system. In the bone marrow smears the cellularity was normal or increased in 53 cases and diminished in only 3. The degree of dysplastic characteristics (erythroid, granulocytic and megakaryocytic) ranged from low to severe. It was low in most of AR, being the erythroid population the most affected in AS and the granulocytic one in AREB and AREB-T. Patients with LMMC showed similar characteristics to those with myeloproliferative syndromes and the differential diagnosis were sometimes difficult, accounting for their separate inclusion in Table 4. Out of 23 patients, 5 presented clonal pathology detected in cytogenetic studies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Myelodysplastic syndrome: experience of the Study and Treatment of Bone Marrow Failure Group]. 213 Feb 4

Alternaria longipes ATCC 26293, a highly phytopathogenic fungus, has been found to produce a large number of siderophores under iron-deficient conditions. Most of the compounds are members of the coprogen family. Structures of three novel siderophores, termed hydroxycoprogens, have been determined by 1H and 13C NMR, FAB mass spectrometry and partial hydrolysis. The compounds are analogs of coprogen, neocoprogen I and isoneocoprogen I, in which one of the terminal trans-anhydromevalonic acid residues is replaced by a trans-4,5 dihydroxy-3-methyl-2-pentenoic acid residue.
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PMID:Siderophores of highly phytopathogenic Alternaria longipes. Structures of hydroxycoprogens. 253 87

Involvement of the transferrin receptor cycle was noted in erythroblasts from a patient with erythroleukemia (FAB classification M6). The kinetics of transferrin receptor cycle in bone marrow erythroblasts was obtained by pulse-chase experiments before the initiation of therapy. Internalization of transferrin was impaired and resulted in a delayed peak of internalized transferrin, as compared with the kinetics pattern seen in healthy subjects. The subsequent exocytosis of the internalized ligand was also delayed. Thus, transferrin receptor cycle seems to be influenced all along the transferrin pathway, hence transferrin travels more slowly in erythroblasts in erythroleukemia. The altered transferrin receptor cycle led to a diminished iron uptake per surface transferrin receptor (approximately 30% of that in healthy subjects), and the incorporation of iron into heme was greatly reduced. Our observations suggest a possible role for the altered transferrin receptor cycle in the pathogenesis of defective heme synthesis and ineffective erythropoiesis in erythroleukemia.
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PMID:Possible mechanism of ineffective erythropoiesis by an altered transferrin receptor cycle in erythroleukemia. 316 2

The livers of 30 cases of advanced thalassemia were studied pathologically. Severe degrees of hemosiderosis and fibrosis were found in liver cells and Kupffer cells in most cases. Various histochemical stains have been used to determine the characteristics of FAB and to grade degrees of iron deposit and fibrosis. The correlation between hemosiderosis and fibrosis as well as the presence of FAB are described.
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PMID:Histochemical study of liver tissue from thalassemic patients. 339 May 41

In 27 patients initially diagnosed as refractory anaemia (RA) or RA with sideroblasts (RA-S) according to the FAB-classification a number of clinical, morphological and cytogenetic parameters were correlated for prognostic significance. From these correlations it emerged that severe cytopenia is centrally positioned with regard to clinical course in RA and RA-S. Positive correlations were found to initial diagnosis, clonal cytogenetic abnormalities, progression to RA with an excess of blasts (RAEB) or acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), the percentage of bone marrow blast cells and prolonged half life for radioactively labeled iron. The degree of peripheral blood granulocytopenia, alone, was correlated to bone marrow hypoplasia. Moreover, the frequency of abnormal karyotypes was inversely correlated to bone marrow cellularity and proportional to the frequency of bone marrow blast cells. From these relationships it may be proposed that chromosome abnormalities are associated with prolonged blast cell generation times and inhibition of blast cell maturation resulting in reduced marrow cellularity and blast cell accumulation, and, in the peripheral blood, falling percentages of neutrophil granulocytes. With the blast cell accumulation the bone marrow cellularity again becomes hyperplastic and the preleukaemic condition is transformed into RAEB or AML.
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PMID:Prognostic significance of some clinical, morphological and cytogenetic findings in refractory anaemia (RA) and RA with sideroblasts. 345 30

A detailed study of 43 newly diagnosed cases of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) shows that many of the morphological features of blood and bone marrow are common to the different FAB groups. In addition, there is no clear distinction between the groups with regard to CFU-E, BFU-E or CFU-GM colony growth in vitro or ferrokinetic assessment of erythropoiesis in vivo. The interrelationships between all the parameters we have studied have been examined and there is little correlation between erythroid colony formation in vitro, the percentage erythroblasts in the bone marrow, erythroid output measured by ferrokinetics and the peripheral blood reticulocyte count, all of which appear to measure different aspects of erythropoiesis. Reduced erythroid colony growth and a high degree of ineffective erythropoiesis in vivo are common in all groups and appear to be an early manifestation of abnormal function. Decreasing marrow iron turnover is more closely related to increasing numbers of marrow blast cells than any other index of erythropoiesis.
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PMID:The myelodysplastic syndrome: analysis of laboratory characteristics in relation to the FAB classification. 397 Aug 59


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