Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.3.5.1 (
succinate dehydrogenase
)
8,177
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Do muscle fiber properties commonly associated with fiber types in adult animals and the population distribution of these properties require normal activation patterns to develop? To address this issue, the activity of an oxidative [
succinic dehydrogenase
(
SDH
)] and a glycolytic [alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (GPD)] marker enzyme, the characteristics of myosin adenosinetriphosphatase (myosin ATPase, alkaline preincubation), and the cross-sectional area of single fibers were studied. The soleus and medial gastrocnemius of normal adult cats were compared with cats that 6 mo earlier had been spinally transected at T12-T13 at 2 wk of age. In control cats,
SDH
activity was higher in dark than light ATPase fibers in the soleus and higher in light than dark ATPase fibers in the medial gastrocnemius. After transection,
SDH
activity was similar to control in both muscles. GPD activity appeared to be elevated in some fibers in each fiber type in both muscles after transection. The cross-sectional areas most affected by spinal transection were light ATPase fibers of the soleus and dark ATPase fibers of the medial gastrocnemius, the predominant fiber type in each muscle. These data demonstrate that although the muscle fibers of cats spinalized at 2 wk of age presumably were never exposed to normal levels of activation, the activity of an oxidative marker enzyme was maintained or elevated 6 mo after spinal transection. Furthermore, although the absolute enzyme activities in some fibers were elevated by transection, three functional protein systems commonly associated with fiber types, i.e., hydrolysis of ATP by myosin ATPase and glycolytic (GPD) and oxidative (
SHD
) metabolism, developed in a coordinated manner typical of normal adult muscles.
...
PMID:Enzyme profiles of single muscle fibers never exposed to normal neuromuscular activity. 170 Sep 75
Intrafusal muscle fibres of the slow soleus (Sol) and fast vastus lateralis (VL) muscles of the rat were studied histochemically. Serial transverse sections were incubated for the localization of
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
), alpha glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (GPD) and adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase). The latter was examined further after preincubation in acidic solution held at either low or room temperature (RT). The bag2 intrafusal fibres in both muscles displayed high regular and acid stable ATPase, but low
SHD
and GPD activities. Bag1 intrafusal fibres showed low to moderate regular ATPase, a regional heterogeneity after RT acid preincubation (low activity in juxtaequatorial and high in polar zones), moderate
SDH
, but low GPD reactions. In both muscles the chain fibres usually exhibited high ATPase for both regular and cold acid preincubated reactions, but usually low activity after RT acid preincubation; they had high
SDH
but variable GPD activities. In Sol muscle, however, approximately 25% of spindles contained chain fibres that showed high acid-stable ATPase reaction after both cold and RT acid preincubation. In contrast, chain fibres in some VL spindles had a characteristically low ATPase reaction even after cold acid preincubation. This study, therefore, has delineated the existence of an inherent heterogeneity among chain fibres (with respect to their histochemical reactions) in muscle spindles located within slow and fast muscles and also between those found within populations of either Sol or VL muscle spindles.
...
PMID:Histochemical heterogeneity of intrafusal muscle fibres in slow and fast skeletal muscles of the rat. 296 70
Since information pertinent to the effect of prelatent or latent iron deficiency on tissue iron is scare, the present study was aimed at producing this stage of iron deficiency in rats by phlebotomy and to determine whether the mitochondrial iron-containing enzymes,
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) and glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) were affected. These phlebotomized rats showed a subclinical aneamic picture in the blood together with reduced plasma iron and storage iron in the spleen and liver, but an elevated plasma total iron-binding capacity (TIBC). Under this latent iron deficient state, the
SHD
in the heart and the skeletal muscle with mixed-fibre types (gastrocnemius and plantaris) but not the red (soleus) and white fibres (vastus lateralis) showed reduced activities. No significant changes in GPDH activities were found in these organs. This finding is consistent with our early report (Quisumbing et al., 1985) that even in mild iron deficiency, some loss of mitochondrial functions could have occurred and this could affect the muscular endurance.
SDH
was more affected by latent iron deficiency than GPDH.
...
PMID:Will latent iron deficiency affect the mitochondrial iron-containing enzymes? 402 19
Two muscles involved in locomotion the vastus lateralis and the gastrocnemius, were compared on a variety of histochemical an biochemical properties. Ten active males, age 20 - 24 years, served as subjects. Fibre type distributions, type I, type IIA and type IIB, as determined from samples extracted by muscle biopsy were similar in both muscles. In addition, no significant difference (p greater than 0.05) was found between fibre types in each muscle for fibre size, relative area, capillaries per fibre and the ratio of capillaries per fibre area. The activities of a number of enzymes representative of energy supplying pathways - the citric acid cycle (
succinate dehydrogenase
,
SHD
; beta-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase, HADH), glycogenolysis (total phosphorylase, PHOSP), glycolysis (phosphofructokinase, PFK) - were of similar magnitude between the two muscles. The only exception noted was for the activity of a glycolytic enzyme, lactate dehydrogenase, LDH, where a 16% higher value was observed in the vastus lateralis. The close degree of homogeneity displayed between these two muscles may be of significance in providing for a functional synchrony to occur in locomotor activities of varying intensity.
...
PMID:Human vastus lateralis and gastrocnemius muscles. A comparative histochemical and biochemical analysis. 617 18
Transversal sections of the inferior oblique muscle from kittens of various ages and from adult cats were stained for myofibrillar ATP-ase at Ph 9.4 and 4.35,
succinic dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) and fat. The same muscles had previously been submitted to studies of contractional and fatigue properties. With ATPase the fibers could be differentiated into types I, II and II C. The percentages of each fiber type remained approximately the same from birth onwards. In the inner, global layer of the muscle, type I fibers showed a linear increase in size, but types II and IIC fibers an accelerated growth after age 20 weeks. In the outer, orbital layer, where no type I fibers were seen, type II and II C fibers showed the same growth pattern as in the global layer. The fiber content of
SHD
and fat was low at birth but increased after two weeks of age. Type I fibers were poor and type II C fibers rich in
SDH
and fat. Type II fibers showed varying amounts of these substances. Provided that type I fibers are slow, type II fast and type II C intermediate in speed of contraction, like in other muscles, the findings on fiber growth and
SDH
content seem to support the idea that slow, fatigue resistant components in eye muscles reach maturity earlier than fast components.
...
PMID:The postnatal development of the inferior oblique muscle of the cat. III. Fiber sizes and histochemical properties. 644 74