Jenõ Duba
Semmelweis University
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Featured researches published by Jenõ Duba.
Atherosclerosis | 2001
Csaba Szalai; Jenõ Duba; Zoltán Prohászka; Ákos Kalina; Teréz Szabó; Bálint Nagy; Laura Horváth; Albert Császár
The central role of chemokines in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis has been made clear. Recently polymorphisms in the gene regulatory region of MCP-1 and in the promoter region of RANTES have been found, which increase the expression of these chemokines. We investigated the role of these polymorphisms together with the chemokine SDF-1-801A and the chemokine receptors CCR2-64I and CCR5Delta32 mutations in 318 patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) referred to coronary bypass surgery, comparing them with 320 healthy controls. The prevalence of the MCP-1 -2518 G/G homozygotes was significantly higher among CAD patients than among controls (P<0.005; OR=2.2 (95% CI 1.25-3.92). The Lp(a) levels of CAD patients with G/G genotype were significantly higher than those in patients with G/A or A/A genotypes. No CAD patients homozygous for the CCR5Delta32 and CCR2-64I mutations have been found. The genotype distributions of the two alleles deviated from the Hardy Weinberg equilibrium in patients, indicating that the numbers of homozygotes were significantly lower than expected. The MCP-1 -2518G variant in homozygous form appears as a genetic risk factor for severe CAD. This genotype is associated with elevated Lp(a) levels in patients. Individuals homozygous for CCR2-64I or CCR5Delta32 mutations are at reduced risk for severe CAD.
Circulation | 2001
Katalin Burián; Zoltan Kis; Dezso Virok; Valéria Endrész; Zoltán Prohászka; Jenõ Duba; Klara Berencsi; Krisztina Boda; Laura Horváth; Laszlo Romics; George Füst; Eva Gonczol
BackgroundStudies have suggested that the prevalence of antibodies against heat-shock proteins (HSPs), Chlamydia pneumoniae (Cpn), and cytomegalovirus (CMV) is associated with coronary artery disease (CAD), but the independent or joint effects of human (h) HSP60 antibodies and these pathogens in patients have not been fully elucidated. Methods and ResultsA total of 405 subjects (276 patients with CAD and 129 control individuals) were tested for serum antibodies to hHSP60, Cpn, and CMV immediate-early-1 (IE1) antigens. Patients were also assessed for serum cholesterol, triglyceride levels, and smoking habit. Significantly elevated levels of antibodies to hHSP60 and Cpn but not to CMV-IE1 antigens were documented in CAD patients. Multiple logistic regression analysis and subanalyses of selected subjects showed that these associations were independent of age, sex, smoking, and serum lipid levels. Antibodies to hHSP60 and Cpn did not correlate quantitatively; however, the relative risk of disease development was substantially increased in subjects with high antibody levels to both hHSP60 and Cpn, reaching an odds ratio of 82.0 (95% CI 10.6 to 625.0). ConclusionsHigh levels of antibodies to hHSP60 and Cpn are independent risk factors for coronary atherosclerosis, but their simultaneous presence substantially increases the risk for disease development.
Cell Stress & Chaperones | 2002
Zoltán Prohászka; Mahavir Singh; Kálmán Nagy; Emese Kiss; Gabriella Lakos; Jenõ Duba; George Füst
Abstract According to new hypotheses, extracellular heat shock proteins (Hsps) may represent an ancestral danger signal of cellular death or lysis-activating innate immunity. Recent studies demonstrating a dual role for Hsp70 as both a chaperone and cytokine, inducing potent proinflammatory response in human monocytes, provided support for the hypothesis that extracellular Hsp is a messenger of stress. Our previous work focused on the complement-activating ability of human Hsp60. We demonstrated that Hsp60 complexed with specific antibodies induces a strong classical pathway (CP) activation. Here, we show that another chaperone molecule also possesses complement-activating ability. Solid-phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was applied for the experiments. Human Hsp70 activated the CP independently of antibodies. No complement activation was found in the case of human Hsp90. Our data further support the hypothesis that chaperones may messenger stress to other cells. Complement-like molecules and primitive immune cells appeared together early in evolution. A joint action of these arms of innate immunity in response to free chaperones, the most abundant cellular proteins displaying a stress signal, may further strengthen the effectiveness of immune reactions.
Circulation | 2002
Szabolcs Rugonfalvi-Kiss; Valéria Endrész; Hans O. Madsen; Katalin Burián; Jenõ Duba; Zoltán Prohászka; István Karádi; László Romics; Eva Gonczol; George Füst; Peter Garred
Background—The possible association between coronary artery disease (CAD) and Chlamydia pneumoniae (C pneumoniae) infection is controversial. On the basis of the recent suggestion that mannose-binding lectin (MBL) variant alleles are related to an increased risk of severe atherosclerosis, and on the in vitro interaction of MBL with C pneumoniae, we asked whether MBL might contribute to CAD in conjunction with C pneumoniae. Methods and Results—Antibodies to C pneumoniae were measured by immunofluorescence and MBL alleles were determined by polymerase chain reaction technique in samples from 210 patients with CAD and 257 healthy subjects from Hungary collected between 1995 and 1996. A higher percentage of patients with CAD were anti-C pneumoniae positive as compared with the control group (P =0.058). However, at logistic regression analysis adjusted to age, sex, and serum lipid levels, this difference was confined only to subjects carrying MBL variant alleles (P =0.035, odds ratio 2.63, [95% CI: 1.07 to 6.45]). In contrast, no significant difference was seen in those homozygous for the normal MBL allele (P =0.412). During a 65±5.8-month follow-up period, major outcomes (new myocardial infarction, and/or bypass operation or cardiovascular death) occurred in 11 C pneumoniae positive and 3 C pneumoniae negative patients. In the C pneumoniae positive group, the odds ratio of development of outcomes was 3.27 (95% CI: 1.10 to 9.71, P =0.033) in the carriers of the MBL variant alleles compared with the homozygous carriers of the normal MBL allele. Conclusions—These results indicate that infection with C pneumoniae leads mainly to the development and progression of severe CAD in patients with variation in the MBL gene.
Atherosclerosis | 2001
Anna Horváth; George Füst; István T. Horváth; Gábor Vallus; Jenõ Duba; Péter Harcos; Zoltán Prohászka; Éva Rajnavölgyi; Lívia Jánoskuti; Margit Kovács; Albert Császár; László Romics; István Karádi
In animal experiments the protective role of anti-cholesterol antibodies (ACHA) in the development of atherosclerosis has been demonstrated. Despite the fact that ACHA are present in the serum of healthy humans, no data on the occurrence of these antibodies in human diseases are available. We determined serum concentrations of IgG type ACHA by an enzyme immunosorbent assay in 600 patients with atherosclerotic vascular diseases (86 patients with peripheral occlusive atherosclerosis, 146 patients with cerebrovascular diseases, 341 patients with severe coronary heart disease (CHD) who received aorto-coronary by-pass, 27 patients with myocardial infarction who did not undergo by-pass operation), in 57 patient controls (complaints of CHD, without coronarographic alterations) and in 218 healthy individuals. ACHA were present in the sera of all persons tested. No serum cofactor is needed for the binding of human ACHA to solid phase cholesterol, binding can be inhibited dose-dependently by LDL and even more strongly with LDL/VLDL preparations purified from human serum. ACHA levels were found to be considerably lower in patients with peripheral occlusive atherosclerosis and cerebrovascular diseases compared with the levels in healthy individuals. By contrast, the ACHA levels of patients with CHD were considerably higher. No differences in the IgG subclass distribution and binding efficiency of ACHA in the sera of CHD patients and controls were found. Thus, our present findings indicate that both low and high ACHA production may be associated with different atherosclerotic vascular diseases.
Experimental and Clinical Immunogenetics | 2001
Albert Császár; Jenõ Duba; Béla Melegh; Judith Kramer; Csaba Szalai; Zoltán Prohászka; István Karádi; Margit Kovács; Károly Méhes; László Romics; George Füst
The aim of the present study was to compare the frequencies of the F allele of C3 complement component and the Leiden mutation of coagulation factor V in patients with severe coronary heart disease (CHD) who survived myocardial infarction (MI; group A), and those who had no MI in their case history (group B). We have determined the C3 allele frequencies by electrophoresis, and Leiden mutation by PCR in 338 patients with severe CHD and in 490 and 523 healthy controls, respectively. The C3*F allele frequency was significantly (p = 0.006) higher in group A (0.213) that in group B (0.132). A significant (p = 0.045) difference was found between ≤60-year group A (0.077) and group B (0.029) patients in the frequency of Leiden mutation. These findings indicate that the C3*F allele and the Leiden mutation may be associated with an increased risk of developing myocardial infarction in CHD patients.
Atherosclerosis | 2004
Csaba Szalai; Marton Keszei; Jenõ Duba; Zoltán Prohászka; Gergely Tibor Kozma; Albert Császár; Sándor Balogh; Zsuzsa Almássy; George Füst; Antal Czinner
International Immunology | 1999
Zoltán Prohászka; Jenõ Duba; Gabriella Lakos; Emese Kiss; Lilian Varga; Lívia Jánoskuti; Albert Császár; István Karádi; Kálmán Nagy; Mahavir Singh; László Romics; George Füst
International Immunology | 2004
George Füst; Gudmundur J. Arason; Judith Kramer; Csaba Szalai; Jenõ Duba; Yan Yang; Erwin K. Chung; Bi Zhou; Carol A. Blanchong; Marja-Liisa Lokki; Sigurdur Bödvarsson; Zoltán Prohászka; István Karádi; Ágnes Vatay; Margit Kovács; László Romics; Gudmundur Thorgeirsson; C. Yung Yu
Clinica Chimica Acta | 2001
Ákos Kalina; Albert Császár; George Füst; Bálint Nagy; Csaba Szalai; István Karádi; Jenõ Duba; Zoltán Prohászka; Laura Horváth; Hans Dieplinger