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Leila Risteli

Eastern Finland Laboratory Center

ORCID: 0000-0002-5532-5895

Publishes on Cell Adhesion Molecules Research, Bone health and osteoporosis research, Protease and Inhibitor Mechanisms. 270 papers and 12.3k citations.

270Publications
12.3kTotal Citations

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Radioimmunoassay for the pyridinoline cross-linked carboxy-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen: a new serum marker of bone collagen degradation
Juha Risteli, Inkeri Elomaa, S. Niemi et al.|Clinical Chemistry|1993
Cited by 637

We developed a radioimmunoassay (RIA) for the carboxy-terminal telopeptides of type I collagen (ICTP), cross-linked with the helical domain of another type I collagen molecule, after isolation from human femoral bone. The cross-linked peptide was liberated by digesting insoluble, denatured bone collagen either with bacterial collagenase or with trypsin, and purified by two successive reversed-phase separations on HPLC, with monitoring of pyridinoline-specific fluorescence. The purity of the peptide was verified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and its origin in the type I collagen fibers was determined by amino-terminal amino acid sequencing. Polyclonal antibodies and a separation reagent containing second antibody and polyethylene glycol are used in the RIA. An immunologically identical, somewhat larger antigen is present in human serum; its concentration increases in multiple myeloma and in rheumatoid arthritis. The ICTP antigen seems to be cleared from the circulation by the kidneys, because glomerular filtration rates that are two-thirds of normal or less are associated with increased circulating ICTP concentrations. The CVs of the method are between 3% and 8% for a wide range of concentrations. The analysis of 40 serum samples can be completed in 4 h.

Radioimmunoassay of the carboxyterminal propeptide of human type I procollagen
Jukka Melkko, S. Niemi, Leila Risteli et al.|Clinical Chemistry|1990
Cited by 525

Type I collagen is the most abundant collagen type in soft tissues and the only type found in mineralized bone. We established a rapid equilibrium radioimmunoassay for the carboxyterminal propeptide of human type I procollagen (PICP), to be used as an indicator of the synthesis of type I collagen. We isolated type I procollagen from the medium of primary cultures of human skin fibroblasts, digested the protein with highly purified bacterial collagenase, and purified PICP by lectin-affinity chromatography, gel filtration, and ion-exchange separation on HPLC. The purity of the protein was verified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by N-terminal amino acid sequencing of its component chains. The final radioimmunoassay was established with polyclonal rabbit antibodies. Material antigenically related to PICP is readily detected in human serum. There is only one form of the serum antigen, its molecular size and affinity to the antibodies being similar to those of the isolated propeptide. Intra- and interassay CVs are 3% and 5%, respectively. Preliminary reference intervals for healthy adults (18 to 61 years of age) are 38-202 micrograms/L for men and 50-170 micrograms/L for women: in men the concentration is inversely related to age. The serum antigen is stable during storage and after repeated thawing.

Mannose Receptor-Mediated Regulation of Serum Glycoprotein Homeostasis
Sena J. Lee, Stefan Evers, Daniel Roeder et al.|Science|2002
Cited by 481

Carbohydrates are thought to function as tags that mark circulatory glycoproteins for rapid clearance. To examine the role of the mannose receptor (MR) in glycoprotein clearance, we generated mice genetically deficient in MR. MR-/- mice were defective in clearing proteins bearing accessible mannose and N-acetylglucosamine residues and had elevated levels of eight different lysosomal hydrolases. Proteomic analysis of MR-/- and control mouse sera showed that an additional 4 out of 52 proteins identified were elevated in MR-/- serum. Each of these is up-regulated during inflammation and wound healing. Thus, MR appears to operate as an essential regulator of serum glycoprotein homeostasis.

Serum markers of type I collagen formation and degradation in metabolic bone disease: Correlation with bone histomorphometry
Erik Fink Eriksen, Peder Charles, F. Melsen et al.|Journal of Bone and Mineral Research|1993
Cited by 445

Type I collagen makes up more than 90% of bone matrix. Therefore, analysis of antigens related to collagen formation and degradation in bone should provide good and specific estimates of both bone resorption and bone formation rates. In this study we measured serum levels of the pyridinoline cross-linked telopeptide domain of type I collagen (ICTP) as a marker of bone resorption and serum carboxy-terminal propeptide of type I procollagen (PICP) as a marker of bone formation. Serum levels of the two antigens were correlated to histomorphometric indices of bone resorption and bone formation calculated from iliac crest bone biopsies in a group of 18 individuals with high- and low-turnover bone disease (myxedema, primary hyperparathyroidism, and thyrotoxicosis). After logarithmic transformation the regression of S-ICTP on volume-referent resorption rate (BRs/R/BV) was significant (r = 0.61, p < 0.01, SEM/Y = 56%). S-ICTP also showed a significant regression on the volume-referent cancellous bone balance (r = -0.45, p < 0.05, SEM/Y = 412%). S-PICP was significantly correlated to the mineral appositional rate (r = 0.53, p < 0.05) and volume-referent bone formation rate (r = 0.61, p < 0.01, SEM/Y = 48%). The correlation to bone turnover as expressed in the activation frequency was also highly significant (r = 0.61, p < 0.01, SEM/Y = 51%). No significant correlation with wall thickness or bone balance was demonstrable per remodeling cycle. Thus, assays employing antigens that reflect collagen formation and degradation are useful instruments for the evaluation of rates of bone remodeling in metabolic bone disease.

Rapid equilibrium radioimmunoassay for the amino-terminal propeptide of human type III procollagen.
Juha Risteli, S. Niemi, Premila Trivedi et al.|Clinical Chemistry|1988
Cited by 342

This is an equilibrium-type radioimmunoassay for the amino-terminal propeptide of type III procollagen (PIIINP), which overcomes the problem of nonparallelism between the standard and human serum samples encountered with earlier assays. Proper selection of antiserum and reaction conditions diminishes interference from degradation products of the propeptide in serum. Because a rapid solid-phase-bound second-antibody step is included, the assay takes only 3 h. The intra-assay and the interassay CVs are both about 5%. In infants and children the concentration of PIIINP in serum closely parallels the growth-velocity curve. For 88 presumably healthy adults, the PIIINP concentration was 1.7-4.2 micrograms/L, about a third that measured with the previously available commercial assay. This is because of lack of inhibition by small Col 1 domain-related degradation products.