Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.6.99.3 (diaphorase)
5,903 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Danazol (4 mg/day/animal) and oestradiol-17 beta (100 microgram/day/animal) were administered subcutaneously for 22 and 15 days respectively. The testis and epididymis were histochemically analysed for steroid dehydrogenases, NADH-diaphorase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity and lipids. Both steroids significantly reduced the weights of the testis and other accessory reproductive organs. The activities of delta 5-3 beta- and 17 beta-HSD were markedly reduced in the seminiferous epithelium and interstitial cells of the testis. Sudanophilic lipids accumulated in the seminiferous tubules and the interstitium. Oestradiol generally had a greater effect than did danazol, but both probably affect the testicular function by inhibiting steroidogenesis.
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PMID:A histochemical study of the effect of danazol and oestradiol-17 beta on steroidogenic activity in testis and epididymis of the gerbil, Tatera indica. 693 36

In the early stages of experiments there was a structural-metabolic reconstruction in the adrenal cortex, manifest by changes in interzonal relations and dissociation of the activity of enzymes responsible for energy supply and synthesis of steroid hormones. Analogous changes were also seen later on. However, in the early stages that process was a response to the pancreas injury, whereas in the later period it preceded the emergence of repeated lesions in the gland. In animals with experimental pancreatitis, administration of metapyrone caused an activation of NAD-diaphorase in the glomerular and reticular zones and concurrent potentiation of the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in all 3 zones of the adrenal cortex.
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PMID:[Histoenzymological characteristics of the adrenal cortical reaction in variants of experimental pancreatitis]. 695 49

Results of histochemical study of testicular tissue in 31 patients, aged 2.5 to 31 years, suffering from dysgenesia syndrome of the testis are presented. Enzymes and lipids furnishing synthesis of steroid hormones (3-beta-oxysteroid dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. NAD- and NADP-diaphorase, cholesterol and its esters) were revealed in Leydig's cells of pubertal-juvenile and adult patients, in Leydig's cells precursors in children, and also in Sertoli's cells of all these patients. All these cellular elements possessed high activity of the enzymes under study. It is suggested that Sertoli cells and Leydig's cells precursors, along with mature Leydig's cells, provide a sufficiently high functional activity of the gonads in patients with dysgenesia of the testis.
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PMID:[Functional activity of gonadal glandular cells in patients with testicular dysgenesis]. 699 Apr 2

The energy metabolism of the English E-CMO strain of contagious equine metritis bacterium was studied in whole cells and cell extracts. This bacterium appears to have an active Krebs cycle and probably obtains energy by oxidative phosphorylation since glycolysis and the hexose monophosphate pathways appear to be absent. These conclusions are based on the findings that [U-14C]glucose incorporation by this bacterium is below the level of detection, and that respiration is stimulated by Krebs cycle intermediates (i.e., malate, citrate, and succinate), but not by glucose, fructose, maltose, or sucrose. Furthermore, support comes from the fact that enzymes generally associated with the Krebs cycle and electron transport (i.e., malate dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, fumarate hydratase, malate dehydrogenase [decarboxylating], cytochrome oxidase, superoxide dismutase, NADH dehydrogenase, and catalase) were detected. Those enzymes normally associated with glycolysis and the hexose monophosphate pathways (i.e., hexokinase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, fructose biphosphate aldolase, glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, pyruvate kinase, phosphate acetyl transferase, acetate kinase, alcohol dehydrogenase, and lactate dehydrogenase) were below the level of detection.
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PMID:Energy metabolism of the contagious equine metritis bacterium. 708 71

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.
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PMID:Histochemical and physiological properties of cat motor units after self-and cross-reinnervation. 715 31

A comparison of the anatomy, fiber type profiles, and contractile properties of the wrist flexor muscles was undertaken in the cat. Isometric contractile characteristics were measured for each muscle. Three muscle fiber types, FG, FOG, and SO, were differentiated by staining cross sections of each muscle for ATPase, NADH diaphorase, SDH, and alpha-GPD activities. The wrist flexor muscles ranged from less than 1% to 49% SO fiber content; with two of the five heads of the flexor digitorium profundus (FDP) having 1% or less SO fibers (FDP1-1.07%, FDP5-0.81%) and the humeral head of the flexor carpi ulnaris muscle (FCUh) having the greatest content of SO fibers. The mean contraction time (CT) plus one-half relaxation time for an isometric twitch was correlated with the percentage of SO fibers and ranged from 40.5 to 111.8 ms. Except for the FCU (37ms), the CT was less than 25 ms for the wrist flexor muscles. The uniarticular wrist flexor muscles, the flexor carpi radialis (FCR), and the FCU had the highest percentage of SO fibers and were more fatigue-resistant that the multiarticular muscles. Considerable differences exist in muscle structure, fiber type proportions, and contractile properties between the FCR and FCU, which may be related to functional differences between the two sides of the wrist that may exist during the placement of the foot during locomotion.
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PMID:Morphological organization and contractile properties of the wrist flexor muscles in the cat. 725 81

Aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA), an inhibitor of Ca(2+)-dependent endonuclease activity, is often used to implicate a role for increased intracellular calcium in mechanistic toxicology studies. We report here on the ability of ATA to inhibit the activity of several NAD(H)/NADP(H)-requiring enzymes (purified or cellular homogenates), including lactic dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, cytochrome c reductase, ethoxycoumarin o-dealkylase, isocitric dehydrogenase, glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. These results were compared with the ability of ATA to inhibit micrococcal nuclease and rat liver Ca(2+)-dependent endonuclease activity in similar incubations. With the exception of alcohol dehydrogenase, ATA was a potent inhibitor of each of the purified enzymes, with IC50s ranging from 0.5 to 82 microM. In cell homogenates, however, ATA was from 10 to 100-fold less potent at inhibiting these enzymes. When exogenous protein was added to purified enzyme incubations, the effect of ATA was similarly diminished. Our results demonstrate that ATA inhibits a wide range of NAD(H)/NADP(H)-requiring enzymes in in vitro incubations using purified enzymes, but that the inhibitory effects are markedly reduced in incubations which more closely resemble a cellular milieu.
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PMID:Inhibition of NAD(H)/NADP(H)--requiring enzymes by aurintricarboxylic acid. 855 68

A method has been developed for quantifying the residual cytoplasm present in the midpiece of human spermatozoa, based upon the imaging of NADH oxidoreductase activity. This procedure used NADH and nitroblue tetrazolium as electron donor and acceptor, respectively, and resulted in the discrete staining of the entire midpiece area, including the residual cytoplasm. Image analysis techniques were then used to generate binary images of the midpiece, from which objective measurements of this cellular domain could be undertaken. Such data were found to be highly correlated with biochemical markers of the cytoplasmic space, such as creatine kinase (CK) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PDH), in sperm populations depleted of detectable leukocyte contamination. Morphometric analysis of the sperm midpiece was also found to reflect semen quality in that it predicted the proportion of the ejaculate that would be recovered from the high-density region of Percoll gradients and was negatively correlated with the movement and morphology of the spermatozoa in semen. Variation in the retention of excess residual cytoplasm was also associated with differences in the functional competence of washed sperm preparations, both within and between ejaculates. Thus, within-ejaculate comparisons of high- and low-density sperm subpopulations revealed a relative disruption of sperm function in the low-density fraction. This disruption was associated with the presence of excess residual cytoplasm in the midpiece, high concentrations of cytoplasmic enzymes, and the enhanced-generation reactive oxygen species (ROS). Functional differences between individual high-density Percoll preparations were also negatively correlated with the area of the midpiece and the corresponding capacity of the spermatozoa to generate ROS. These findings suggest that one of the factors involved in the etiology of defective sperm function is the incomplete extrusion of germ cell cytoplasm during spermiogenesis as a consequence of which the spermatozoa experience a loss of function associated with the induction of oxidative stress.
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PMID:Development of an image analysis system to monitor the retention of residual cytoplasm by human spermatozoa: correlation with biochemical markers of the cytoplasmic space, oxidative stress, and sperm function. 879 18

In normal erythrocytes, small quantities of methaemoglobin are formed constantly and are continuously reduced, almost entirely by the reduced nicotine adenine dinucleotide (NADH) diaphorase system, rather than the reduced nicotine adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) diaphorase system. Methaemoglobinaemias are usually the result of xenobiotics, either those that may directly oxidise haemoglobin or those that require metabolic activation to an oxidising species. The most clinically relevant direct methaemoglobin formers include local anaesthetics (such as benzocaine and, to a much lesser extent, prilocaine) as well as amyl nitrite and isobutyl nitrite, which have become drugs of abuse. Indirect, or metabolically activated, methaemoglobin formation by dapsone and primaquine may cause adverse reactions. The clinical consequences of methaemoglobinaemia are related to the blood level of methaemoglobin; dyspnoea, nausea and tachycardia occur at methaemoglobin levels of > or = 30%, while lethargy, stupor and deteriorating consciousness occur as methaemoglobin levels approach 55%. Higher levels may cause cardiac arrhythmias, circulatory failure and neurological depression, while levels of 70% are usually fatal. Cyanosis accompanied by a lack of responsiveness to 100% oxygen indicates a diagnosis of methaemoglobinaemia, which should be confirmed using a CO-oximeter. Pulse oximeters do not detect methaemoglobin and may give a misleading impression of patient oxygenation. Methaemoglobinaemia is treated with intravenous methylene blue (methyl-thioninium chloride; ;1 to 2 mg/kg of a 1% solution). If the patient does not respond, perhaps because of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency or continued presence of toxin, admission to an intensive care unit and exchange transfusion may be required. Dapsone-mediated chronic methaemoglobin formation can be reduced by coadministration of cimetidine to aid patient tolerance. Increasing knowledge and awareness of drug-mediated acute methaemoglobinaemia among physicians should lead to prompt diagnosis and treatment of this potentially life-threatening condition.
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PMID:Drug-induced methaemoglobinaemia. Treatment issues. 882 17

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.
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PMID:Metabolic properties of the sensory neurons in the rat dorsal root ganglion. 917 28


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