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Query: EC:1.2.1.13 (
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
)
6,511
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Myofibrillar proteins (MPs) were extracted from isolated and perfused rat hearts subjected to different periods of
ischemia
to investigate the occurrence of protein degradation and/or the association of cytosolic proteins with the myofibrillar pellet. A 23-kD band was detected by SDS-PAGE of MPs after 5 minutes of
ischemia
, with its density gradually increasing to a plateau after 20 minutes. Longer periods of
ischemia
were associated with the appearance of a 39-kD band. Irrespective of the duration of
ischemia
, both these bands persisted during reperfusion. A partial proteolytic degradation of troponin T (TnT) and troponin I (TnI) has been claimed to be responsible for the generation of these peptides. However, the N-terminal sequence of the 39-kD band was identical to that of
GAPDH
, whereas Edman sequencing after pepsin digestion showed that the 23 kD is alpha B-crystallin. The binding of the two cytosolic proteins to myofibrils was confirmed by immunofluorescence analysis on cryosections of ischemic hearts. In vitro studies showed that acidosis was sufficient to induce the binding of alpha B-crystallin, whereas the inhibition of ATP depletion prevented the binding of
GAPDH
. Thiol oxidation is unlikely to promote
GAPDH
binding, since perfusion with iodoacetate under aerobic conditions or treatment of homogenates with N-ethylmaleimide or diamide failed to induce
GAPDH
association with the myofibrils. These changes of the myofibrillar proteins could be considered as intracellular markers of the evolution of the ischemic damage. In addition, the binding of the 23-kD peptide might be involved in alterations of contractility.
...
PMID:Binding of cytosolic proteins to myofibrils in ischemic rat hearts. 862 Jun 2
The mammalian heart is normally well oxygenated and anaerobic glycolysis is extremely rare except for the production of extra ATP during extreme exercise like a marathon race. Anaerobic glycolysis plays a role when there is a serious impairment in coronary blood flow such as during heart attack and open heart surgery. The control of glycolysis in ischemic myocardial tissue appears to be extremely complex. During aerobic glycolysis, phosphofructokinase is the most important regulatory enzyme that controls the energy requirements of the cell. Under anaerobic conditions, however,
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
becomes the key enzyme because it responds promptly to any changes in the essential supply of co-factors for oxidation. The conversion of pyruvate to acetyl CoA (aerobic metabolism) involves a series of chain reactions primarily catalyzed by pyruvate dehydrogenase complex which is situated at the cross roads between both aerobic and anaerobic glycolysis. It is important to remember that substrate utilization is carefully controlled by substrate availability. During aerobic metabolism, control mechanisms using fatty acids, lactate and glucose as energy substrates regulate the rate of ATP production according to energy demand. This precise mechanism is upset during
ischemia
and post-ischemic reperfusion for reasons discussed in this review. The demand for ATP can no longer be met by its supply because of severely reduced anaerobic glycolysis and significantly inhibited beta-oxidation of fatty acids. The impairment of bioenergetics is discussed in the context of several diseases such as cardiomyopathy, heart failure, diabetes, arrhythmias, cardiac surgery, heart-lung transplantation, and also in aging and oxidative stress. The regulation of energy metabolism in preconditioned heart is also discussed. Finally, methods used to preserve energy in ischemic myocardium are summarized and quantitation of the high-energy phosphates is discussed. This review challenges scientists to discover drugs which will stimulate energy supply during myocardial ischemia.
...
PMID:Bioenergetics, ischemic contracture and reperfusion injury. 880 94
Transplantation of small intestine is a neural model that permits studies of expression of the neuropeptide, vasoactive intestinal peptide, following extrinsic denervation, transection of intrinsic neural pathways, and an ischemic interval. Tissue levels of vasoactive intestinal peptide were examined at 3 months in ileum from a sham operation, in ileum after resection of proximal small intestine, in ileum after resection of proximal small intestine and extrinsic denervation, in ileum after resection of proximal small intestine and 30 min of
ischemia
, and in ileum obtained 3 months after ileal isografting in Lewis-to-Lewis combinations. Vasoactive intestinal peptide levels were increased in transplanted rat ileum, resection controls, denervation controls, and ischemic controls compared to sham-operated ileum (pANOVA < 0.01). The increased levels of this peptide were highest in denervation controls and lowest in ischemic controls. Northern blot analysis using rat vasoactive intestinal peptide cDNA identified a single 1.7-kb transcript in normal and transplanted rat ileum. The density of vasoactive intestinal peptide transcripts was increased in transplanted ileum (8450 +/- 540) compared to normal ileum (5790 +/- 620) (P < 0.01), and the ratio of this transcript to
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
density units was also increased in transplanted ileum (0.81 +/- 0.08) compared to normal ileum (0.40 +/- 0.07; P < 0.01). Enhanced transcriptional regulation was the likely mechanism for increased tissue vasoactive intestinal peptide. The increased tissue levels appeared to be a response to extrinsic denervation and transection of intrinsic neural pathways, while an ischemic interval appeared to decrease tissue levels of the peptide.
...
PMID:Expression of mRNA for vasoactive intestinal peptide in rat small intestine. 882 62
Peroxynitrite is a reactive oxidant produced from nitric oxide (NO) and superoxide, which reacts with proteins, lipids, and DNA under conditions of inflammation and shock. Here we overview the role of peroxynitrite in circulatory shock and inflammation. Immunohistochemical and biochemical evidence demonstrate production of peroxynitrite in endotoxic and hemorrhagic shock, chronic bowel inflammation, and in various forms of
ischemia
-reperfusion injury. The reactivity and decomposition of peroxynitrite is determined by the chemical environment, and the ratio of superoxide versus NO. Peroxynitrite can initiate toxic oxidative reactions in vitro and in vivo. Initiation of lipid peroxidation, direct inhibition of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes, inactivation of
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
, inhibition of membrane Na+/K+ ATP-ase activity, inactivation of membrane sodium channels, and other oxidative protein modifications contribute to the cytotoxic effect of peroxynitrite. In addition, peroxynitrite is a potent trigger of DNA strand breakage, with subsequent activation of the nuclear enzyme poly-ADP ribosyl synthetase, with eventual severe energy depletion of the cells. Pharmacological evidence suggests that the peroxynitrite-poly-ADP ribosyl synthetase pathway importantly contributes to the cellular injury in endotoxic shock, inflammatory pancreatic islet cell destruction, and central nervous system
ischemia
. The proposal that peroxynitrite is a major cytotoxic mediator would change the interpretation of previous data on the effects of NO donors, NO synthase inhibitors, and superoxide neutralizing strategies in shock and inflammation.
...
PMID:The pathophysiological role of peroxynitrite in shock, inflammation, and ischemia-reperfusion injury. 885 40
We examined the effects of two exercise training modalities, i.e., low-intensity endurance and sprint running, on in vitro, isovolumic myocardial performance following
ischemia
and reperfusion. Rats ran on a treadmill 5 d.wk-1 for 6 wk at the following levels: endurance; 20 m.min-1, 0% grade, 60 min.d-1 and sprint; five 1-min runs at 75 m.min-1, 15% grade interspersed with 1-min active recovery runs at 20 m.min-1, 15% grade. Both endurance and sprint training significantly improved exercise tolerance relative to control (P < 0.05) on two graded exercise tests. Buffer perfused hearts of control (N = 18), endurance (N = 20), and sprint (N = 13) trained animals underwent no-flow
ischemia
(20 min) and reperfusion (30 min) in a Langendorff mode. During reperfusion, left ventricular developed pressure and its first derivative were 20% higher in sprint (P < 0.05) than either endurance or control hearts. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was lowest in sprint during reperfusion (sprint, 10 +/- 1 mm Hg vs endurance, 14 +/- 2 mm Hg; and control, 14 +/- 2 mm Hg, at 30 min reperfusion). Hearts were then used for biochemical studies or dissociated into single cells for measurement of contraction, cell calcium, and action potential duration. Single cell contractions were greatest in sprint despite similar calcium transients in all groups.
Ischemia
/reperfusion caused action potential prolongation in control but not trained myocytes. Hearts from sprint had the greatest
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
activity (P < 0.05) and a tendency towards increased superoxide dismutase activity. These results suggest that sprinting increases myocardial resistance to
ischemia
/reperfusion. This protection may be secondary to increased myofilament calcium sensitivity and/or myocardial expression of
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
.
...
PMID:Reduced ischemia and reperfusion injury following exercise training. 910 34
Our objective in experiments reported here was to identify myofilament proteins of rat hearts either lost or degraded by cardiac
ischemia
(15- or 60-minute duration) with and without 45 minutes of reperfusion. We correlated these changes with alterations in myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+ and maximum force generation. Protein degradation and loss were assessed by high-performance liquid chromatography, SDS-PAGE, Western blotting analysis, and amino acid sequencing. Compared with nonischemic control hearts, bundles of skinned fibers from hearts subjected to
ischemia
alone demonstrated a decrease in maximum force generation and an increase in sensitivity to Ca2+. These changes in function were increased with the duration of the
ischemia
and with reperfusion. With increasing duration of
ischemia
, there was an increased loss and degradation of myofibrillar alpha-actinin and troponin I (TnI) at its C-terminus. Alpha-actinin and TnI were most susceptible to
ischemia
, but with 60 minutes of
ischemia
/reperfusion, there was also degradation of myosin light chain-1 (MLC1) involving a clip of residues 1 to 19. The MLC1 degradation product was detected in the reperfusion effluent (along with troponin T, tropomyosin, and alpha-actinin) but not in the tissue with 60 minutes of
ischemia
with no reperfusion. Moreover, with
ischemia
the following proteins became associated with the myofibrils:
GAPDH
and proteins of the mitochondrial ATP synthase complex. Our results provide new evidence regarding the mechanism by which
ischemia
/reperfusion causes myocardial injury and support the hypothesis that an important element in the injury is altered activity and structure of the myofilaments.
...
PMID:Breakdown and release of myofilament proteins during ischemia and ischemia/reperfusion in rat hearts: identification of degradation products and effects on the pCa-force relation. 946 97
Cerebral ischemia is known to modify the expression of genetic information in the brain. To complement this knowledge, in the present study we have estimated the expression of calcium- and phospholipid-dependent (classical) protein kinase C (c PKC) isoform mRNAs (alpha, beta1 and gamma) at different time following
ischemia
. Forebrain cerebral ischemia was performed on Mongolian gerbils by 5 minutes bilateral occlusion of common carotid arteries. At the pointed time the cytoplasmic RNA was extracted from hippocampus and the expression of PKC mRNA quantified by RT PCR technique using
GAPDH
expression as an internal standard. Results indicate that only one gamma isoform of cPKC mRNA expression becomes significantly modified in postischemic hippocampus. A transient increase up to 145% of control within the first 3 h was followed by its decline to 60-65% at a longer recirculation period. This lowered levels returned back to control at 72 h postischemic recovery. This result indicates that gamma PKC could be particularly sensitive to ischemic insult and would react in accordance with the other early signals determining ischemic outcome.
...
PMID:Expression of Ca2+-dependent (classical) PKC mRNA isoforms after transient cerebral ischemia in gerbil hippocampus. 947 87
The anti-inflammatory role of nitric oxide (NO) was studied in a model of hepatic
ischemia
-reperfusion (I/R) in rats. Male Fischer rats were subjected to 30 min of no-flow
ischemia
of the left and median lobes of the liver, and animals were examined for a 4-h period of reperfusion. The animals were divided into the following groups: control-vehicle; I/R-vehicle; I/R-Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 10 mg/kg iv, 10 min before reperfusion); sham control-L-NAME, and I/R-S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP, 25 micromol/kg iv, 10 min before reperfusion, followed by 20 micromol. kg-1. h-1 in 1.0 ml saline infused for 4 h). Results showed that mean arterial blood pressure was significantly increased in the sham control-L-NAME or I/R-L-NAME groups compared with either the I/R-vehicle or I/R-SNAP groups. However, cardiac index (CI) and stroke volume index (SVI) were markedly decreased, and systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) was dramatically increased. Interestingly, the CI and SVI in rats treated with SNAP were markedly improved over that of the I/R group. Plasma nitrate and nitrite levels were significantly decreased in the I/R-L-NAME group; however, superoxide generation in the ischemic lobes and plasma alanine aminotransferase activity were higher compared with I/R-SNAP rats. The L-NAME-induced enhancement of hepatic injury in rats with I/R may be due in part to neutrophil infiltration, which was significantly increased compared with animals subjected to I/R or I/R-SNAP. The mechanism of L-NAME-enhanced neutrophil infiltration may be due to the fact that the ratios of P-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) mRNA to
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
mRNA extracted from the ischemic lobes of I/R-L-NAME rats were significantly increased when compared with the I/R-SNAP group. These results suggest that 1) endogenous NO reduces the SVRI and permits an increased CI and SVI; 2) exogenous NO further improves CI and SVI; and 3) endogenous, but not exogenous, NO decreases P-selectin and ICAM-1 mRNA expression, thereby reducing polymorphonuclear neutrophil-dependent reperfusion tissue injury.
...
PMID:NO modulates P-selectin and ICAM-1 mRNA expression and hemodynamic alterations in hepatic I/R. 984 19
It is known that
ischemia
commonly increases exogenous glucose utilization by accelerating glucose uptake and flux rates through the Embden-Meyerhof pathway. Constitutive enzymes regulate the rate of glycolysis and in turn are regulated by product inhibition and allosteric controls. The purpose of this report was to test whether mRNA abundance for select glycolytic enzymes, and glucose transport proteins, is also modified. Six intact working pig hearts with coronary flow controlled by extracorporeal perfusion were compared at the following conditions: (1) aerobic control perfusion; (2)
ischemia
affected by a 60% decrease in left anterior descending (LAD) coronary perfusion: (3)
ischemia
again affected by a 60% decrease in LAD flow followed by a 40-min interval of aerobic reflow; (4) an intermittent
ischemia
and reflow protocol including four cycles of similar LAD flow reductions (5 min per cycle) interspersed with 15-20 min of aerobic reperfusion; (5) a 4-day model designed to produce myocardial chronic hibernation: and (6) mild
ischemia
induced by a 40% decrease in LAD flow for 85 min to produce certain adaptations compatible with short-term hibernation. In each heart, mRNA abundance was measured from LAD and circumflex (LCF) perfused myocardium for hexokinase, phosphofructokinase,
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
and the two glucose transporter isomers, GLUT 4 and GLUT 1. mRNA data from LAD myocardium in intervention hearts were normalized to those from LAD tissue in the control heart (LADc) and with LCF values in the same intervention hearts. Signal variance around unity in the LAD tissue, with respect to that of the LCF myocardium, in the control heart compared closely (44 and 41% in two separate runs, respectively). GLUT 1/GLUT 4 ratios in the LAD and LCF beds of this heart also agreed closely. LAD/LADc ratios were increased for hexokinase (1.69), phosphofructokinase (3.69), and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(2.29) in the
ischemia
heart and for phosphofructokinase (3.90),
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(2.20), GLUT 4 (1.55) and GLUT 1 (2.20) in the
ischemia
/reflow heart. There was no evidence of excess signal in the intermittent
ischemia
/reflow, chronic hibernation, or mild
ischemia
hearts. Altered signal from LCF myocardium was also suggested. These data indicate that mRNA abundance for select glycolytic enzymes and transporter proteins is increased in ischemic myocardium with or without reperfusion and offers a possible mechanism for increased protein activity in settings of diminished regional coronary flow.
...
PMID:mRNA expression of glycolytic enzymes and glucose transporter proteins in ischemic myocardium with and without reperfusion. 992 82
Recent studies have suggested that simvastatin may exert endothelial-protective and anti-ischemic effects via nitric oxide (NO) mechanisms. The aim of this study was to evaluate, in isolated working rat hearts, the effect of acute simvastatin administration on endothelial and inducible NO-synthase (eNOS and iNOS) mRNA and on myocytic apoptosis after
ischemia
-reperfusion. We used isolated working rat hearts submitted to 15 min global, no-flow, normothermic
ischemia
and 180 min reperfusion. To detect myocytic apoptosis we used DNA agarose gel electrophoresis and Tunel technique; eNOS and iNOS expression were evaluated by multiplex reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction;
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(G3PDH) was used as standard. The eNOS and iNOS mRNAs were expressed as G3PDH/eNOS and G3PDH/iNOS densitometric ratio (BioRad Gel Doc 1000). Hearts were divided into four groups: A) hearts excised and used as histological controls; B) untreated hearts submitted to
ischemia
and reperfusion; C) actinomicin D-treated (1.5 mg/kg) hearts, perfused with 25 microM simvastatin, subjected to
ischemia
and reperfusion; D) hearts treated with simvastatin 25 microM and submitted to
ischemia
and reperfusion. In Group B we evidenced a significant myocytic apoptotic damage, reduced in groups C and D. In Group B an increase in G3PDH/eNOS ratio vs Group A was detected; in Group D a reduction in G3PDH/eNOS ratio vs Group B occurred; no significant changes were observed between groups C and D. As for G3PDH/iNOS ratio, it was significantly increased in Group D with respect to groups A and B. Our data suggest that simvastatin in acute may modulate NO-synthase mRNA expression (induction of eNOS mRNA by means of post-transcriptional mechanisms and inhibition of iNOS postischemic overexpression) and reduce myocytic apoptosis.
...
PMID:[Simvastatin and ischemia-reperfusion damage: its effects on apoptotic myocyte death and on the endothelial expression of nitric-oxide synthetase in an experimental model of the isolated rat heart]. 1018 33
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