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1.
Ter Arkh ; 95(2): 158-163, 2023 Mar 30.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37167132

ABSTRACT

Hypertransaminasemia is a common extra-intestinal manifestation of celiac disease. AIM: To analyze the frequency of hypertransaminasemia, clinical and anamnestic, serological and morphological picture in children in the active period of celiac disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study included 272 children with celiac disease aged from 8 months to 17 years. The patients were divided into two groups: the first - children with hypertransaminasemia, the second - without hypertransaminasemia. RESULTS: Hypertransaminasemia was detected in 55.9% of children with celiac disease. The age of manifestation of the disease in the first group was 1.0 [0.5; 2.0] years, in the second group - 1.9 [0.5; 4.0] years (p=0.0004). Children of the first group were diagnosed at 2.5 [1.7; 4.9] years, the second group - at 4.9 [3.0; 10.8] years (p<0.001). The duration of the latency period in children of the first and second groups was 1.4 [0.6; 3.1] years and 2.4 [0.9; 4.3] years, respectively (p=0.002). The average values of IgA anti-tTG antibodies in children of the analyzed groups did not differ, and the indicators of IgG anti-tTG antibodies in the first group were 1.6 (p=0.04) times higher. The level of EMA in children with hypertransaminasemia was 2 times higher than in children without hypertransaminasemia. CONCLUSION: Hypertransaminasemia is more often detected in young children with early manifestation of the disease, increases with the deepening of atrophy in the mucous membrane of the small intestine. Higher titers of celiac-specific antibodies were detected in children with hypertransaminasemia.


Subject(s)
Celiac Disease , Liver Diseases , Humans , Child , Adolescent , Child, Preschool , Celiac Disease/complications , Celiac Disease/diagnosis , Celiac Disease/epidemiology , Transglutaminases , Intestine, Small , Autoantibodies , Immunoglobulin A
2.
Dokl Biochem Biophys ; 479(1): 101-104, 2018 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29779108

ABSTRACT

Using multiple parallel sequencing on Illumina platform, we identified eight microRNAs that showed significant opposite changes of gene expression in cells of the hormone-sensitive LNCaP prostate cancer cell line and in cells of the hormone-resistant DU-145 cell line, in comparison to the microRNA expression in the normal prostate tissue cells. We found that the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF1R) gene is a target of five microRNAs whose expression is increased in LNCaP cells and reduced in DU-145 cells.


Subject(s)
Drug Resistance, Neoplasm/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/genetics , Hormones/pharmacology , MicroRNAs/genetics , Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology , Receptors, Somatomedin/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/drug effects , Humans , Male , Receptor, IGF Type 1
3.
Biochemistry (Mosc) ; 77(9): 1065-71, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23157267

ABSTRACT

Using affinity chromatography, two-dimensional electrophoresis, and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, plasminogen isoforms were separated and identified in blood plasma. Healthy donors and patients with prostate cancer in various stages of development were included in the studied sample. With the development of prostate cancer, four additional specific plasminogen isoforms are registered in blood plasma; they are characterized by lower molecular weights and higher pI values compared to isoforms found in the control group.


Subject(s)
Plasminogen/isolation & purification , Prostatic Neoplasms/blood , Aged , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Plasminogen/analysis , Protein Isoforms/blood
5.
Oncogene ; 30(47): 4697-706, 2011 Nov 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21602888

ABSTRACT

A human endogenous retrovirus type E (HERV-E) was recently found to be selectively expressed in most renal cell carcinomas (RCCs). Importantly, antigens derived from this provirus are immunogenic, stimulating cytotoxic T cells that kill RCC cells in vitro and in vivo. Here, we show HERV-E expression is restricted to the clear cell subtype of RCC (ccRCC) characterized by an inactivation of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor-suppressor gene with subsequent stabilization of hypoxia-inducible transcription factors (HIFs)-1α and -2α. HERV-E expression in ccRCC linearly correlated with HIF-2α levels and could be silenced in tumor cells by either transfection of normal VHL or small interfering RNA inhibition of HIF-2α. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation, we demonstrated that HIF-2α can serve as transcriptional factor for HERV-E by binding with HIF response element (HRE) localized in the proviral 5' long terminal repeat (LTR). Remarkably, the LTR was found to be hypomethylated only in HERV-E-expressing ccRCC while other tumors and normal tissues possessed a hypermethylated LTR preventing proviral expression. Taken altogether, these findings provide the first evidence that inactivation of a tumor suppressor gene can result in aberrant proviral expression in a human tumor and give insights needed for translational research aimed at boosting human immunity against antigenic components of this HERV-E.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Renal Cell/virology , Endogenous Retroviruses/genetics , Kidney Neoplasms/virology , Proviruses/genetics , Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Protein/physiology , 5' Untranslated Regions , Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors/physiology , Cell Line, Tumor , DNA Methylation , Humans , Kidney Neoplasms/etiology , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Terminal Repeat Sequences , Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor Protein/genetics
7.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18038545

ABSTRACT

From 1998 through 2005 3,294 cases of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) including 93 cases with clinical picture of poliomyelitis were registered in Russian Federation. From the latter cases 91 were classified as vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis (VAPP): 66 were VAPP cases in oral poliomyelitis vaccine (OPV) recipients and 25--VAPP cases in contacts. VAPP rate was 1 case per 1.6 million of distributed OPV doses, 1 case per 2.2 million doses for OPV recipients, and 1 case per 186,000 doses for recipients of 1st OPV dose in children aged < 1 year. Majority of VAPP cases in recipients occurred after 1st dose (89.4%) and in contacts--in non-vaccinated children (76%). Mean interval between OPV administration and onset of VAPP in recipients was 21 days. Children aged < 1 year were predominant among VAPP cases (92.4% among recipient VAPP cases, and 80% among contact VAPP cases). Majority of the patients had unfavorable health status including defects of immunity. Most of poliovirus strains isolated from VAPP cases belonged to type 3 (52.9%) whereas to type 2 and 1--29.8% and 17.4% of strains respectively. All VAPP cases were associated with vaccine-derived polioviruses. A highly diverged poliovirus type 1 (2.65% of nucleotide substitutions in VP1 region) was isolated from patient with contact VAPP. Formation of poliovirus-neutralizing serum antibodies in children with VAPP including persons with immunodeficiency reflects the ability of the organism to produce specific antiviral immune response.


Subject(s)
Poliomyelitis/epidemiology , Poliomyelitis/etiology , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/adverse effects , Poliovirus/isolation & purification , Vaccination/adverse effects , Amino Acid Substitution , Animals , Antibodies, Viral/blood , Capsid Proteins/genetics , Child, Preschool , Disease Transmission, Infectious , Humans , Immunization Programs , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes/complications , Infant , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Neutralization Tests , Paralysis , Poliomyelitis/blood , Poliomyelitis/transmission , Poliovirus/classification , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/genetics , Risk Factors , Russia/epidemiology
8.
J Virol ; 79(2): 1062-70, 2005 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15613335

ABSTRACT

Sabin strains used in the manufacture of oral polio vaccine (OPV) replicate in the human organism and can give rise to vaccine-derived polioviruses. The increased neurovirulence of vaccine derivatives has been known since the beginning of OPV use, but their ability to establish circulation in communities has been recognized only recently during the latest stages of the polio eradication campaign. This important observation called for studies of their emergence and evolution as well as extensive surveillance to determine the scope of this phenomenon. Here, we present the results of a study of vaccine-derived isolates from an immunocompromised poliomyelitis patient, the contacts, and the local sewage. All isolates were identified as closely related and slightly evolved vaccine derivatives with a recombinant type 2/type 1 genome. The strains also shared several amino acid substitutions including a mutation in the VP1 protein that was previously shown to be associated with the loss of attenuation. Another mutation in the VP3 protein resulted in altered immunological properties of the isolates, possibly facilitating virus spread in immunized populations. The patterns and rates of the accumulation of synonymous mutations in isolates collected from the patient over the extended period of excretion suggest either a substantially nonuniform rate of mutagenesis throughout the genome, or, more likely, the strains may have been intratypic recombinants between coevolving derivatives with different degrees of divergence from the vaccine parent. This study provides insight into the early stages of the establishment of circulation by runaway vaccine strains.


Subject(s)
Poliomyelitis/virology , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/genetics , Poliovirus/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Genome, Viral , Humans , Infant , Mutation , Recombination, Genetic
9.
Dev Biol (Basel) ; 105: 219-23, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11763331

ABSTRACT

After introducing surveillance for poliomyelitis and AFP cases in the Russian Federation in 1998, 740 AFP cases have been registered in 1998-1999, and 18 of that number were considered as vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis (VAPP). Of 18 cases 11 were classified as VAPP of vaccine recipients and confirmed by virus isolation; from two of the vaccine recipients virus was not isolated, and five were poliomyelitis cases in contact non-vaccinated children. In all the cases the disease was characterised with the typical clinical picture with residual pareses and paralyses. One case was fatal. Vaccine virus type 3 has been isolated from all the vaccine recipients. The MAPREC test has shown that the quality of monovaccine type 3 bulks used for vaccinating these children did not differ from the quality of other bulk vaccines produced by the Chumakov Institute of Poliomyelitis. Patients surveyed for gammaglobulin were positive. Polioviruses type 1 isolated from two of the contact cases had changed antigenic properties and were recombinants of types 1 and 2.


Subject(s)
Poliomyelitis/epidemiology , Poliomyelitis/virology , Feces/virology , Humans , Immunocompromised Host , Infant , Poliomyelitis/diagnosis , Poliovirus/genetics , Poliovirus/immunology , Poliovirus/isolation & purification , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/adverse effects , Population Surveillance , Russia/epidemiology
10.
Dev Biol (Basel) ; 105: 231-7, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11763333

ABSTRACT

An outbreak of poliomyelitis with 146 cases among children of whom six died occurred in the Chechen Republic in 1995. Sporadic cases of poliomyelitis have been reported in the neighbouring Ingush Republic. The outbreak lasted for five months (from May to September) and the maximum number of cases was registered in July. The age of the patients did not exceed 11 years, and more than 90% of the patients were children aged from one month to four years. The overwhelming majority of the patients had not been vaccinated in the routine OPV immunization programme. The outbreak was due to wild poliovirus type 1 belonging to genotype T previously known to circulate in the territory of the former Soviet Union (FSU). Chechen and Ingush isolates were very closely related to each other and to isolates from Central Asia, Tajikistan, 1994. Only a very distant relatedness of the Chechen and Ingush isolates was found with the strains isolated at about the same time outside the FSU (China 1994, Pakistan 1995). The presence of high numbers of non-vaccinated/poorly vaccinated persons and the poor sanitary and hygienic conditions for civilians due to the military conflict were factors that had a role in the outbreak.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks , Poliomyelitis/epidemiology , Poliomyelitis/virology , Poliovirus/physiology , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Feces/virology , Female , Humans , Phylogeny , Poliovirus/classification , Poliovirus/genetics , Poliovirus/isolation & purification , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral/immunology , Russia/epidemiology , Virus Shedding
11.
Dev Biol (Basel) ; 105: 43-50, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11763336

ABSTRACT

Molecular mechanisms of poliovirus reproduction in the human gut remain largely unexplored. Nevertheless, there are grounds to believe that the virus spreads from cell to cell, like that from person to person during natural circulation, and involves a relatively small proportion of the highly heterogeneous viral population generated by the previous host. This mechanism of random sampling is responsible for the majority of fixed mutations, and contributes to the maintenance of a certain level of viral fitness (virulence). In the long term, random sampling may lead to the decrease in fitness and even to extinction of some viral evolutionary branches, explaining cases of self-limiting poliovirus infection in immunodeficient patients. A low propensity of the Sabin viruses for natural circulation may also be a related phenomenon. The trend to decrease in fitness may be interrupted by the appearance of rare, fitter (more virulent) variants, which may be responsible for poliomyelitis outbreaks caused by wild type virus, and for the development of paralytic disease in chronic carriers of the Sabin vaccine. All these evolutionary events are largely stochastic and hence are unpredictable in principle.


Subject(s)
Digestive System/virology , Poliomyelitis/virology , Poliovirus/physiology , Evolution, Molecular , Humans , Poliovirus/genetics , Recombination, Genetic , Virus Replication
12.
J Virol ; 74(16): 7381-90, 2000 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10906191

ABSTRACT

We determined nucleotide sequences of the VP1 and 2AB genes and portions of the 2C and 3D genes of two evolving poliovirus lineages: circulating wild viruses of T geotype and Sabin vaccine-derived isolates from an immunodeficient patient. Different regions of the viral RNA were found to evolve nonsynchronously, and the rate of evolution of the 2AB region in the vaccine-derived population was not constant throughout its history. Synonymous replacements occurred not completely randomly, suggesting the need for conservation of certain rare codons (possibly to control translation elongation) and the existence of unidentified constraints in the viral RNA structure. Nevertheless the major contribution to the evolution of the two lineages came from linear accumulation of synonymous substitutions. Therefore, in agreement with current theories of viral evolution, we suggest that the majority of the mutations in both lineages were fixed as a result of successive sampling, from the heterogeneous populations, of random portions containing predominantly neutral and possibly adverse mutations. As a result of such a mode of evolution, the virus fitness may be maintained at a more or less constant level or may decrease unless more-fit variants are stochastically generated. The proposed unifying model of natural poliovirus evolution has important implications for the epidemiology of poliomyelitis.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Immunocompromised Host , Poliomyelitis/virology , Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral , Poliovirus/genetics , Viral Proteins , Adolescent , Amino Acid Sequence , Capsid/genetics , Capsid Proteins , Child , Codon , Cysteine Endopeptidases/genetics , Genome, Viral , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Poliovirus/classification , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Time Factors , Viral Nonstructural Proteins/genetics
13.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9825506

ABSTRACT

33 wild poliovirus strains isolated on the territory of the former USSR were subjected to the comparative sequence analysis of the 150 bp genome fragment VP1/2A on the junction of the genome regions coding basic capsid protein VP1 and viral protease 2A. The dendrograms characterizing the similarity of nucleotide sequences revealed the existence of 3 geographical genotypes (geotypes) of wild poliovirus strains of type 1 (A, G, T) and broad geotype (C) of wild poliovirus strains of type 3. The comparison of the analyzed strains with strains circulating in the neighboring countries at the same period provided information on their genetic relationship. The data thus obtained made it possible to establish the pathways of the transmission of wild poliovirus strains in the common epidemic area of the Russia u CIS.


Subject(s)
Genome, Viral , Poliovirus/classification , Commonwealth of Independent States , Poliovirus/genetics , Poliovirus/isolation & purification , Russia , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Serotyping
14.
Mol Gen Mikrobiol Virusol ; (2): 25-32, 1996.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8927060

ABSTRACT

One hundred and fifty nucleotide-long VP1/2A junction regions were sequenced in the RNAs of 19 strains isolated in 1990-1991 from patients with paralytic poliomyelitis in different regions of the former USSR. On the basis of the alignments of these sequenced RNAs, four pairs of 19-25 base-long oligodeoxynucleotide PCR primers were designed capable of detecting polio RNAs in isolated strains and of discriminating between polio genotypes. PCR with 520 polio virus strains isolated from patients, normal subjects, and environmental objects showed 428 of these strains to be related to Sabin's vaccine strains, whereas the rest were referred to A (30), T (24), and G (1) genotypes of serotype 1 and to C-genotype (37) of serotype 3. The designed primers were highly specific and did not cross-react between themselves and with primers specific for Sabin's vaccine strains in PCR.


Subject(s)
Poliovirus/isolation & purification , Base Sequence , Capsid/genetics , Capsid Proteins , DNA Primers , Genotype , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Poliovirus/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Russia , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
15.
Drugs Exp Clin Res ; 12(9-10): 735-8, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3792201

ABSTRACT

A study was carried out on terminal, infiltrational and conductive anaesthetic activity of new aliphatic-aromatic aminoamides, C6H5CR(NHCOR'') - (CH2)nNR'2, which are the result of reaction between corresponding aminocarbinoles with nitriles in the presence of concentrated sulphuric acid. Terminal anaesthesia was checked on the rabbit eye cornea. Infiltrational anaesthesia was performed on guinea-pigs, conductive anaesthesia on frogs. A comparison of data on the local anaesthetic activity of aminoamides, aminoketones and aminoesters showed that aminoamides display a larger activity than aminoketones and are on the same scale as aminoesters. The choice of aminoamides made it possible to show the influence of various features of structure (lengths of hydrocarbon chain between functional groups, the nature of substitutes in the functional groups) on the local anaesthetic action of the preparations under study. It was proved that the increase of distance between the functional groups appreciably intensifies local anaesthetic activity. Moreover, substitution of the para and meta position by the benzene ring in the amide group leads to an increase of the anaesthetic effect.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics, Local/pharmacology , Amines/pharmacology , Anesthetics, Local/toxicity , Animals , Guinea Pigs , In Vitro Techniques , Lethal Dose 50 , Mice , Rabbits , Structure-Activity Relationship
16.
Biokhimiia ; 40(5): 999-1003, 1975.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1212455

ABSTRACT

Butanol-1 and butandiol-1,4 are shown to increase the decarbamoylation rate of N-methylcarbamoyl- and N,N-dimethylcarbamoyl-cholinesterase. It is mainly due to the formation of a ternary complex NEA which is decomposed in 2,5 times faster than corbamoyl-enzyme EA. This is an evidence for the presence of some allosteric center in cholinesterase which is capable of binding alcohols.


Subject(s)
Alcohols/pharmacology , Cholinesterases/metabolism , Allosteric Site , Butanols/pharmacology , Butylene Glycols/pharmacology , Chemistry, Organic , Organic Chemistry Phenomena
17.
Biokhimiia ; 40(1): 63-70, 1975.
Article in Russian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-237583

ABSTRACT

It is shown that effect of alcohols ROH on the hydrolysis of butyryl-choline and acetylcholine by choline esterase (E. C. 3.1.1.8) is complex; it included the concurrent and the unconcurrent inhibitions, the interaction with the acylenzyme to form more reactive triple complex, and the acyl migration. By titrometric method it is found that proportion of the transacylation and hydrolysis rates depends on hydrophobity of R only being independent on its electronegativity.


Subject(s)
Alcohols/pharmacology , Choline/metabolism , Cholinesterases/pharmacology , Acetylcholine/metabolism , Acylation , Animals , Catalysis , Choline/analogs & derivatives , Chymotrypsin/pharmacology , Esters , Horses , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Hydrolysis , Kinetics
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