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Serum albumin

About: Serum albumin is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 16337 publications have been published within this topic receiving 516395 citations. The topic is also known as: blood albumin & ANALBA.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The physiological or pathophysiological concentrations of different oxidatively modified albumin molecules vary over a wide range and are crucial in assessing the clinical relevance of altered ligand binding properties of a particularly modifiedalbumin species in various disease conditions.
Abstract: Binding and transport of a number of endogenous and exogenous compounds is an important function of the main plasma protein, albumin. In vivo and in vitro, albumin may be oxidatively modified in different ways with different agents at different sites. These modifications have various consequences on the physiological functions of albumin. Diabetes mellitus, liver diseases and nephropathy are just a few examples of disorders in which oxidative stress is involved and altered albumin functions have been described. This review is focussed on the consequences of oxidative modification on the binding properties of albumin. These range from no effect to decreased or increased binding affinities depending on the ligand under investigation and the type of modification. Indicators for modification include glycosylation, disulphide formation or the content of carbonyl groups. The redox state of albumin can affect the binding properties in several ways, including altered conformation and consequently altered affinities at binding sites and altered binding when the binding reaction itself is redox sensitive. The physiological or pathophysiological concentrations of different oxidatively modified albumin molecules vary over a wide range and are crucial in assessing the clinical relevance of altered ligand binding properties of a particularly modified albumin species in various disease conditions.

304 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The conformational changes in two physiologically important isomers of HSA (N and B isomers) upon ciprofloxacin binding were evaluated by measuring far, near-UV CD, and fluorescence properties of the CFX-HSA complex.

302 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In well-dialyzed patients who were iron replete, the acute-phase response was the most important predictor of EPO resistance, and EPO/Hct was independent of PTH and aluminum levels, PCRn, and Kt/V.

302 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In vivo results suggest that these conjugates formed with tri- and tetrapeptidic spacer arms are endocytosed by L1210 cells and that DNR is released intracellularly after digestion by lysosomal enzymes.
Abstract: Daunorubicin (DNR) has been conjugated to succinylated serum albumin by an amide bond joining the amino group of the drug and a carboxyl side chain of the protein either directly or with the intercalation of a peptide spacer arm varying from one to four amino acids. During in vitro incubation with lysosomal hydrolases, intact DNR could be released extensively only from conjugates prepared with a tri- or tetrapeptide spacer arm. These latter conjugates remained very stable in the presence of serum. When tested in vivo against the intraperitoneal form of L1210 leukemia, the conjugates in which DNR was linked to serum albumin directly or via one amino acid were completely inactive but the conjugate with a dipeptide spacer arm was not more active than free DNR. In parallel with the in vitro studies, the best therapeutic results were obtained with the conjugates formed with tri- and tetrapeptidic spacer arms; they were much more active than DNR, inducing a high percentage of long-term survivors. Thus, use of a tri- or tetrapeptide spacer arm is essential to obtain DNR-protein conjugates that remain stable in serum and from which DNR can be released through the action of lysosomal hydrolases. The in vivo results suggest, moreover, that these conjugates are endocytosed by L1210 cells and that DNR is released intracellularly after digestion by lysosomal enzymes. This conjugation method can be applied to other drugs possessing a free amino group and to various potential carriers, such as antibodies, polypeptide hormones, and glycoproteins, that have amino or carboxyl side chains.

301 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202379
2022208
2021267
2020296
2019295
2018323