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Query: EC:1.6.5.2 (
NQO1
)
6,196
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Changes in the activity of 13 enzymes are described in the process of cytodifferentiation of the nerve cells of spinal ganglion, the motor neurons of spinal cord and large nerve cells of the III layer of tectum opticum in 7, 10 and 21 day old chick embryos. Cytophotometry was performed with MZFV-1 (LOMO) by means of plug-method. A relatively high activity of glucose-6-phosphat dehydrogenase,
diaphorase
,
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
and, partially, acetylcholine esterase was found already in the 7 days old embryo. The activity of monoamine oxidase, aldolase-glyceroaldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase increased markedly on the 21st day. When studying the reciprocal distribution of two enzymes in separate cells, pairs of enzymes with a high value of correlation coefficient were found. The cytodifferentiation was found to be accompanied by changes in the coefficient of correlation of the same pair of enzymes.
...
PMID:[Enzymes in the process of neuronal differentiation of the hen spinal ganglion, spinal cord and tectum opticum. A cytophotometric histochemical study]. 683 47
1. This report describes selected histochemical and physiological properties of the motor units of adult cat soleus muscle approximately one year after self- and cross-reinnervation with the nerve of the heterogenous flexor hallucis longus (f.h.l.). Self-reinnervated f.h.l. motor units are also considered. Whole muscles were tested for fibre reaction to alkaline pre-incubated ATPase,
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
(alpha-GPD) and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
diaphorase
(NADH-D). Motor units were isolated and studied by splitting the ventral root in acute preparations.2. The histochemical fibre type profile in the self-reinnervated muscle was comparable to normal muscle as was mean twitch contraction time, twitch-tetanus ratio and fatigue index. The mean tetanic tension of the soleus self- and cross-reinnervated motor units appeared close to a normal soleus whereas the mean tetanic tension of the f.h.l. self-reinnervated units was significantly less than a normal f.h.l.3. An average of 14% of the fibres of the soleus cross-reinnervated muscles had high ATPase and a alpha-GPD staining intensity in contrast to normal and self-reinnervated soleus in which such fibres are absent. Thus alkaline lability of myofibrillar ATPase increased in some fibres of what was originally a homogeneous population. The small increase in the number of densely staining fibres for ATPase at an alkaline pH (14%) was associated with a 73% decrease in (mean) contraction time (41 +/- 11 ms) of the thirty-three cross-reinnervated muscle units studied, with no unit's contraction time greater than 60 ms. Mean contraction times for the self-reinnervated soleus and f.h.l. muscles were 78 +/- 31 ms and 27 +/- 8 ms respectively.4. All fibres of the soleus cross-reinnervated muscles showed intense reaction to NADH-D, as was true of self-reinnervated soleus. This staining pattern is typical of normal soleus. In concordance, these motor units consistently demonstrated a high resistance to fatigue when stimulated for a four-minute period.5. These results suggest that in the adult self-and cross-reinnervated soleus muscle, there is some active mechanism which regulates the eventual size of motor units as reflected by tetanic tension.6. Change in contraction time from that typical for a soleus unit to that similar to an f.h.l. unit remains incomplete one year after cross-reinnervation. Within this time this partial change in single motor units reflects incomplete neural control of this property rather than a mixture of self- and foreign-innervation.7. A greater degree of independence from neural control to conversion of the histochemically demonstrated myofibrillar ATPase activity exists than is the case for contraction time.
...
PMID:Histochemical and physiological properties of cat motor units after self-and cross-reinnervation. 715 31
Thirty adrenal glands from patients with adreno-leukodystrophy (ALD) have been studied by light microscopy, three by enzyme histochemistry, three by electron microscopy and two by tissue culture. Cytoplasmic ballooning and striations result from proliferation of smooth endoplasmic reticulum and accumulations of lamellar-lipid profiles and clear clefts (crystalloids). Striated adrenocortical cells, the only pathognomonic adrenal lesion in ALD, display cytoplasmic lamellae, decreased amounts of rough endoplasmic reticulum and depression of several enzymes (
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
, 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase and TPNH
diaphorase
). The striated cells also demonstrate decreased ability to adapt to changes in microenvironment, both in vivo and in vitro. A blunted response by striated cells to focal peripheral cytolysis leads to cytoplasmic erosion, atrophy and macrovacuoles. ACTH has a pivotal role in the evolution of these lesions. We propose that the pathognomonic lamellae of ALD basically represent bilayers or bimolecular leaflets of very long chain saturated fatty acids, while lamellar-lipid profiles and clefts contain cholesterol esterified to these abnormal fatty acids. The similarity of lamellar-lipid profiles of ALD to cytoplasmic lesions induced by long chain saturated fatty acids suggests that the very long chain saturated fatty acids isolated in ALD are cytotoxic and are responsible for adrenocortical cell dysfunction in this disease.
...
PMID:A correlative study of the adrenal cortex in adreno-leukodystrophy--evidence for a fatal intoxication with very long chain saturated fatty acids. 746 18
A description is provided of the fiber-type composition of several hindlimb muscles of the adult turtle, Pseudemys (Trachemys) scripta elegans. In addition, cross-section areas of each fiber type and an estimation of the relative (weighted) cross-section area (wCSA) occupied by the different fiber types are also provided. Seven muscles were selected for study, based on their suitability for future neurophysiological analysis as components of the segmental motor system, and on their homologies with muscles in other vertebrates. The test muscles were iliofibularis (ILF), ambiens (AMB), external gastrocnemius (EG), extensor digitorum communis (EDC), flexor digitorum longus (FDL), tibialis anterior (TA), and peroneus anterior (PA). Serial sections of these muscles were stained for myosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), NADH-
diaphorase
, and
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
(alpha-GPDH), thereby enabling fiber-type classification on the basis of indirect markers for contraction speed and oxidative (aerobic) vs. glycolytic (anaerobic) metabolism. All muscles contained three fiber types: slow oxidative (SO; possibly including some non-twitch tonic fibers); fast oxidative glycolytic (FOG); and fast glycolytic (Fg). There were at least 30% FOG and 50% FOG + Fg fibers in the seven muscles, the extreme distributions being the predominantly glycolytic ILF vs. the predominantly oxidative FDL muscle (ILF--15.5% SO, 35.2% FOG, 49.3% Fg vs. FDL--49.1% SO, 41.1% FOG, 9.8% Fg). As in other species, the test muscles exhibited varying degrees of regional concentration (compartmentalization) of the different fiber types. This feature was most striking in ILF. Pronounced compartmentalization was also observed in AMB, EG, PA, TA, and EDC, whereas the distribution of fiber types in the highly oxidative FDL was homogeneous. In five of the seven muscles, fiber size was ranked with Fg > FOG > SO. In terms of wCSA, which provides a coarse-grain measure of the different fiber types' potential contribution to whole muscle peak force, all muscles exhibited a higher Fg and lower SO contribution to cross-section area than suggested by their corresponding fiber-type composition. The largest relative increase in wCSA vs. fiber-type composition were in the ILF and AMB muscles. We conclude that the turtle hindlimb provides some interesting possibilities for testing for a division of labor among different muscles during different movements (e.g., sustained vs. ballistic), and for study of the behavior of the different fiber (and motor unit) types under normal and perturbed conditions. The relationships between the present results and previous findings on homologous muscles of the mammalian (cat, rat) and reptilian (lizard) hindlimb are discussed.
...
PMID:Fiber-type composition of hindlimb muscles in the turtle, Pseudemys (Trachemys) scripta elegans. 766 37
The dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons were classified in the rat on the basis of their metabolic enzyme properties as determined by quantitative analysis in histochemical staining. In particular, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-
diaphorase
(NADH-d) and
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
(alpha-GPD) activities were examined on two serial sections from the same neurons in the lumbar (L4) DRG. The DRG neurons were classified into three groups based on the soma diameter distribution; small, intermediate and large size DRG neurons. The NADH-d activity showed a unimodal distribution in all size groups, while the alpha-GPD activity clearly showed a bimodal distribution in the intermediate and large size neurons, but not in the small size neurons.
...
PMID:Metabolic properties of the sensory neurons in the rat dorsal root ganglion. 917 28
Muscle biopsies for histochemical and ultrastructural analysis were obtained from seven critically ill patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit of the "Domingo Luciani" Hospital, Caracas, Venezuela. The sample included two patients with sepsis of abdominal origin, and five that presented sepsis/MOFS, with renal, hepatic, and respiratory disturbances and muscular weakness. Sections were examined for myosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) after pre-incubation with both acid buffer (pH 4.37 and 4.6) and alkaline buffer (pH 10.3), for reduced nicotinamide dinucleotide
diaphorase
(NADHd), and for
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
(alpha-GPDH). Sections were stained with hematoxilin and eosin to look for pathological changes and examined with a transmission electron microscope. Skeletal muscle of patients in early stage of sepsis showed a normal aspect with light microscopy, but at the ultrastructural level some of the fibres showed atrophy and some capillaries looked altered. Patients with sepsis/MOFS exhibited an evident muscle disorder with oedema, infiltrate, atrophy and segmental necrosis. All fibre types showed decrease in diameter; specially fibre types IIA and IIB. Intramuscular capillaries were thickened and occluded, indexes of capillarity were slightly reduced, and fibre oxidative activity was decreased. At ultrastructural level fibres showed severe atrophy, contractile system disorganization and segmental necrosis. Capillaries were also altered and the mononuclear cell infiltrate was abundant and represented by macrophages, lymphocytes and mastocytes.
...
PMID:Histochemical and ultrastructural study of skeletal muscle in patients with sepsis and multiple organ failure syndrome (MOFS). 947 42
The localisation of
diaphorase
was visualised by light microscopy using the dye nitro blue tetrazolium and NADPH as substrates. Under appropriate conditions,
diaphorase
reduces this dye to a dark blue insoluble formazan. The enzyme was located at very low activity in many tissue and glandular structures of the deer, but at very much higher activity in sebaceous glands in the dermal velvet of the antler and skin, and in additional sebaceous gland-related structures in the ear canal, prepuce and tail (scent) gland. Within sebaceous glands, activity was greatest in the outermost layers of the acini, but decreased as the cells progressed and differentiated centripetally. There was little or no difference between the staining observed when NADH was used as a substrate, compared to NADPH. There was generalised staining (usually light) for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, and
glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase
. However, this staining was not specifically localised to sebaceous glands and related structures, showing that the observed activity in these structures was due to a
diaphorase
that was distinct from any of the dehydrogenase activities tested. The possible role of
diaphorase
in sebaceous development and secretion is discussed.
...
PMID:Diaphorase activity in sebaceous glands and related structures of the male red deer. 1042 9
The neuromotor pattern (i.e. the onset/offset of muscle contraction within the locomotor cycle) is conserved for some homologous muscles of the tetrapod shoulder but not others in the transition from terrestrial locomotion to flight. Here we test for three shoulder muscles of the European starling (Sturnus vulgaris) to determine whether retention of, or deviation from, a conserved neuromotor pattern can be predicted on the basis of the location of the muscle's motor nucleus within the motor column and the histochemical profile of its constituent muscle fibers. The M. supracoracoideus, the major wing elevator, illustrates a neuromotor pattern that has shifted in its timing within the limb movement cycle. Of the two heads of the triceps, the electrical activity pattern of M. humerotriceps is conserved during the transition, whereas that of the M. scapulotriceps is not. We reacted serial sections of each muscle for myosin adenosine triphosphotase (ATPase), nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
diaphorase
(NADH-D), and
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
(alpha-GPD) to characterize all muscles into two fiber types: fast glycolytic (FG) and fast oxidative glycolytic (FOG). We used retrograde axonal tracers to determine the longitudinal distribution and topographical organization of the motoneurons within the motor column in the spinal cord. The histochemical profile of each muscle studied is unique and is statistically different from its homologue in non-avian tetrapods. Compared to non-avian tetrapods, the spatial location of the motor nucleus of the supracoracoideus is conserved. The topology of the two heads of the triceps is fundamentally conserved relative to the other test muscles, but relative to one another there is some spatial segregation which might reflect their respective functional specializations. These data indicate that an evolutionary change in neuromotor pattern can occur without a corresponding topological reorganization of a muscle's motor nucleus within the motor column. Nor can the histochemical profile of homologous muscles be used to predict their neuromotor pattern in the transition from terrestrial locomotion to flight. These findings suggest that evolutionary change in neuromotor outflow relates to altered synaptic input from supraspinal or segmental sources or by alteration of factors intrinsic to individual motoneurons.
...
PMID:Neuromuscular correlates to the evolution of flapping flight in birds. 1083 79
Blood lymphocyte dehydrogenase activity (SDH, LDH, mitochondrial and cytoplasmic
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
, NADH-
diaphorase
) was studied in 140 Wistar rats at different time intervals following intraosseous insertion of titanium implants. It was shown that implantation was accompanied with an increase in enzyme activities indicating a rise in the intensity of energy production processes. Cytochemical analysis of lymphocyte enzymes enables to formulate a "prognostic scenario" describing titanium implant interaction with biological environmental factors and organism tissues to assess the long-term results of implantation.
...
PMID:[Energy metabolism of blood lymphocytes after insertion of titanium implants]. 1274 Nov 12
A description is provided of the ratio of slow-tonic vs. slow- and fast-twitch fibers for five muscles in the adult turtle, Pseudemys (Trachemys) scripta elegans. The cross-sectional area of each fiber type and an estimation of the relative (weighted) cross-sectional area occupied by the different fiber types are also provided. Two hindlimb muscles (flexor digitorum longus, FDL; external gastrocnemius, EG) were selected on the basis of their suitability for future motor-unit studies. Three neck muscles (the fourth head of testo-cervicis, TeC4; the fourth head of retrahens capitus collique, RCCQ4; transversalis cervicis, TrC) were chosen for their progressively decreasing oxidative capacity. Serial sections were stained for myosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), NADH-
diaphorase
, and
alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase
(alpha-GPDH). Conventional fiber-type classification was then performed using indirect markers for contraction speed and oxidative (aerobic) vs. glycolytic (anaerobic) metabolism: i.e., slow oxidative (SO, including slow-twitch and possibly slow-tonic fibers), fast-twitch, oxidative-glycolytic (FOG), and fast-twitch glycolytic (Fg) fibers. Slow-tonic fibers in the SO class were then revealed by directing the monoclonal antibody, ALD-58 (raised against the slow-tonic fiber myosin heavy chain of chicken anterior latissimus dorsi), to additional muscle cross sections. All five of the tested muscles contained the four fiber types, with the ATPase-stained fibers including both slow-tonic and slow-twitch fibers. The extreme distributions of SO fibers were in the predominately glycolytic TrC vs. the predominately oxidative TeC4 muscle (TrC-SO, 9%; FOG, 20%; Fg, 71% vs. TeC4-SO, 58%: FOG, 16%; Fg, 25%). Across the five muscles, the relative prevalence of slow-tonic fibers (4-47%) paralleled that of the SO fibers (9-58%). TeC4 had the highest prevalence of slow-tonic fibers (47%). The test muscles exhibited varying degrees of regional concentration of each fiber type, with the distribution of slow-tonic fibers paralleling that of the SO fibers. In the five test muscles, fiber cross-sectional area was usually ranked Fg > FOG > SO, and slow-twitch always > slow-tonic. In terms of weighted cross-sectional area, which provides a coarse-grain measure of each fiber type's potential contribution to whole muscle force, all five muscles exhibited a higher Fg and lower SO contribution to cross-sectional area than suggested by their corresponding fiber-type prevalence. This was also the case for the slow-twitch vs. slow-tonic fibers. We conclude that slow-tonic fibers are widespread in turtle muscle. The weighted cross-sectional area evidence suggested, however, that their contribution to force generation is minor except in highly oxidative muscles, with a special functional role, like TeC4. There is discussion of: 1) the relationship between the present results and previous work on homologous neck and hindlimb muscles in other nonmammalian species, and 2) the potential motoneuronal innervation of slow-tonic fibers in turtle hindlimb muscles.
...
PMID:Slow-tonic muscle fibers and their potential innervation in the turtle, Pseudemys (Trachemys) scripta elegans. 1573 49
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