CDNA clones for 17β‐hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17‐HSD; EC 1.1.1.62) were isolated from a placental λgt11 expression library using polyclonal antibodies against placental 17‐HSD. The largest cDNA contained 1325 nucleotides, consisting of a short 5′‐noncoding segment, a coding segment of 987 nucleotides terminated by a TAA codon, and a 329 nucleotide long 3′‐noncoding segment. The open reading frame encoded a polypeptide of 327 amino acid residues with a predicted M
r of 34853. The amino acid sequence of 23 N‐terminal amino acids determined from purified 17‐HSD agreed with the sequence deduced from cDNA. The deduced amino acid sequence also contained two peptides previously characterized from the proposed catalytic area of placental 17‐HSD.
This is an equilibrium-type radioimmunoassay for the amino-terminal propeptide of type III procollagen (PIIINP), which overcomes the problem of nonparallelism between the standard and human serum samples encountered with earlier assays. Proper selection of antiserum and reaction conditions diminishes interference from degradation products of the propeptide in serum. Because a rapid solid-phase-bound second-antibody step is included, the assay takes only 3 h. The intra-assay and the interassay CVs are both about 5%. In infants and children the concentration of PIIINP in serum closely parallels the growth-velocity curve. For 88 presumably healthy adults, the PIIINP concentration was 1.7-4.2 micrograms/L, about a third that measured with the previously available commercial assay. This is because of lack of inhibition by small Col 1 domain-related degradation products.
SummaryTwo primary bile acids, cholic acid (CA) and chenodeoxycholic acid (CDCA), and one secondary bile acid, deoxycholic acid (DCA), were measured by radioimmuno‐assay in pregnancy serum from 30 healthy women, 49 women with itching and 45 with intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy. All subjects were studied serially from between 16 and 20 weeks gestation until 35–60 days post partum. In healthy pregnant women, serum CA and DCA levels did not change significantly at any time. The mean CDCA level rose significantly towards term. In women with intrahepatic cholestasis, serum levels of CA and CDCA were increased ten‐ and five‐fold, respectively, at the time of appearance of clinical Symptoms and the CA/CDCA ratio rose from l/l to 2/1; there was also a moderate increase in the serum concentration of DCA. In 4 of 8 women studied prospectively an increase in serum bile acid levels preceded the appearance of Symptoms or other laboratory evidence of intrahepatic cholestasis. Nine of the women with itching with normal routine liver function test results had increases in serum CA and CDCA concen‐trations suggesting mild cholestasis.
Nine different liver function tests (LFT) were assessed in 175 unselected diabetic outpatients stabilized on diet, insulin, or oral hypoglycemic drugs. In another group of 72 diabetic inpatients having diagnostic liver biopsy, relationships between LFT and histologic changes in the liver were investigated. Abnormalities in at least one of the tests were noted in 57% of the outpatients, and two tests gave pathologic results in 27%. The non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients more often had abnormal LFT results than did the insulin-dependent diabetic patients. Serum chenodeoxycholic acid concentrations were increased in 27%, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gGT) activities in 19%, and alanine aminotransferase (Alt) activities in 17% of the outpatients, but the increases were rarely more than twice the upper limit of normal. In multivariate analysis, outpatients who were overweight, showed poor diabetes control during a short duration of diabetes controlled by treatment with diet or oral agents, and had a mature age at onset of diabetes displayed the most significant clinical explanatory variables associated with abnormal Alt. In the inpatients, the percentages of abnormal Alt and gGT results were augmented, along with increasing severity of histologic changes, but the mean values of Alt and gGT did not differ significantly between the various histologic groups. In addition, the diabetic patients with nonspecific inflammatory changes or increase in liver fibrosis often showed normal or only minor elevations in these test values.
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