phylloquinone

Phylloquinone is a lipid of Prenol Lipids (PR) class. Phylloquinone is associated with abnormalities such as Vitamin K Deficiency, Malnutrition, Consumption-archaic term for TB, Osteoporosis and Hyperostosis, Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal. The involved functions are known as Ingestion, Blood Circulation, Genetic Polymorphism, Intestinal Absorption and Process. Phylloquinone often locates in Blood, Body tissue, Hepatic, Membrane and Entire bony skeleton. The associated genes with phylloquinone are Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase Complex, Subunit 1, GGCX gene, CYP4F2 gene, Alleles and APOE gene. The related lipids are Micelles, 208-G, Fatty Acids, Total cholesterol and Sphingolipids. The related experimental models are Knock-out.

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Introduction

To understand associated biological information of phylloquinone, we collected biological information of abnormalities, associated pathways, cellular/molecular locations, biological functions, related genes/proteins, lipids and common seen animal/experimental models with organized paragraphs from literatures.

What diseases are associated with phylloquinone?

phylloquinone is suspected in Vitamin K Deficiency, Diabetes Mellitus, Non-Insulin-Dependent, Diabetes, vitamin depletion, Malnutrition, Osteoporosis and other diseases in descending order of the highest number of associated sentences.

Related references are mostly published in these journals:

Disease Cross reference Weighted score Related literature
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Possible diseases from mapped MeSH terms on references

We collected disease MeSH terms mapped to the references associated with phylloquinone

MeSH term MeSH ID Detail
Thromboembolism D013923 6 associated lipids
Vitamin K Deficiency D014813 5 associated lipids
Exanthema D005076 11 associated lipids
Total 3

PubChem Associated disorders and diseases

What pathways are associated with phylloquinone

There are no associated biomedical information in the current reference collection.

PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

Link to PubChem Biomolecular Interactions and Pathways

What cellular locations are associated with phylloquinone?

Related references are published most in these journals:

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What functions are associated with phylloquinone?


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What lipids are associated with phylloquinone?

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What genes are associated with phylloquinone?

Related references are published most in these journals:


Gene Cross reference Weighted score Related literatures

What common seen animal models are associated with phylloquinone?

Knock-out

Knock-out are used in the study 'A dedicated thioesterase of the Hotdog-fold family is required for the biosynthesis of the naphthoquinone ring of vitamin K1.' (Widhalm JR et al., 2009) and Knock-out are used in the study 'Deficiency in phylloquinone (vitamin K1) methylation affects prenyl quinone distribution, photosystem I abundance, and anthocyanin accumulation in the Arabidopsis AtmenG mutant.' (Lohmann A et al., 2006).

Related references are published most in these journals:

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NCBI Entrez Crosslinks

All references with phylloquinone

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Authors Title Published Journal PubMed Link
Chambrier C et al. Replacement of long-chain triglyceride with medium-chain triglyceride/long-chain triglyceride lipid emulsion in patients receiving long-term parenteral nutrition: effects on essential fatty acid status and plasma vitamin K1 levels. 2004 Jan-Feb JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr pmid:14763787
REID RA The treatment of hypoprothrombinemia with orally administered vitamin K 1. 1951 Q Bull Northwest Univ Med Sch pmid:14864841
Conly JM and Stein K The production of menaquinones (vitamin K2) by intestinal bacteria and their role in maintaining coagulation homeostasis. 1992 Oct-Dec Prog Food Nutr Sci pmid:1492156
pmid:14952231
Braam LA et al. Beneficial effects of vitamins D and K on the elastic properties of the vessel wall in postmenopausal women: a follow-up study. 2004 Thromb. Haemost. pmid:14961167
Fleming RH et al. Effects of dietary particulate limestone, vitamin K3 and fluoride and photostimulation on skeletal morphology and osteoporosis in laying hens. 2003 Br. Poult. Sci. pmid:14965088
Santa-María I et al. Quinones facilitate the self-assembly of the phosphorylated tubulin binding region of tau into fibrillar polymers. 2004 Biochemistry pmid:15005624
Bui L et al. Skin reaction to subcutaneous phytonadione injections. 2004 Am J Health Syst Pharm pmid:15011773
Suzuki K et al. [Study on changes of serum vitamin K1 level and K dependent coagulation factors in patients with coumarin derivatives (warfarin) therapy]. 1992 Rinsho Byori pmid:1507498
Swartz AM et al. On the alcohol- and water-catalyzed tautomerization of vitamins K1- and K2-derived quinone methide intermediates. 2004 J. Org. Chem. pmid:15104464