Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.9.3.1 (cytochrome oxidase)
8,822 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Since patients with Friedreich's ataxia appear to oxidize pyruvate slowly, we measured the activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex in disrupted fibroblasts from four patients with this syndrome and one patient with a clinical variant. The activity was 43 +/- 4 per cent of that in 16 controls (mean +/- S.E.M., P less than 0.001). The activity of the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex was also lower in the patients' cells than in those of controls (50 +/- 2 per cent, P less than 0.001). However, the activity of cytochrome-c oxidase was normal (126 +/- 43 per cent of controls). Mixing experiments gave no evidence of soluble enzyme inhibitors or activators, and the addition of excess substrate or cofactor did not ameliorate the deficiencies. White blood cells from one of the patients had low activities of both complexes. Mutations of these dehydrogenase complexes occur in some patients with Friedreich's ataxia and lead to abnormally low activity of an enzyme of the tricarboxylic acid cycle.
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PMID:Low activities of the pyruvate and oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes in five patients with Friedreich's ataxia. 17 5

We studied evoked potentials in 15 children (age range: 2 wks to 4 yrs; mean: 10 mos) with metabolic disturbances that led to Leigh syndrome. These disturbances included deficiencies of pyruvate dehydrogenase (N = 5), complex 1 (N = 7), complex 4 or cytochrome oxidase (N = 2), and complex 5 (N = 1) deficiencies. Subsequent studies were performed in 11 children. All of the children with pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency had abnormal brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) due to poor morphology and reproducibility of the waveforms; central conduction time was normal in 4 of 5 initial studies. The patients with complex 4 or cytochrome oxidase deficiency had abnormal BAEPs, due to increased interpeak latencies and low amplitude or absent waves IV/V. Six of 7 of the children with complex 1 deficiency had normal BAEPs. The remaining patient (the youngest, age 6 wks) had only waves I and II bilaterally and suffered from the rapidly progressive form of complex 1 deficiency; the other 6 with complex 1 deficiency had the slowly progressive form. The one patient with complex 5 deficiency had normal BAEPs when first tested at 4 mos; abnormal BAEPs with loss of later waves were observed 10 weeks later. The visual evoked potentials and somatosensory evoked potentials usually were abnormal in these patients, but the findings were not specific to the patient subgroups. In all but one patient, subsequent studies disclosed a lack of normal maturational changes and/or deterioration across all 3 modalities. The BAEPs appeared to covary with the specific metabolic findings in these patients and with the patient's clinical course, but no BAEP could be considered characteristic of Leigh syndrome.
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PMID:Evoked potentials in children with oxidative metabolic defects leading to Leigh syndrome. 131 75

A female child suffering from intrauterine growth retardation was born by caesarean section at 32 weeks. In the immediate newborn period there was a metabolic acidosis but this resolved. Hypotonia, muscular weakness and poor respiratory effort were evident and the child died at 6 days of age. A previous male sibling had died at 3 months of age after similar symptoms with seizures and a dysmyelination disorder. Post-mortem examination of both children showed damage to the basal ganglia. Defects in the activities of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, cytochrome oxidase and succinate cytochrome c reductase were found in cultured skin fibroblasts. Similar defects were found in isolated muscle mitochondria but not in isolated liver mitochondria from the patient. Immunoblotting for cytochrome oxidase showed that the multienzyme complex was not assembled in muscle and skin fibroblast mitochondria, but was assembled in liver mitochondria. Similar results were obtained in cultured skin fibroblast mitochondria for complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. This is the first occasion that multiple defects have been demonstrated both in tissue and in culture skin fibroblasts in mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes.
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PMID:Fatal combined defects in mitochondrial multienzyme complexes in two siblings. 132 97

Diagnosis of respiratory chain defects in cultured skin fibroblasts is a difficult diagnostic procedure. We investigated the feasibility of using survival of skin fibroblasts in culture medium with galactose as the major carbon source as a method of quickly diagnosing cell lines that were compromised in oxidative metabolism. We found that cells from patients with most forms of cytochrome oxidase deficiency, cells with complex I deficiency, cells with multiple respiratory chain defects and cells with severe pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex deficiency failed to survive when subcultured into galactose (5 mM) medium. Cells from patients with Lebers hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS), myoclonus-epilepsy-lactic acidosis-stroke (MELAS), the hepatic form of cytochrome oxidase deficiency, and mild PDH complex deficiency survived well in galactose (5 mM)-containing medium. This could be used as a rapid screening test for skin fibroblasts with major oxidative defects.
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PMID:Nonviability of cells with oxidative defects in galactose medium: a screening test for affected patient fibroblasts. 132 73

The activity patterns of enzyme linked to energy transduction are measured as an estimate of the energy potential capacity of the brain during aging. Early investigations provided information on age-related modifications in the apparent activity of these enzymes in the brain as a whole without taking into account the anatomical, morphological, and functional heterogeneity of the discrete brain regions, the metabolic compartments, and their different time course of aging processes. These considerations prompted the investigators to focus their efforts on subcellular organelles, representative of metabolic compartments, isolated from selected brain regions. In the present study, to better elucidate the role of the synaptic compartment during aging, the maximum rate (Vmax) of enzymes involved in energy metabolic pathways is evaluated in synaptosomes isolated from the cerebral cortex of rats aged 4, 12, and 24 months. The potential catalytic activity of phosphofructokinase and citrate synthase is not affected by aging. In contrast, the Vmax of pyruvate dehydrogenase and particularly of cytochrome oxidase decreases in aged rats. A marked increase is found in the Vmax of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in 24-month-old rats and could support the availability of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) for antiperoxidative processes. Pretreatments of the animals with certain drugs are performed in order to check the responsiveness of the tissue and the plasticity of enzyme proteins during aging. Papaverine (acting on macrocirculation) is ineffective, but raubasine (acting on microcirculation and metabolism) and almitrine (acting on oxygen availability) both interfere with the potential activity of some of the enzymes tested. Their influence differs with the age of the animal and are in agreement with their action on brain carbohydrate and phospholipid metabolism.
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PMID:Role of synaptosomal enzymatic alterations and drug treatment in brain aging. 196 31

In synaptosomes from rat cerebral cortex, the potential catalytic activity of some enzymes related to energy metabolism--namely, phosphofructokinase and citrate synthase--is not affected by aging. In contrast, the maximum velocity (Vmax) of cytochrome oxidase and of pyruvate dehydrogenase decreases in aged rats. A marked increase is found in the Vmax of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase in aged rats and could be related to the availability of NADPH for antiperoxidative processes. Pretreatments of experimental animals with certain drugs were done to investigate the plasticity of enzyme proteins during aging. Papaverine, which acts on macrocirculation, is ineffective, but delta-yohimbine acting on microcirculation and metabolism and almitrine acting on oxygen availability both could interfere with the potential activity of some enzymes. However, their influence differs with the age of the rats.
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PMID:Age-related modification of enzyme activities in synaptosomes isolated from rat cerebral cortex. 254 Mar 42

The effect of aging and subchronic treatment with acetyl-L-carnitine (50 mg/kg per day) was studied on mitochondrial bioenergetics and cholinergic metabolism in non-synaptic mitochondria and synaptosomes isolated from cerebral cortex, hippocampus and striatum of rats aged 4, 11 and 18 months. Respiratory activity and cytochrome oxidase specific activity were unaffected by aging in non-synaptic mitochondria. In synaptosomes, pyruvate dehydrogenase, choline acetyltransferase and acetylcholinesterase specific activity remained unchanged, but the high-affinity choline uptake decreased in cerebral cortex and striatum of 18-month-old rats. Acetyl-L-carnitine treatment increased the high-affinity choline uptake in cerebral cortex of 18-month-old rats. The treatment caused also an increase in cytochrome oxidase activity in all the three cerebral regions and in choline uptake in the hippocampus, parameters that were not directly affected by aging processes.
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PMID:Effect of aging and acetyl-L-carnitine on energetic and cholinergic metabolism in rat brain regions. 254 2

Stable-isotope tracer experiments performed in vitro are evaluated for their utility in differentiating between pyruvate dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase deficiencies, two of several enzyme defects commonly associated with the lactic acidemias. Fibroblasts of enzyme-deficient individuals and of age-matched controls are grown in medium containing [U-13C]glucose. Direct analysis of cells and conditioned culture medium provides only minor differences in the organic acid/amino acid GC-MS profiles, making differentiation of enzyme defects difficult by this method. However, differences have been found in the glucose turnover into various cell metabolites, making differentiation of these two enzyme defects possible. The cellular pool of glutamic acid experiences 13C-enrichment in both the control and cytochrome oxidase deficient lines, but not in the pyruvate dehydrogenase-deficient line. The cellular pool of an unknown, possibly an aminopentose sugar, on the other hand, experiences 13C-enrichment in the pyruvate dehydrogenase and control lines, but not in the cytochrome oxidase line. These observations, as well as other differences in the extent of enrichment into various metabolite pools, suggest that this stable-isotope approach, in vitro, is feasible and may allow these two enzyme defects to be differentiated in a definitive manner. Such stable-isotope experiments are easy to carry out with cultured cells and are inexpensive. Applications of the technique to other genetic disorders might be appropriate.
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PMID:Determination of [U-13C]glucose turnover into various metabolite pools for the differential diagnosis of lactic acidemias. 254 11

We report two brothers with a previously undescribed type of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy and associated aminoacidopathy. Both have growth failure, progressive intellectual decline, deafness, neurologic dysfunction, exercise intolerance, lactic acidosis, and abnormal plasma and cerebrospinal fluid amino acid levels (elevated levels of alanine and low levels of threonine, methionine, citrulline, tryptophan, ornithine, arginine, and lysine). A muscle biopsy specimen taken from the younger, more severely affected brother showed abnormal mitochondrial morphology. Activities of the following enzymes in cultured fibroblasts from both boys were normal: pyruvate dehydrogenase, pyruvate carboxylase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, cytochrome oxidase, reduced nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide-cytochrome c reductase, and succinate cytochrome c reductase. Fibroblast mitochondria from the younger boy showed undetectable (less than 1% of control values) adenosine triphosphate synthesis with pyruvate and malate, whereas adenosine triphosphate synthesis with succinate was 70% of control values. These data indicate probably deficient activity of complex I of the electron transport chain. The boys' mother has progressive neurosensory hearing loss; their sister is clinically normal. Both mother and sister have many of the biochemical abnormalities found in the boys. It is possible, but not proved, that this disorder is inherited through maternal mitochondria.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with associated aminoacidopathy in a male sibship. 273 99

The cultured skin fibroblasts from three patients with lacticacidemia were found to have low rates of 1-[14C]pyruvate oxidation in the face of normal pyruvate dehydrogenase activity. After incubation with 1 mM glucose, these three cell strains also exhibited lactate/pyruvate ratios which were three times greater than those of controls. In two of the patients, both ATP and oxygen consumption in fibroblast mitochondrial preparations was deficient with NAD-linked substrates but normal with succinate and ascorbate/N'N'N'N' tetramethyl phenylene diamine. In the third patient, ATP synthesis in mitochondrial preparations was deficient with all substrates tested. Measurement of Rotenone-sensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase in mitochondrial preparations from skin fibroblasts showed that two of the patients had 14 and 18%, respectively, of control activity. In the third patient, cytochrome oxidase activity was 15% of that in controls. We conclude that respiratory chain defects can be demonstrated in cultured skin fibroblasts with consistency using a number of different techniques.
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PMID:Respiratory chain defects in the mitochondria of cultured skin fibroblasts from three patients with lacticacidemia. 300 44


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