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)

Djungarian hamsters kept in long photoperiod (16:8 L:D) were injected daily at 0800, 1200, or 1600 with 25 micrograms of melatonin. During 90 days of treatment, body weight and fur coloration were checked at weekly intervals, and at the end of the treatment the reproductive status of the hamsters and their thermoregulatory properties (could limit, maximum thermoregulatory heat production, nonshivering thermogenesis, cytochrome oxidase activity in brown adipose tissue) were measured. Hamsters injected at 1600 changed from summer to winter status with regard to all functions investigated responding simultaneously; i.e., their body weights decreased, their fur became white, their gonads regressed, and their thermoregulatory properties improved. All these changes were identical to the effects of short photoperiod (8:16 L:D) exposure. Injections of melatonin at 0800 and 1200 were ineffective for reproductive functions, but the injection of melatonin at 0800 caused slight improvements of thermogenesis. The response to melatonin injected at 1600 could be suppressed by an additional injection of melatonin at 0800 (75 micrograms). Pinealectomized or ganglionectomized hamsters kept in long photoperiod did not respond to daily injections of melatonin at 1600 for the first 60 days of treatment, but during a prolonged treatment their sensitivity to melatonin was restored. Similarly, pinealectomized or ganglionectomized hamsters failed to respond to short photoperiod for about 40 days, but during prolonged exposure their sensitivity to short photoperiod was restored.
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PMID:Diurnal changes in sensitivity to melatonin in intact and pinealectomized Djungarian hamsters: effects on thermogenesis, cold tolerance, and gonads. 383 20

The sparse fur (spf) mutant mouse, with an X-linked ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, is a model of congenital hyperammonemia in children. Our earlier studies indicated a deficiency of hepatic carnitine, CoA-SH, acetyl CoA, and ATP in spf mice. We have now studied the effects of a 7-day treatment with acetyl-L-carnitine (ALCAR) in the spf/Y mice on the activity and expression of the respiratory chain enzyme cytochrome c oxidase (COX; EC 1.9.3.1). We found decreased hepatic activity and expression of COX in the untreated hyperammonemic spf/Y mice, which was restored upon ALCAR treatment. Because COX is a mitochondrial membrane protein, we also carried out studies to explain the mechanism of ALCAR through its effect on membrane stability. Our results indicate a decrease of the mitochondrial membrane cholesterol/phospholipid molar ratio (CHOL/PL ratio) with the activity and expression of COX in untreated spf/Y mice. While ALCAR treatment normalized the ratios, it also restored the hepatic ATP production to normal. To study further if there was any effect of ALCAR on the mitochondrial matrix urea cycle enzymes, we measured the activity and expression of mutant ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC; EC 2.1.3.3) and normal carbamyl phosphate synthase-I (CPS-I; EC 6.3.4.16) in spf/Y mice. There was no general effect on the specific activities of the matrix enzymes upon ALCAR treatment, although their mRNA levels were enhanced. Our studies point towards the feasibility of an ALCAR treatment in conjunction with other treatment modalities, e.g. sodium benzoate and/or arginine, to improve the availability of cellular ATP and to counteract the effects of hereditary hyperammonemic syndromes in children.
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PMID:Restoration of hepatic cytochrome c oxidase activity and expression with acetyl-L-carnitine treatment in spf mice with an ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. 971 4

This study determined the role of body temperature during exercise on cytochrome-c oxidase (CytOx) activity, a marker of mitochondrial content, and mitochondrial heat shock protein 70 (mtHSP70), which is required for import of nuclear-coded preproteins. Male, 10-wk-old, Sprague-Dawley rats exercised identically for 9 wk in ambient temperatures of 23 degrees C (n = 10), 8 degrees C with wetted fur (n = 8), and 4 degrees C with wetted fur and fan (n = 7). These conditions maintained exercising core temperature (T(c)) at 40.4, 39.2, or 38.0 degrees C (resting temperature), respectively. During weeks 3-9, exercisers ran 5 days/wk up a 6% grade at 20 m/min for 60 min. Animals were housed at 23 degrees C. Gastrocnemius CytOx activity in T(c)=38.0 degrees C (83.5 +/- 5.5 microatoms O x min(-1) x g wet wt(-1)) was greater than all other groups (P < 0.05), exceeding sedentary (n = 7) by 73.2%. T(c) of 40.4 and 39.2 degrees C also were higher than sedentary by 22.4 and 37.4%, respectively (P < 0.05). Quantification of CytOx content verified that the increased activity was due to an increase in protein content. In extensor digitorum longus, a nonactive muscle, CytOx was not elevated in T(c) = 38.0 degrees C. mtHSP70 was significantly elevated in gastrocnemius of T(c) = 38.0 degrees C compared with sedentary (P < 0.05) but was not elevated in extensor digitorum longus (P > 0.05). The data indicate that decreasing exercise T(c) may enhance mitochondrial biogenesis and that mtHSP70 expression is not dependent on temperature.
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PMID:Effect of body temperature during exercise on skeletal muscle cytochrome c oxidase content. 1213 60

Barrel subfields in rodent primary somatosensory cortex (SI) are important model systems for studying cortical organization and reorganization. During cortical reorganization that follows limb deafferentation, neurons in deafferented forelimb SI become responsive to previously unexpressed inputs from the lower jaw. Although the lower jaw barrel subfield (LJBSF) is a likely source of the input, this subfield has received little attention. Our aim was to describe the structural and functional organization of the normal LJBSF. To investigate LJBSF organization, a nomenclature for lower jaw skin surface was developed, cytochrome oxidase (CO) was used to label flattened-cut LJBSF sections, microelectrodes were used to map the lower jaw skin surface representation in SI, and electrolytic lesions, recovered from electrode penetrations, were used to align the physiological map to the underlying barrel map. LJBSF is a tear-shaped subfield containing approximately 24 barrels, arranged in eight mediolateral rows and a barrel-free zone capping the anterior border. The representation of the lower jaw skin consisting of chin vibrissae and microvibrissae embedded in common fur is somatotopically organized in a single map in the contralateral SI. This physiological map shows that the activity from the vibrissae aligns with the CO-staining of the underlying LJBSF. LJBSF barrels receive topographically ordered barrel-specific input from individual vibrissa and microvibrissae in the lower jaw but not from trident whiskers. The barrel-free zone receives topographically ordered input from the lower lip. These data demonstrating that the LJBSF is a highly organized subfield are essential for understanding its possible role in cortical reorganization.
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PMID:Structural and functional organization of the lower jaw barrel subfield in rat primary somatosensory cortex. 3313 68