Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:1.9.3.1 (
cytochrome oxidase
)
8,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Electrical stimulation of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes in culture produces increases in myocyte size (hypertrophy) and organization of actin into myofibrillar arrays. The maturation of the cells is associated with enhanced contractile parameters and cellular calcium content. The numbers and intensity of cellular mitochondrial profiles increase, as measured by scanning laser confocal microscopy. Consistent with the hypertrophic response is increased cellular content of
beta-myosin heavy chain
and
cytochrome oxidase
subunit Va messages, as well as increases in
cytochrome oxidase
activity in the stimulated cardiac myocytes. Myocyte contractile capacity is associated with increased expression of the muscle carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT-I) isoform as measured by Northern analysis, immunoblotting, and altered sensitivity of CPT-I activity to malonyl-CoA in the stimulated cells. The data suggest that a switch from the liver isoform of CPT-I, prominent in the neonatal rat heart, to the muscle CPT-I which predominates in adult rat heart, takes place in the neonatal cardiac myocytes over the same time period as the hypertrophic-mediated changes in myofibrillar assembly and increased contractile activity.
...
PMID:Change in expression of heart carnitine palmitoyltransferase I isoforms with electrical stimulation of cultured rat neonatal cardiac myocytes. 866 50
In patients with congestive heart failure, skeletal muscle is characterized by a smaller proportion of slow-twitch oxidative fibers and reduced oxidative enzyme activity. However, whether these changes result from disuse or occur as a direct consequence of heart failure is unresolved. To address this issue, 18 rats with heart failure 8 weeks after left coronary artery ligation and 13 sham-operated control rats underwent quantification of locomotor activity by a photocell activation technique, measurements of hemodynamics and infarct size, histochemical and morphological analyses of the soleus and plantaris muscles, and Northern analyses of muscle contractile protein and oxidative enzyme mRNA expression. Although the rats with heart failure had elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressures (24.1 +/- 2.6 mm Hg) and a mean infarct size of 35.1 +/- 4.1%, activity levels were similar to those found in the sham-operated rats (3849 +/- 304 versus 3526 +/- 130 counts per hour). With heart failure, there was a significant reduction of type I fibers in the soleus muscle and type IIa fibers in the plantaris muscle, with corresponding increases in intermediate staining of type IIab fibers in both muscles. This was associated with a 17% decrease in citrate synthase activity in both the soleus and plantaris muscles (26.2 +/- 1.6 versus 30.7 +/- 3.4 and 29.1 +/- 2.4 versus 35.7 +/- 3.4 mumol/L per minute per gram, respectively [P < .05]). In the soleus muscle, mRNA for both beta-myosin heavy chains and cytochrome C oxidase III (normalized to 18S RNA) was reduced (0.27 +/- 0.02 versus 0.65 +/- 0.02 and 0.23 +/- 0.04 versus 0.64 +/- 0.02 U), whereas the messages for IIx and IIb myosin heavy chains were increased. A similar decrease in messages for
cytochrome oxidase
and the primary myosin isoform was observed in the plantaris muscle. Both soleus
beta-myosin heavy chain
and cytochrome C oxidase expression show significant inverse relationships to left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and infarct size. In contrast, there was no relationship between either
beta-myosin heavy chain
or cytochrome C oxidase expression and locomotor activity. These results indicate that in rats heart failure produces changes in skeletal muscle gene expression at the pretranslational level that cannot be explained by inactivity.
...
PMID:Heart failure in rats causes changes in skeletal muscle morphology and gene expression that are not explained by reduced activity. 892 60
Electrical stimulation of neonatal cardiac myocytes produces hypertrophy and cellular maturation with increased mitochondrial content and activity. To investigate the patterns of gene expression associated with these processes, cardiac myocytes were stimulated for varying times up to 72 hr in serum-free culture. The mRNA contents for genes associated with transcriptional activation [c-fos, c-jun, JunB, nuclear respiratory factor 1 (NRF-1)], mitochondrial proliferation [cytochrome c (Cyt c),
cytochrome oxidase
], and mitochondrial differentiation [carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT-I) isoforms] were measured. The results establish a temporal pattern of mRNA induction beginning with c-fos (0.25-3 hr) and followed sequentially by c-jun (0.5-3 hr), JunB (0.5-6 hr), NRF-1 (1-12 hr), Cyt c (12-72 hr), and muscle-specific CPT-I (48-72 hr). Induction of the latter was accompanied by a marked decrease in the liver-specific CPT-I mRNA, thus supporting the developmental fidelity of this pattern of gene regulation. Consistent with a transcriptional mechanism, electrical stimulation increased c-fos,
beta-myosin heavy chain
, and Cyt c promoter activities. These increases coincided with a rise in their respective endogenous gene transcripts. NRF-1, cAMP response element, and Sp-1 site mutations within the Cyt c promoter reduced luciferase expression in both stimulated and nonstimulated myocytes. Mutations in the NRF-1 and CRE sites inhibited the induction by electrical stimulation (5-fold and 2-fold, respectively) whereas mutation of the Sp-1 site maintained or increased the fold induction. This finding is consistent with the appearance of NRF-1 and fos/jun mRNAs prior to that of Cyt c and suggests that induction of these transcription factors is a prerequisite for the transcriptional activation of Cyt c expression. These results support a regulatory role for NRF-1 and possibly AP-1 in the initiation of mitochondrial proliferation.
...
PMID:Electrical stimulation of neonatal cardiomyocytes results in the sequential activation of nuclear genes governing mitochondrial proliferation and differentiation. 932 21