An adenylate cyclase activity in Medicago sativa L. (alfalfa) roots was partially characterized. The enzyme activity remains in the supernatant fluid after centrifugation at 105,000 g and shows in crude extracts an apparent Mr of about 84,000. The enzyme is active with Mg2+ and Ca2+ as bivalent cations, and is inhibited by EGTA and by chlorpromazine. Calmodulin from bovine brain or spinach leaves activates this adenylate cyclase.
Hereditary spherocytosis (HS) is a common inherited hemolytic anemia due to red cell membrane defects. Extramedullary hematopoiesis is a compensatory response to insufficient bone marrow blood cell production. The preferred sites of extramedullary hematopoietic involvement are the spleen, liver, and lymph nodes, but in HS the posterior paravertebral mediastinum is also commonly involved. A nonsplenectomized 74-year-old man with mild HS, with primary deficiency in ankyrin, was found by magnetic resonance imaging to have thoracic paravertebral hematopoietic masses. The patient showed high serum levels of erythropoietin, which may have played a role in the development of extramedullary hematopoietic masses through a continuous hematopoietic stimulus to erythroid cells in the propositus. The long-standing history of respiratory infections and of hypoxia in the propositus may have been an additional etiological factor.
The authors studied the relative prevalence of erythroid cytoskeletal protein defects and their relationship with the clinical course of Hereditary Spherocytosis (HS) in 39 Portuguese patients of North of Portugal (25 families). This study showed that, in the North of Portugal, HS is primarily due to anquirin deficiency (72%), followed by band 3 (20%). These findings are similar to the published data in other Caucasian populations. Anquirin primary defects have been difficult to diagnose before splenectomy, due to high reticulocytes counts.
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