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)

The clonal study of L cell culture has shown that the clone-forming cells are heterogeneous both in form and in the activities of enzymes (succinate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, NAD- and NADP-diaphorase) which were determined by histochemical methods. The morphological heterogeneity is characteristic for clones with not less than 10 cells manifesting itself earlier and heterogeneity as to the activity of the studied enzymes--later, in clones with more than 15-20 cells.
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PMID:[Heterogeneity of L-line cells in the early stages of clone development]. 384 12

Two published subcellular subfractionation techniques employing Ficoll-sucrose or sucrose-density gradient centrifugation, respectively, are evaluated for their capacity to yield fractions containing free mitochondria and synaptosomes from a single rat forebrain. The enzymes lactate dehydrogenase, acetylcholinesterase, NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase, and citrate synthase, markers of different subcellular components, were used to assess the purity and integrity of the fractions. Judged by the distribution of these specific enzymatic markers, the free mitochondria obtained by the Ficoll-sucrose gradient technique were less contaminated by synaptosomes and had greater biochemical integrity than those obtained by the sucrose-gradient technique. By contrast, the synaptosomes obtained by the Ficoll-sucrose gradient technique resulted in more contamination by microsomes than those prepared in a sucrose gradient.
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PMID:Free mitochondria and synaptosomes from single rat forebrain. A comparison between two known subfractionation techniques. 392 87

Muscular glycolytic fuels, intermediates and end-products (glycogen, glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, pyruvate, lactate), Krebs cycle intermediates (citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, malate), related free amino acids (glutamate, alanine), ammonia, energy store (creatine phosphate), energy mediators (ATP, ADP, AMP) and energy charge potential were evaluated. Furthermore the maximum rate (Vmax) of the following muscular enzyme activities was evaluated in the crude extract and/or mitochondrial fraction: for the anaerobic glycolytic pathway: hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase; for the tricarboxylic acid cycle: citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase; for the electron transfer chain: total NADH cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome oxidase. The rat gastrocnemius muscles were analyzed in normoxia and after repeated, alternate hypoxic and normoxic exposures (12 hours of hypoxia daily; for 5 days). Naftidrofuryl was administered daily at three different doses: 10, 15 and 22.5 mg/kg i.m., 30 min before the beginning of the experimental hypoxia. The biochemical adaptation to intermittent normobaric hypoxic-normoxic exposures was characterized by the decrease of the muscular contents of creatine phosphate, citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate. This adaptation occurred in absence of significant changes in the Vmax of the muscle enzymes tested. By naftidrofuryl treatment, in gastrocnemius muscle from hypoxic rats both alpha-ketoglutarate and creatine phosphate contents maintained normal values, while glutamate concentration remained reduced to subnormal values. With the exception of hexokinase, naftidrofuryl treatment did not modify the Vmax of marker enzymes related to energy transduction.
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PMID:Adaptation of skeletal muscle energy metabolism to repeated hypoxic-normoxic exposures and drug treatment. 401 59

Muscular glycolytic fuels, intermediates and end-products (glycogen, glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, pyruvate, lactate), Krebs cycle intermediates (citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, malate), related free amino acids (glutamate, alanine), ammonia, energy store (creatine phosphate), energy mediators (ATP, ADP, AMP) and energy charge potential were evaluated. Furthermore the maximum rate (Vmax) of the following enzyme activities was evaluated in the crude extract and/or mitochondrial fraction: for the anaerobic glycolytic pathway: hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase; for the tricarboxylic acid cycle: citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase; for the electron transfer chain: total NADH cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome oxidase. The rat gastrocnemius muscles were analysed in normoxia and after normobaric intermittent hypoxia (12 hours continuously daily; for 5 days). Cytidine and/or uridine were administered daily at the dose of 120 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before the beginning of the experimental hypoxia. The intermittent normobaric hypoxia induced a biochemical adaptation characterized by the decrease of the muscular contents of creatine phosphate, citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate. This adaptation occurred in the absence of significant changes in the Vmax of the tested muscle enzymes. In gastrocnemius muscle from hypoxic rats, the two biological pyrimidines tested induced various discrete, but often related, modifications of the contents of some Krebs cycle intermediates (i.e., alpha-ketoglutarate, malate) and related free amino acids (i.e., glutamate, alanine). In any case, the treatment with cytidine and/or uridine did not modify the Vmax of marker enzymes related to energy transduction.
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PMID:Modification of the skeletal muscle energy metabolism induced by intermittent normobaric hypoxia and treatment with biological pyrimidines. 402 89

The early primary biochemical response of lung to NO2 was studied separately from the later secondary responses of inflammation and proliferation by measuring several biochemical parameters in lungs of rats immediately following a 4-hr exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) at concentrations of 10, 20, 30, and 40 ppm. Cell-free lavage fluid contained elevated amounts of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), malate dehydrogenase (MDH), isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (GDH), acid phosphatase (AP), and aryl sulfatase (AS) after 30 or 40 ppm NO2. Total protein and sialic acid were increased in cell-free lavage after 20, 30, or 40 ppm NO2. The amounts of protein, sialic acid, and acid phosphatase recovered by airway lavage were equal to the amounts found in 0.7 ml of plasma, consistent with transudation of this volume of plasma into airways as a source of these parameters. The plasma activity of the other parameters measured was too low to account for their increase in lavage fluid by plasma leakage into airways. Decrease in the number and enzyme content of lavagable cells indicated damage to free cells in the airways. The amount of the decrease in enzyme content of the lavagable cell fraction was similar to the increase in the cell-free lavage for all of the measured enzymes except acid phosphatase, suggesting the release of these enzymes into airways as a result of damage to free cells. However, the LDH isoenzyme profile in cell-free lavage after exposure is inconsistent with free cells as the source of this enzyme. No changes were observed in the whole-lung homogenate content of protein, DNA, lipid, LDH, MDH, IDH, GDH, AP, AS, glutathione reductase, NADPH cytochrome c, or succinate cytochrome c reductase immediately after NO2 exposure. This study indicates that initial acute damage to lung by NO2 results in translocation of enzymes, proteins, and sialic acid into airways. Plasma is a likely source of translocated protein, sialic acid, and acid phosphatase. The sources of the other enzyme activities remain to be identified, with lung parenchyma and free cells as likely sources.
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PMID:Biochemical assessment of acute nitrogen dioxide toxicity in rat lung. 404 14

Histochemical study of enzymatic activity in the myocardium was performed in sudden cardiac death. Human hearts in which there were no macroscopic and histological focal or diffuse changes served as material. The following enzymes were studied in the anterior or posterior walls of the left ventricle or in the interventricular septum: succinate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), beta-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (OHBDH), alpha-glycerophosphate- and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NAD-diaphorase and phosphorylase. Increased activity of OHBDH and LDH was found: 36,0 and 22,6% higher than in trauma and brain hemorrhage that served as control. These alterations seem to be connected with the increase of blood content of fatty acids, and lactate as a response to the catecholamine excess. Foci of an acute ischemia were found in the interventricular septum in 80% of cases in which phosphorylase was revealed. The appearance of the ischemic foci was obviously due to the coronary arteries contraction.
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PMID:[Histoenzymological characteristics of the myocardium in sudden cardiac death]. 405 12

By means of the light and electron microscopy, histochemical and cytophotometrical methods the anterior subarea of the cerebral limbic cortex has been studied in 30 experimental and 30 control rabbits. The experimental animals have been given 3, 15 and 30 sessions (1 h per day) of electric irritation (0.05 mA, 50 Hz, 1 msec) on the posterior hypothalamic field (PHF). Twelve rabbits from 30 control animals make an intact group and 18--a group with inactive electrodes inserted into the PHF. After 3 and especially after 15 sessions it has been revealed: in neurons--an acute swelling, edematous alterations, hyperchromatosis and shrinkage, changes in lactate dehydrogenase, succinic dehydrogenase, nicotinamide-adenine-dinucleotide-diaphorase and nicotinamide-adenine-dinucleotide-phosphate-diaphorase activities, in neuroglia--hypertrophy and weakly manifested hyperplasia. After 30 sessions synapses degenerated after the dark type are revealed. More intensive structural and metabolic changes are noted in the middle cytoarchitectonical complex. The changes of the enzymatic activity are considered as certain signs of weakening mitochondrial processes, connected with energy production, increasing glycolysis, decreasing level of the energetic provision of the cytoplasmic synthesis, arising under conditions of a disturbed transneuronal influence on the cortex by the hypothalamus.
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PMID:[Structural and metabolic changes in the limbic cortex of the rabbit in response to experimentation with the hypothalamus]. 408 71

1. The reconstitution of oxidase activity in cell-free extracts of a mutant of Escherichia coli K12Ymel, that require 5-aminolaevulinic acid for growth on non-fermentable carbon sources, is described. 2. The reconstitution is dependent on haematin or a haem extract from a prototrophic strain of E. coli, and the product of the reaction has been identified as NADH-reducible cytochrome b. 3. The requirement for haematin cannot be replaced by four other porphyrins. Coproporphyrin III does not inhibit the haematin-dependent reconstitution, mesoporphyrin IX and protoporphyrin IX apparently compete with haematin for a binding site on the cytochrome apoprotein(s) and deuteroporphyrin IX binds to cytochrome apoprotein(s) and cannot be subsequently replaced by haematin. 4. The properties of electron-transport particles from cell-free extracts of the mutant strain, grown aerobically in the presence or absence of 5-aminolaevulinic acid, are described. In the absence of 5-aminolaevulinic acid no detectable cytochromes are produced, and oxidase activities are lowered but there is no apparent effect on the activities of the NADH dehydrogenase and d-lactate dehydrogenase. 5. The reconstitution of oxidase activity by electron-transport particles from cells grown in the absence of 5-aminolaevulinic acid requires ATP and haematin, and the product of the reaction was identified as NADH-reducible cytochrome b. 6. It is concluded that the cytochrome apoproteins are synthesized and incorporated into the cytoplasmic membrane of E. coli in the absence of haem synthesis. The subsequent reconstitution of functional cytochrome(s) requires protohaem, but the nature of the side chain on the 2 and 4 positions of the porphyrin appears to be important.
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PMID:The reconstitution of oxidase activity in membranes derived from a 5-aminolaevulinic acid-requiring mutant of Escherichia coli. 415 Jun 52

The antifungal antibiotic flavensomycin inhibited the oxidation of amino acids and of glucose by Penicillium oxalicum. The compound inhibited l-amino acid oxidase (EC 1.4.3.2) activity for l-leucine and l-phenylalanine, and also d-amino acid oxidase (EC 1.4.3.3) in the oxidation for dl-alanine. The addition of flavin adenine dinucleotide, which is a cofactor for this enzyme, antagonized the action of the antibiotic. Glucose oxidase (EC 1.1.3.4) was also inhibited. The antibiotic inhibited the reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH(2)) cytochrome c reductase (EC 1.6.2.1) as well as the much slower nonenzymatic reduction of this cytochrome by the nucleotide. Reduced cytochrome c was also oxidized nonenzymatically by flavensomycin. The antibiotic completely inhibited the action of rabbit muscle lactic dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) in promoting the reduction of pyruvate by NADH(2) but only slightly affected the reverse reaction. Alcohol dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.1) was also similarly inhibited. Flavensomycin prevented the reduction of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate by isocitrate in the presence of isocitrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.42). The hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1)-catalyzed phosphorylation of glucose, in which the adenosine triphosphate acts as a phosphate donor, was only slightly affected. Flavensomycin also inhibited the action of yeast lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.2.3) on the reduction of cytochrome c. High concentrations of cytochrome c were antagonistic to this reaction. The results point to an interference with enzymatically controlled hydrogen or electron transfer as the mechanism of the antifungal activity of flavensomycin.
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PMID:Flavensomycin, an inhibitor of enzyme reactions involving hydrogen transfer. 438 33

Changes in the maximal rate of some enzymatic activities related to energy transduction (lactate dehydrogenase; citrate synthetase and malate dehydrogenase; total NADH-cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome oxidase) and others such as glutamate dehydrogenase and acetylcholine esterase were assayed both in the purified mitochondrial fraction and in the crude synaptosomal fraction from the cerebral cortex of rats. The evaluations were performed before and after a postdecapitative normothermic ischaemia of 5, 10, 20 and 40 min duration. The ischaemic damage resulted in a decrease in the activity of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase and total NADH-cytochrome c reductase, and of synaptosomal acetylcholine esterase. The biochemical evaluations were performed also after an intraperitoneal pretreatment with vincamine TPS, trimetazidine DC and suloctidil (50 mg/kg). These drugs induced different changes in enzyme activities as a function of the duration of ischaemia. These various interferences are discussed with regard to the possible mode of action of the drugs.
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PMID:Effect of ischaemia and pharmacological treatment on enzyme activities of cortical mitochondria and synaptosomes. 609 68


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