Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.3.5.1 (succinate dehydrogenase)
8,177 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Biotin carboxylases in mammalian cells are regulatory enzymes in lipogenesis and gluconeogenesis. In this study, endogenous biotin in skeletal and cardiac muscle was detected using avidin conjugated with alkaline phosphatase and applied in high concentrations to muscle sections. The avidin binding was subsequently visualized by histochemical demonstration of the alkaline phosphatase activity. All cardiac muscle cells showed high affinity for avidin with only the nuclei and the intercalated discs remaining unstained. In skeletal muscle a diffuse reaction could be detected in the sarcoplasm of the muscle fibres. A granular reaction was noted in the same fibres that showed activity for succinic dehydrogenase. The specificity of the coloured reaction product in the muscle sections was investigated and is suggested to be caused by avidin binding to biotin moieties in mitochondria and the cytosol. Mitochondrial and cytosolic preparations of skeletal muscle were electrophoresed in sodium dodecyl sulphate gels. After blotting and incubation with conjugated avidin, two bands with molecular weights of 75 kDa and 130 kDa respectively were evident in the mitochondrial preparation. It is suggested that the 75-kDa band represents comigration of the biotin-containing subunits of propionyl-CoA carboxylase and methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase. The 130-kDa band may represent the biotin-containing pyruvate carboxylase. In the cytosolic preparation a 270-kDa band was stained in blots that had been incubated with conjugated avidin; this band is suggested to represent acetyl-CoA carboxylase. A 190-kDa cytosolic band might be a cleavage product of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. We propose that using alkaline phosphatase-conjugated avidin it is possible to detect the mitochondrial and cytosolic biotin-dependent carboxylases in striated muscle.
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PMID:Biotin carboxylases in mitochondria and the cytosol from skeletal and cardiac muscle as detected by avidin binding. 816 85

The enzyme activities of mitochondrial glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase (mGPD) (EC 1.1.99.5) and pyruvate carboxylase (PC) (EC 6.4.1.1) have been reported to be low in the pancreatic islet of several rodent models of NIDDM. The present study was undertaken to discern whether mGPD is abnormal in the Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rat (ZDF/Gmi-fa/fa), an animal model of NIDDM in which insulin secretion is unable to counteract the insulin resistance associated with the obesity that characterizes this model. Experiments were performed in prediabetic 6-week-old ZDF rats in comparison with 12-week-old overtly hyperglycemic animals and, as controls, Zucker lean (ZL) rats (ZDF/Gmi-+/fa or -+/+) and Wistar rats (+/+) of the same ages. The enzyme activity of mGPD was 32 and 18% of normal in islets of 6- and 12-week-old ZDF rats, respectively (P < 0.001 by analysis of variance). The activity of PC, which like mGPD is relatively abundant in the pancreatic islet, was 17 and 10% of normal in the islets of 6- and 12-week-old ZDF rats, respectively (P < 0.001). The activity of mGPD was normal in islets from ZL rats. However, PC activity was slightly lower in islets of 6- (51% of normal, P = 0.007) and 12-week-old (67% of normal, P = 0.01) ZL rats. The amounts of mGPD protein, as judged from Western analysis, and of PC protein, as judged from probing transblots with streptavidin that binds to biotin-containing enzymes, roughly correlated with the enzyme activities. This indicates that the decreased enzyme activities are caused by the decreased net synthesis of these enzymes rather than by the decreased activity of a normal amount of enzyme. The enzyme activity of succinate dehydrogenase, a control for mGPD, was normal in the ZL and ZDF rats. An incidental finding of the current study was the discovery of beta-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase and propionyl-CoA carboxylase in the islet. Levels of these enzymes were also normal. Although reductions in mGPD and PC may contribute to the abnormal insulin secretion present in overt diabetes, they are modest compared with the severe reductions seen in inherited inborn errors of metabolism. Because of this and because more than a single enzyme is affected and the enzymes in the islet are diminished in more than one rodent model of NIDDM, these reductions are unlikely to represent the primary genetic defect in the ZDF rat. Since ZDF rats are euglycemic at 6 weeks of age and ZL animals are euglycemic throughout life and since these animals demonstrate low enzyme activities, this evidence suggests that it is not hyperglycemia but rather some other component of the diabetic syndrome that is responsible for the reductions in these enzymes.
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PMID:Low mitochondrial glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase and pyruvate carboxylase in pancreatic islets of Zucker diabetic fatty rats. 886 70