Asatoor AM, Milne MD, Walshe JM. Peptiduria in the Fanconi syndrome.
CIBA FOUNDATION SYMPOSIUM 2008:287-98. [PMID:
244388 DOI:
10.1002/9780470720318.ch16]
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Abstract
Peptide excretion has been studied in 20 cases of Wilson's disease and in maleate-induced Fanconi syndrome in the rat, ligand-exchange column chromatography being used to separate peptides from free amino acids. There is a statistically significant increase in urinary peptides in both types of the Fanconi syndrome. In both man and the rat, a large fraction of the excreted peptides has been shown to contain hydroxyproline, and therefore to be derived from collagen degradation. In both groups there is a close correlation between the output of hydroxyproline and that of total peptide-bound amino acids. Arguments are advanced that the peptiduria is due to increased urinary clearance of plasma peptides rather than to a metabolic cause. Peptides excreted in patients with the Fanconi syndrome are shown to have a different proportionate amino acid composition to those in urine specimens from normal controls. The mean size of urinary peptides derived from collagen must be at least five or six amino acids per peptide chain. Maleate-induced Fanconi syndrome in the rat is thought to be a close analogue of the syndrome in man, and further results obtained in the animal model may well be directly applicable to human disease.
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