sodium-borohydride and Marfan-Syndrome

sodium-borohydride has been researched along with Marfan-Syndrome* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for sodium-borohydride and Marfan-Syndrome

ArticleYear
The borohydride-reducible compounds of human aortic elastin. Demonstration of a new cyclic amino acid in alkali hydrolysate, and changes with age and in patients with annulo-aortic ectasia including one with Marfan syndrome.
    The Biochemical journal, 1985, Nov-15, Volume: 232, Issue:1

    Human aortic elastin reduced with [3H]borohydride was analysed by ion-exchange chromatography after alkali or acid hydrolysis. Alkali hydrolysates of elastins contained a radioactive peak that was eluted between proline and leucine. This peak was not present in foetal elastin, but its proportion increased steadily during aging. Aortic samples from patients with annulo-aortic ectasia (aneurysm of the ascending aorta), including one with classical Marfan syndrome, contained less elastin (CNBr-insoluble material) than did the age-matched controls. The proportion of radioactivity in the new peak of all these aortas was low when compared with age-matched controls. Gas-chromatographic/mass-spectrometric analysis suggested that it contained a cyclic derivative of a hydrated aldol-condensation product. The concentration of the cross-link precursors, lysine aldehyde and aldol-condensation product (estimated from the acid-hydrolysis product 6-chloronorleucine and the acid-degradation product of reduced aldol-condensation product) was high in very young aortas but remained quite stable after childhood. No differences were observed in cross-link profiles of acid hydrolysates between pathological and control aortas. A low proportion of radioactivity in the new peak may indicate the presence of young or immature elastin in the pathological aortas.

    Topics: Adult; Age Factors; Amino Acids; Aorta; Aortic Diseases; Borohydrides; Child; Chromatography, Ion Exchange; Dilatation, Pathologic; Elastin; Female; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Humans; Hydrolysis; Male; Marfan Syndrome; Middle Aged

1985