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uric acid

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uric acid

a white odourless tasteless crystalline product of protein metabolism, present in the blood and urine; 2,6,8-trihydroxypurine. Formula: C5H4N4O3
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Uric acid

The main excretory end product of protein metabolism in certain species of birds and reptiles. In mammals, uric acid is derived from purines; in higher primates, including humans, it is excreted as such and is not oxidized to allantoin, the main excretory purine metabolism product of most species. In humans, uric acid levels are increased following excessive intake of dietary purines, primary synthesis in certain diseases (gout, Lesch-Nyhan syndrome), endogenous nucleic acid metabolism (leukemia, an abnormal number of erythrocytes in blood, chemotherapy-induced tumor lysis), and restricted renal excretion (renal diseases, ketoacidosis, lacticidosis, diuretics). Uric acid levels are lowered by the use of drugs causing increased uric acid excretion, and by renal tubular defects. See Liver, Nucleic acid, Protein metabolism, Purine

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Bioscience. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

uric acid

[′yu̇r·ik ′as·əd]
(biochemistry)
C5H4N4O3 A white, crystalline compound, the excretory end product in amino acid metabolism by uricotelic species.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Uric Acid

 

(2,6,8-trioxypurine), a colorless, crystalline solid that is very slightly soluble in water and that decomposes below the melting point. Uric acid, which was discovered in 1776 by K. Scheele as a component of urine, can exist in two forms— keto and enol:

In man and primates, uric acid is the end product of purine metabolism, forming as a result of the enzymatic oxidation of xanthine; in all other mammals, uric acid is converted into allantoin. The brain, liver, and blood of all mammals and man, as well as the urine and sweat, contain small quantities of uric acid. Some metabolic disorders are characterized by an accumulation in the body of uric acid and of uric acid salts (called urates); gouty deposits and the formation of stones in the kidneys and urinary bladder often accompany these metabolic disorders.

In birds, some reptiles, and most terrestrial insects, uric acid is the end product not only of purine metabolism but also of protein metabolism. Because an organism requires only a minimal amount of water in order to eliminate uric acid from the body (uric acid can even be eliminated as a solid), these animals, which have a limited water balance, use the uric acid biosynthetic pathway as the primary mechanism for neutralizing ammonia. (The neutralization is advantageous because ammonia is a more toxic product of nitrogen metabolism than uric acid.) This mechanism is in contrast to the mechanism found in most vertebrates, which have a more complete water balance and thus use the urea biosynthetic pathway as a means of neutralizing ammonia. (Urea requires much water to be safely eliminated from the body.)

Up to 25 percent of avian excrement, or guano, is uric acid; thus, the excrement serves as a source for obtaining uric acid. Uric acid is also found in a number of plants. It is the starting material for the synthesis of caffeine.

REFERENCES

Prosser, C. L., and F. Brown. Sravnitel’naia fiziologiia zhivotnykh. Moscow, 1967. (Translated from English.)

E. N. SAFONOVA

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Uric acid is a weak organic acid, the final enzymatic end product of purine nucleotides degradation (8).
Baking soda can reduce the amount of uric acid in the body, which is the main cause of gout, and relieve gout pain.
Most of the patients were overweight (70.91 %), including 35 out of 49 males and 4 out of 6 females Regarding the chemical composition, calcium oxalate was the commonest constituent, in 33(60%); patients followed by pure form of uric acid, 10 (18.18%); calcium phosphate, 6(10.90%) and calcium magnesium phosphatein, 3 (5.45%) patients, whereas, magnesium phosphate, calcium carbonate and magnesium ammonium phosphate stones were found in one patient each (1.81%), (Table-1).
For quantitative variables like age, parity, gestational age, uric acid levels and blood glucose levels mean and standard deviation will be calculated.
Uric acid develops when your body metabolizes substances known as purines, found in tissues throughout your body and also a variety of foods (most uric acid comes from internal metabolism, not diet).
Your doctor may also do a test to measure the amount of uric acid in your blood.
To study the association of serum uric acid levels with various complications of hypertension.
Comparative effects of losartan and irbesartan on serum uric acid in hypertensive patients with hyperuricaemia and gout.
Excess uric acid in your body also may make you more resistant to insulin, increasing the odds that you'll develop diabetes.
According to recent reports increased production of serum uric acid through activation of xanthine oxidase (XO) from xanthine and hypoxanthine was found in the patients of chronic heart failure (CHF).5 XO also generates free radicals including reactive oxygen species (ROS) which may participate in oxidative damage in the myocardium.6 However, ROS also play a crucial role during cardiomyocytes apoptosis.7 In addition, inadequate ROS levels were also found in human cardiac valve dysfunction during apoptosis.
According to a Radio Pakistan report, researchers at the Mauritius University suggest that green tea and fermented papaya are preventive means for diabetes and positively reduce the level of the reactive protein C and the uric acid.
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