Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q8NEX9 (reductase)
26,410 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Several studies have previously reported high levels of total tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) antigen in patients with hypercholesterolemia. The relationship between serum lipid concentrations and total and free-form TFPI antigen in 32 patients with primary type II hypercholesterolemia and 38 age- and gender-matched normolipemic control subjects was studied (Study Group I). Plasma concentrations of total TFPI (tTFPI) antigen, free-form TFPI (fTFPI) antigen, tissue factor antigen, factor VII activity (FVIIc), and prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F1+2) were measured. The median levels of tTFPI, fTFPI, FVIIc, and F1+2 were higher in hyperlipidemic patients compared with those in healthy subjects. The effect of lowering total cholesterol on hypercoagulability in 25 patients with type II hyperlipoproteinemia (Study Group II) were also studied. The median levels of tTFPI, FVIIc, and F1+2 decreased significantly after 6 months of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitor therapy in the hypercholesterolemic patients. On the other hand, fTFPI did not change after therapy. Plasma tTFPI was strongly correlated with total cholesterol and low density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol in hyperlipidemic patients. In contrast to the strong correlation between tTFPI and total cholesterol, the correlation between plasma fTFPI and total cholesterol was relatively poor. These results suggest that the activation of the anticoagulant system as well as the activation of the coagulation system may occur in association with hypercholesterolemia. Furthermore, the results of this study may suggest that lowering of total cholesterol in hyperlipidemic patients reduces the thrombin generation in plasma and that down-regulation of LDL does not affect the anticoagulant potency of TFPI in plasma.
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PMID:Elevated plasma levels of free-form of TFPI antigen in hypercholesterolemic patients. 1113 1

Evaluation of inherited thrombophilia in patients with venous thromboembolism includes testing for functional activity of antithrombin, protein C and protein S, and resistance to activated protein C (factor V Leiden), which can be assessed with plasma and DNA-based assays. The antiphospholipid syndrome is an acquired disorder related to the development of antibodies against phospholipid-protein complexes. Testing for the antiphospholipid syndrome includes measurement of antibodies to phospholipid-protein complexes by immunoassay or by detecting interference of anti-phospholipid antibodies in sensitive phospholipid-based assays. Other genetic risk factors have been listed, including a common polymorphism in prothrombin gene (3'-untranslated region) related to an increase of prothrombin level (> 115%) and a common polymorphism in the methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (enzyme involved in homocysteine metabolism) gene related to a mild increase of homocysteine blood level. More recently high plasmatic levels of factor VIII (> 150%) or factor XI (> 120%), not related so far to a molecular defect, have been identified as risk factors for deep vein thrombosis. As a candidate gene, factor XIII gene polymorphisms are under investigation. Beside the acquired or genetic risk factors involved in thrombophilia, the gene-environment interactions are of importance in the onset of thrombosis.
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PMID:[Laboratory testing for venous thromboembolism]. 1120 40

A subgroup of children with arterial ischemic stroke in the pre- or perinatal period present with delayed diagnosis. We identified 22 children who met the following criteria: (1) normal neonatal neurological history, (2) hemiparesis and/or seizures first recognized after two months of age, and (3) computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging showing remote cerebral infarct. Laboratory evaluations included protein C, protein S, antithrombin, activated protein C resistance screen (APCR), Factor V Leiden (FVL), prothrombin gene defect, methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase variant (MTHFR), anticardiolipin antibody (ACLA), and lupus anticoagulant. Not all children received all tests. Age at last visit ranged from 8 months to 16.5 years (median 4 years). Twelve were boys. Fourteen had left hemisphere infarcts. Median age at presentation was 6 months. Eighteen had gestational complications. Fourteen children had at least transient coagulation abnormalities (ACLA = 11, ACLA + APCR = 1, APCR = 2 with FVL + MTHFR = 1); six of these children had family histories suggestive of thrombosis. Cardiac echocardiogram was unremarkable in the 15 tested. Outcomes included persistent hemiparesis in 22; speech, behavior, or learning problems in 12; and persistent seizures in five, with no evidence of further stroke in any patient. The persistence and importance of coagulation abnormalities in this group need further study.
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PMID:Presumed pre- or perinatal arterial ischemic stroke: risk factors and outcomes. 1150 98

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the acute and chronic toxicology of oral intake of fish oil (omega-3 fatty acid) and garlic combination food supplements. These supplements were proven to have beneficial effects on the lipid profile. Therefore, it is important to evaluate the potential long-term effects of fish oil and garlic combination supplements on the biochemistry of organ structure and function. The hypothesis to be tested was that acute and chronic high-dose supplements of fish oil and garlic may not adversely affect organ histology but may influence certain metabolic activities. A double-blind, placebo-controlled study was carried out using 28 Sprague Dawley rats separated into a placebo group (16 rats) and a supplement group (12 rats). The supplement group received the ingredients in chow inserts at a dosage that was equivalent to three times the maximum safe daily dosage for fish oil and the usual daily dosage for garlic (the maximum safe daily dosage recommended by the United States Food And Drug Administration for a 70-kg human is a total of 3 g/day intake of EPA and HDA omega-3 fatty acids from conventional and dietary sources. The usual daily garlic usage is garlic powder = 1200 mg). The study was conducted over a period of 12 months with evaluations performed at baseline, 2 months, 6 months, and 12 months. Results confirm the expected acute triglyceride, total cholesterol and LDL suppression at these higher dosages in the supplement group. Acutely and chronically, there were no differences in external appearance, level of activity, daily food consumption, blood cell count, kidney function, thyroid function, prothrombin time (PT), and activated partial prothrombin time (PTT), which remained within normal ranges in the supplement group. Organ histology remained unchanged. Although during the chronic toxicity period the triglyceride and LDL suppression persisted, it was noted that total cholesterol and HDL levels increased. The increase in cholesterol and HDL in the supplement group during chronic toxicity periods is simultaneous with loss of suppression of plasma levels of other liver function marker enzymes, ALT and AST, which are not involved in cholesterol synthesis. This possibly suggests that other liver enzymes involved in cholesterol synthesis, such as HMG-co A reductase, follow a similar escape from suppression.
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PMID:Acute and chronic toxicity study of fish oil and garlic combination. 1172 96

Vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation is an essential posttranslational modification required for the functional activity of coagulation proteins such as factors VII, IX, X, and prothrombin. Warfarin, an inhibitor of vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation, was used in earlier work on adult zebrafish to provide evidence for the presence of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase in zebrafish. Here we demonstrate the presence of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase activity in zebrafish by directly assaying the microsomal fraction prepared from adult, unfertilized eggs, and embryos from different developmental stages. Gamma-carboxylase activity was detected both before and after fertilization of embryos and the activity levels remained relatively constant from 6 h postfertilization (hpf) through other advanced stages of development. The expression of activity in the early embryos (0-6 hpf) may be due to the presence of maternal protein since the activity was detected even in the unfertilized eggs. Gamma-carboxylase activity in the eggs as well as early embryos suggested that vitamin K-dependent carboxylase is important throughout development. The detection of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase mRNA by RT-PCR and inhibitor studies using warfarin confirmed these activity results. Further, these studies provide a basis for selecting warfarin-resistant zebrafish mutants in order to find genes regulating gamma-carboxylase activity including the yet unidentified vitamin K-epoxide reductase.
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PMID:Developmental expression of vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylase activity in zebrafish embryos: effect of warfarin. 1183 65

During an 18-month period, 10 consecutive Mexican mestizos with a dinical marker associated with a primary hypercoagulable state were studied. The assessment of the sticky platelet syndrome (SPS) was done by the method described by Mammen. In addition, the activated protein C resistance phenotype, coagulation protein C activity and antigen, coagulation protein S, antithrombin III, plasminogen, tissue-type plasminogen activator activity, plasminogen activator inhibitor activity, plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1, IgG and IgM isotypes of anti-phospholipid antibodies, homocysteine levels, the factor V gene Leiden mutation, the 677 C->T mutation in the 5,10-methylen-tetrahydrofolate-reductase (MTHFR), and the G20210A polymorphism in the 3'-untranslated region of the prothrombin gene were studied. Six patients with the SPS were identified: only one displayed this as the single thrombophilic abnormality; in five others, additional thrombosis-prone conditions were found: heterozygosity for the MTHFR 677 gene mutation in five cases; and, in one case each, heterozygosity for the factor V Leiden mutation, heterozygosity for the factor II G20210A mutation, and antiphospholipid antibodies in another. Four of the six patients had a family history of thrombophilia. All patients were treated with aspirin and no new vasoocclusive episodes have been recorded. SPS in not an infrequent finding in Mexican mestizo thrombophilic patients and may contribute to thrombophilia.
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PMID:Primary thrombophilia in Mexico III: A prospective study of the sticky platelet syndrome. 1236 Dec 6

We have characterized a novel nuclease from the Kamchatka crab, designated duplex-specific nuclease (DSN). DSN displays a strong preference for cleaving double-stranded DNA and DNA in DNA-RNA hybrid duplexes, compared to single-stranded DNA. Moreover, the cleavage rate of short, perfectly matched DNA duplexes by this enzyme is essentially higher than that for nonperfectly matched duplexes of the same length. Thus, DSN differentiates between one-nucleotide variations in DNA. We developed a novel assay for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) detection based on this unique property, termed "duplex-specific nuclease preference" (DSNP). In this innovative assay, the DNA region containing the SNP site is amplified and the PCR product mixed with signal probes (FRET-labeled short sequence-specific oligonucleotides) and DSN. During incubation, only perfectly matched duplexes between the DNA template and signal probe are cleaved by DSN to generate sequence-specific fluorescence. The use of FRET-labeled signal probes coupled with the specificity of DSN presents a simple and efficient method for detecting SNPs. We have employed the DSNP assay for the typing of SNPs in methyltetrahydrofolate reductase, prothrombin and p53 genes on homozygous and heterozygous genomic DNA.
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PMID:A novel method for SNP detection using a new duplex-specific nuclease from crab hepatopancreas. 1246 98

Long-distance air travel is increasing and cases of venous thromboembolism (VTE) following air travel have attracted both considerable public attention and legal claims against airlines. VTE is a common disorder worldwide with a notably high incidence in older individuals. Many biochemical factors that lead to, or accentuate, thrombus formation are associated with increased risk of VTE. These factors include thrombophilia, activated protein C resistance and factor V Leiden, prothrombin gene mutation, antiphospholipid antibodies, protein S and protein C deficiencies, and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase polymorphism and homocysteinemia. Individual physical characteristics including age, weight and height are significant for personal risk of VTE as are other factors such as use of oral contraceptives in women. In the case of air travel-related venous thrombosis, superimposed upon these individual factors are the environmental factors directly related to air travel. Travel-related factors include stasis associated with prolonged periods of immobility, physiological stresses resulting from exposure to the cabin environment (low humidity and hypoxia) in long-haul flight and other in-flight factors. It is suggested that passenger behavior (movement, avoidance of dehydration and of alcohol) and appropriate pharmacological prophylaxis for high-risk travelers can reduce the likelihood of VTE. Physical prophylaxis (use of compression stockings or in-flight exercise devices) may also be of general benefit to passengers. It is recommended that airlines become more proactive in educating passengers concerning the dangers of VTE and in promoting passenger actions that can reduce risk. Airlines should also work to avoid cramped seating conditions (seat size and pitch) that contribute to prolonged immobility. Governments and regulatory authorities should mandate the provision of adequate seating conditions and a good cabin environment and should support studies that will define risks and determine the efficacy of protocols to minimize dangers of VTE. Increased long-haul air traffic and an aging population suggest that travel-related VTE may present a growing healthcare threat and has highlighted a need for additional biomedical research into the causes and potential solutions to this problem.
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PMID:Air travel-associated venous thromboembolism. 1263 60

In the last few years, FV Leiden, prothrombin 20210 and thermolabile methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) 677 variants have been identified as possible risk factors associated with thrombophilia, and many PCR-based methods have been described for detecting these variations. However, the genomic DNA extraction is still a rate-limiting and time-consuming step in the PCR process. In an attempt to accelerate this procedure and make it suitable for routine laboratory, we report a single preparative technique for DNA extraction from peripheral blood samples using an anion-binding resin (GeneFizz). This method enables white blood cell lysis, DNA extraction and PCR amplification directly in the thermocycling tube on the thermocycler. The use of this new DNA extraction system coupled to a multiplex PCR allows rapid genetic screening of large cohorts of patients for thrombophilic risk factors.
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PMID:New method for the extraction of DNA from white blood cells for the detection of common genetic variants associated with thrombophilia. 1275 19

Retinal vein occlusion (RVO) is associated with hyperhomocysteinaemia and the antiphospholipid syndrome-disorders known to contribute to both arterial and venous thrombosis. In both of these conditions and RVO, platelet activation occurs. Aspirin, not warfarin, is the most effective antithrombotic agent in RVO and, taken together, these observations suggest an important role for platelets in this common ocular thrombotic condition. Platelet glycoprotein Ia/IIa (GpIa/IIa) is an adhesion molecule mediating platelet-collagen interactions and is key to the initiation of thrombosis. Recently, the cellular density of this molecule was shown to be determined by two silent, linked polymorphisms (C807T/G873A) within the GpIa/IIa gene. There is evidence that some of the resulting genotypes are associated with thrombo-embolic disease. This study therefore aimed to establish the prevalence of the GpIa/IIa polymorphisms and the three commonest hereditary thrombophilic disorders (prothrombin gene G20210A (PT) mutation, Factor V Leiden (FVL), and the thermolabile methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase C677T (MTHFR) mutation) in patients with RVO and normal controls. The GpIa/IIa polymorphisms and thrombophilic abnormalities were all identified using the polymerase chain reaction.Our results show that the frequency of the GpIa/IIa polymorphisms was similar in our normal control population to previously published series. Patients with RVO, however, had only a 10% (4/40) frequency of the lowest risk subtype (CC/GG) compared to 37.5% (15/40) in the control group-P 0.0039. The incidence of the PT, FVL, and MTHFR thrombophilic mutations was not different between the two groups, but interestingly none of the 7/40 RVO cases with a PT, FVL, or MTHFR mutation had the low-risk GpIa/IIa genotype while all but one of the controls did-P<0.05. Thus, 17.5% of RVO patients harboured more than one prothrombotic abnormality. The principal difference between the RVO and control group was the very high incidence of the intermediate-risk GpIa/IIa subtype (CT/GA)-82.5 vs 50%, P&<0.05. These results suggest a major role for GpIa/IIa polymorphisms in the pathogenesis of RVO.
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PMID:The platelet glycoprotein Ia/IIa gene polymorphism C807T/G873A: a novel risk factor for retinal vein occlusion. 1504 38


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