Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.1.1.37 (malate dehydrogenase)
4,591 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cells of the Neurospora crassa slime mutant grown in sucrose medium exhibited low activities of glyoxysomal marker enzymes isocitrate lyase (ICL), malate synthetase (MS), and malate dehydrogenase. Transfer of the cells to a medium containing acetate as sole carbon source ("acetate medium") induced a strong increase in the activities of these enzymes in both the soluble and the crude particulate cell fraction. Soluble isocitrate lyase activity increased rapidly after a lag phase of about 45 minutes. Addition of 0.1 mM cycloheximide to the acetate medium 3 hours after transfer of the cells halted the rise of isocitrate lyase activity in either cell fraction, but the inhibition of the incorporation of ICL activity into the particulate cell fraction was delayed by 1 hour. Addition of 20 g/l glucose resulted in the immediate decrease of both soluble and particulate ICL activities. Transfer to acetate medium induced no change in the activities of other microbody marker enzymes such as catalase, uricase or D-amino acid oxidase. Resolution of crude homogenates of "slime" cells by sucrose density gradient centrifugation yielded two major protein bands: A mitochondrial band at a density of 1.180 kg/l showing maximum activites of fumarase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and cytochrome c oxidase, and a microbody-rich band which obviously consisted of two types of organelles with different biochemical properties. Maximum activities of ICL and MS sedimented at a density of 1.21 kg/l while the peaks of particulate uricase and catalase activities were recovered at 1.24 kg/l.
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PMID:Isolation and biochemical properties of two types of microbody from Neurospora crassa cells. 15 14

The effect of temperature on the activation energies of mitochondrial enzymes of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was examined. Non-linear Arrhenius plots with discontinuities in the temperature range 14-19 degrees C and 19-22 degrees C were observed for the respiratory enzymes and mitochondrial ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) respectively. A straight-line Arrhenius plot was observed for the matrix enzyme, malate dehydrogenase. The activation energies of the enzymes associated with succinate oxidation, namely, succinate oxidase, succinate dehydrogenase and succinate-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, were in the range 60-85kJ/mol above the transition temperature and 90-160kJ/mol below the transition temperature. In contrast, the corresponding enzymes associated with NADH oxidation showed significantly lower activation energies, 20-35kJ/mol above and 40-85kJ/mol below the transition temperature. The discontinuities in the Arrhenius plots were still observed after sonication, treatment with non-ionic detergents or freezing and thawing of the mitochondrial membranes. Discontinuities for cytochrome c oxidase activity were only observed in freshly isolated mitochondria, and no distinct breaks were observed after storage at -20 degrees C. Mitochondrial ATPase activity still showed discontinuities after sonication and freezing and thawing, but a linear plot was observed after treatment with non-ionic detergents. The results indicate that the various enzymes of the respiratory chain are located in a similar lipid macroenvironment within the mitochondrial membrane.
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PMID:Phase transitions in yeast mitochondrial membranes. The effect of temperature on the energies of activation of the respiratory enzymes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 16 75

A method is described for the preparation of spheroplasts in high yield from Schizosaccharomyces pombe, by treating cells grown in the presence of glucose and deoxyglucose with snail digestive enzymes. Gentle disruption of such spheroplasts yielded homogenates, from which marker enzymes for nuclei (NAD pyrophosphorylase) and mitochondria (cytochrome c oxidase activity and spectroscopically-detectable cytochromes a + a3) could be quantitatively sedimented by low-speed centrifugation. In contrast to previous findings with Saccharomyces carlsbergensis, cytochrome c oxidase and another mitochondrial enzyme, succinate dehydrogenase, were completely sedimentable by zonal centrifugation in sucrose gradients in the presence of either 2 mM-MgCl2 or 0-4 mM-EDTA. Mitochondria were apparently smaller and of lower buoyant density in gradients containing EDTA. The bulk of the total units of malate dehydrogenase and NADH; cytochrome c oxidoreductase sedimented with mitochondria, whereas NADPH: cytochrome c oxidoreductase was located in fractions containing no mitochondria. The distributions of mitochondrial enzymes were heterogeneous in populations of mitochondria separated on the basis of size or density. The possible origins of mitochondrial heterogeneity in extracts of S. pombe are discussed with special reference to changes in the enzyme activities of cells during the cell cycle.
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PMID:Fractionation by differential and zonal centrifugation of spheroplasts prepared from a glucose-repressed fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe 972h-. 18 Feb 35

A model of steady-state hypocitricemia, characterized by hypocitraturia and reduced kidney cortex citrate, has been demonstrated in the rate chronically exposed to environmental heat. The renal citrate extraction ratio remains unchanged. The physiological mechanism that brings about the reduction in circulating citrate has not been determined. Hypocitraturia likely results from a decreased filtered citrate load. Although it is generally contended that filtered citrate load. Although it is generally contended that alkalosis increases and acidosis decreases renal excretion of citrate, observations of mild alkalosis and hypocitraturia during heat exposure suggest that factors other than pH can alter renal handling of citrate. Kidney mitochondrial function, as determined by in vitro measurements of citrate-stimulated respiratory rates and specific activities of isocitrate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, and cytochrome c oxidase, appears to be unaffected by environmental heat.
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PMID:RENAL HANDLING OF CITRATE DURING HEAT-INDUCED HYPOCITRICEMIA. 18 13

The levels of several enzymes have been studied during sporulation of Saccharomyces cerevisia. The specific activities of ribonuclease and aminopeptidase I raised several-fold after transfer of the cells to sporulation medium, whereas the specific activities of phosphofructokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, tryptophan synthase and pyruvate decarboxylase were not significantly altered. The specific activities of NAD-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase, isocitrate lyase, malate dehydrogenase and fructose bisphosphatase all decreased from the onset of sporulation. The inactivation of these latter enzymes was inhibited by cycloheximide and by inhibitors of energy metabolism. Hexokinase, alcohol dehydrogenase and glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase were partially lost from the cells during the period of ascus maturation. None of the enzyme changes observed proved to be 'sporulation-specific' in that it occurred exclusively in sporulating diploid yeast cells. Therefore it is postulated that the meiotic events and the metabolic changes required for ascospore formation are under separate genetic control in this organism. During sporulation, the cellular content of cytochromes b, c, and aa3 was reduced to 20% or less of that present in vegetative derepressed cells. Since the relative percentage of total to cycloheximide-insensitive mitochondrial protein synthesis was not significantly altered throughout sporulation, and the pattern of mitochondrially synthesized polypeptides was rather similar both in vegetative and in sporulating cells, it appeared that not only degradation but also synthesis and therefore turnover of the mitochondrially coded polypeptides of cytochromes b and aa3 took place during sporulation. The activity ratio of cytochrome c oxidase to F1-ATPase in submitochondrial particles isolated from vegetative cells and from purified asci was almost identical. This indicates that the loss of membrane-bound mitochondrial cytochromes during sporulation is probably due to a nonselective degradation of inner mitochondrial membrane proteins.
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PMID:Protein degradation during yeast sporulation. Enzyme and cytochrome patterns. 18 44

Three groups of mice were trained for 1, 4 and 5 months according to different running programs on a motor driven treadmill and the fatty acid oxidation capacity (FAO) and the activities of some enzymes of energy metabolism (cytochrome c oxidase, malate dehydrogenase, triosephosphate dehydrogenase, and lactate dehydrogenase) were determined from m. quadriceps femoris (MQF). Endurance training increased the FAO [5-month training 4 days/week, 30 min/day 22% (p less than 0.05); 1-month training, 7 days/week, 150 min/day 37% (p less than 0.001); 4-month training, 5 days/week, 60 min/day 24% (p less than 0.05)]. The activities of cytochrome c oxidase and malate dehydrogenase increased approx. 30% (p less than 0.001) whereas triosephosphate dehydrogenase and lactate dehydrogenase activities were not prominently influenced by training. The predominantly red part of MQF of untrained animals oxidized palmitate four times faster than the predominantly white part. The activities of cytochrome c oxidase and malate dehydrogenase were two times higher showing pronounced FAO in the red part. Endurance training increased the FAO and activities of oxidative enzymes in the red and white parts and in the whole muscle relatively equally resulting in similar differences between the muscle types after training. The absolute increase in the FAO of the red muscle was, however, manyfold when compared in chemical units to the white muscle.
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PMID:Effect of endurance training on the capacity of red and white skeletal muscle of mouse to oxidize carboxyl-14C-labelled palmitate. 20 44

The activity of certain enzymes of energy metabolism (cytochrome c oxidase, citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase, and lactate dehydrogenase) and of lysosomes (beta-glucuronidase, beta-N-acetylglucosamindase, arylsuphatase, ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, acid phosphatase, and cathepsin D) was assayed from m. rectus femoris of mice trained 5 days per week, 1 hr per day for 4 weeks according to 4 different programmes: I. running speed 20 m/min, horizontal track, II. 25 m/min, horizontal track, III. 20 m/min 8 degrees uphill inclination, and IV. 25 m/min 8 degrees uphill inclination. Oxidative capacity increased and anaerobic capacity decreased without distinction between the different traning programmes. Of acid hydrolases assayed the activities of beta-glucuronidase and cathepsin D were increased independently of training intensity. Simultaneous histochemical observations on beta-glucuronidase and arylsulphatase activities in the contralateral m. rectus femoris showed more intense staining in red as compared to white muscle fibres. It is suggested that training affected the red fibres and that the applied level of loading was probably too low to cause major involvement of white fibres.
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PMID:Oxidative and lysosomal capacity in skeletal muscle of mice after endurance training of different intensities. 21 99

Mitochondrial and microsomal fractions were isolated from guinea pig myocardium by differential pelleting. The mitochondrial fraction was subjected to analytical subfractionation by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and the gradient fractions assayed for marker enzymes for the various mitochondrial compartments, viz outer membrane (monoamine oxidase), intermembranous space (adenylate kinase), inner membrane (Mg2+-dependent ATPase and cytochrome c oxidase) and mitochondrial matrix (malate dehydrogenase), and for creatine kinase. Both creatine kinase and adenylate kinase were released by suspending the mitochondria in 50 mmol . litre-1 sodium phosphate buffer. Sonication or disruption with the detergent, digitonin released the adenylate kinase but the creatine kinase remained associated with the inner membranes. Subsequent salt treatment desorbed the creatine kinase from these membranes. It is concluded that creatine kinase is located to the outer aspect of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Analytical subfractionation of the microsomal fraction clearly resolved markers for the sarcolemma (5'-nucleotidase), outer mitochondrial membrane (monoamine oxidase) and endoplasmic reticulum (neutral alpha-glucosidase and RNA). Creatine kinase was localised in the endoplasmic reticulum particularly the smooth membranes.
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PMID:Sub-mitochondrial and sub-microsomal distribution of creatine kinase in guinea pig myocardium. 51 58

Rats subjected to physical training through swimming increased their weight at a slower rate than controls, which initially had the same characteristics. The ratio heart weight/body weight was 23% greater in the trained rats. However, the absolute weights of the hearts were only 7% greater. The ultrastructural morphometric study, backed up by and analysis of the hierarchical variance, did not reveal significant changes neither in the myofibrillar and mitochondrial volume nor in the number of mitochondria per surface unit of myocardium. Furthermore, no variations were recorded, due to training, in the amount of mitochondrial protein nor in the specific mitochondrial activities of malate dehydrogenase, cytochrome c oxidase and ATPase. It is therefore suggested that the increase in the measured parameters, due to training, is proportional to the increase in weight and size of the heart. On the other hand, the specific activity of LDH increased by 15% after the first weeks of training.
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PMID:Effects of physical training on rat myocardium. An enzymatic and ultrastructural morphometric study. 59 84

Malate dehydrogenase, reputed to be a soluble matricial enzyme, is shown to be also strongly associated with the inner membrane, in pig heart mitochondria. Repeated sonications, water washes, freezing-thawing cycles are not very effective to remove malate dehydrogenase activity from inner membranes, which whatever the treatment, remains important. This activity is only partly solubilized by the substrates, malate or oxaloacetate. High ionic strength treatments by either NaCl-carbonate or 3M KCl have a strong effect, but they also remove cytochrome c oxidase and rotenone-sensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase, reputed inner membrane intrinsic enzymes, thus strongly damaging the inner membrane. After the action of phospholipase A from Naja Naja Venom, the residual activity is about twenty per cent and only phosphatidyl choline and phosphatidyl ethanolamine decreased significantly, the other phospholipids being unchanged. It is suggested that the enzyme is deeply buried in the membrane and mainly interacts with phosphatidyl choline.
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PMID:The markers of pig heart mitochondrial sub-fractions. II. - On the association of malate dehydrogenase with inner membrane. 75 79


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