Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.3.3.1 (
citrate synthase
)
4,488
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Differences of metabolic qualities and capacities among organs and tissues of perinatal rabbits were investigated. A suitable alternative for the measurement of substrate utilization of single organs seems to be the total amount of certain key enzyme activities calculated for whole organs. The immediate perinatal period is the object of this study with adult animals serving as a reference. We have selected the
phosphofructokinase
activity to represent the upper segment of glycolytic reactions, 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase as a key enzyme for beta-oxidation of fatty acids and
citrate synthase
activity to represent the Krebs cycle activity. In fetal, newborn, and adult rabbits we analyzed liver, kidneys, heart, lung, brain, brown and white adipose tissue, stomach and intestines, skin, a representative sample of skeletal muscles, and of bones. The organ weight distribution, total amount of protein, and DNA was determined for the same ten organs. The share each organ contributes to the total body key enzyme activity shows the importance of each metabolic capacity which is represented by the three enzymes. In perinatal adipose tissue the very high potential for energy production through utilization of Krebs cycle reactions is striking. The same tissue has a high capacity to oxidize fatty acids. The skeletal muscle represents the biggest capacity of glycolytic reactions in all age groups. After birth the metabolic profile of the whole organism shows a marked and steep increase of glycolytic capacity, whereas the capacity to oxidize fatty acids decreases slowly.
...
PMID:Perinatal changes of interorgan differences in cell metabolism. 12 90
The metabolic effects on rat cardiac and skeletal muscle of a strenous program of swimming, of cold acclimation and of isoprenaline treatment (0.3 mg/kg daily for 5 five-day weeks) were compared. Exercised and cold-exposed rats gained less body weight than did controls or isoprenaline-treated rats. In all treated groups the heart and the intercapular brown adipose tissue hypertrophied. The size of the adrenals increased only in isoprenaline-treated animals. Cold-acclimation and physical training increased and isoprenaline treatment reduced or did not affect the activities of succinate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase and
citrate synthase
of cardiac muscle. In the skeletal muscle all treatments resulted in increased activities of these enzymes. Of the anaerobic enzymes analysed, only the activity of hexokinase increased in response to the treatements used. This increase was the same in cardiac as in skeletal muscle, but it was significantly greater with isoprenaline-treatment than with training or with cold-acclimation. The activities of lactate dehydrogenase and
phosphofructokinase
did not differ significantly. All treatments improved cold resistance, but only swimming exercise and cold acclimation significantly increased tolerance to exercise. It is concluded that prolonged stimulation of adrenergic beta-receptors by catecholamines is responsible for the metabolic changes observed.
...
PMID:Comparison of the effects of physical exercise, cold acclimation and repeated injections of isoprenaline on rat muscle enzymes. 12 87
Fast-twitch plantaris muscles of female rats were subjected to unilateral compensatory overload, induced by partial excision of synergistic muscles. One group of rats remained sedentary whereas another was subjected to a supplemental program of treadmill exercise consisting of walking 3 m/min, 65% grade, 2 h/day, 5 days/week. Groups of rats were sacrificed after 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks and their muscles were weighed and analyzed for protein,
citrate synthase
,
phosphofructokinase
(
PFK
) and myofibril ATPase. Absolute and relative (muscle weight/body weight) muscle weights were much greater in both overloaded groups as compared to contralateral controls. However, treadmill exercise also increased the absolute and relative muscle mass of control plantaris muscles in the exercising group as compared tonormal sedentary contralateral controls. Citrate synthase activity was decreased in overloaded, sedentary muscles as compared to contralateral controls, but after 8 weeks of exercise, it returned to normal levels.
PFK
was decreased in both sedentary and exercised overloaded muscles throughout the 8 week period. Myofibril ATPase showed a tendency to be reduced in sedentary, overloaded muscles, and was significantly reduced in overloaded, exercising muscles. These results collectively suggest that certain fibers of overloaded fast-patterns take on similar in certain aspects to that normally seen in differentiated slow-twitch muscle fibers.
...
PMID:Enzymatic changes in hypertrophied fast-twitch skeletal muscle. 13 54
The effects of chronic "steady-state" and high-speed interval running were investigated on time-course changes in certain biochemical properties of cardiac and skeletal muscle fiber types of rats. Nine weeks of the interval program resulted in significant increased (15%) in both cardiac enlargement and ATPase activity of myofibrils; whereas increases in these parameters were only transient and not significant at the termination of the program involving steady-state running. Neither program induced appreciable alterations in
citrate synthase
and
phosphofructokinase
activity in cardiac muscle. In fast-twitch white fibers, "steady-state" training induced only a transient 45% increase in
citrate synthase
activity in contrast to a progressive twofold change with interval training. Both programs resulted in similar increases (45-50%) in
citrate synthase
activity in fast-twitch and slow-twitch red fibers. However, the patterns of increase for both fiber types differed between the two programs. These findings suggest that training programs incorporating elements of both "steady-state" incline and high-speed interval running can potentially induce respiratory enzyme adaptations in the greatest spectrum of rodent skeletal muscle fibers in addition to inducing adaptations to enhance contractile potential in cardiac muscle.
...
PMID:Time course adaptations in cardiac and skeletal muscle to different running programs. 13 67
The effects of bilateral functional overload on enzyme changes in fast-twitch plantaris muscles were studied on different groups of rats: 1) normal-control; 2) normal-exercise; 3) overload-control; and 4) overload-exercise. Overload was accomplished by surgical elimination of synergists. Exercising groups walked up a 65% grade, 3 m/min, 2 h/day. Peak muscle enlargement of the overload groups was reached after 5 wk. Citrate synthase,
phosphofructokinase
, and myofibril ATPase activities were consistantly depressed by approximately 30%, 40%, and 18%, respectively, in overload as compared to normal groups. Daily exercise prevented the decrease in only
citrate synthase
activity. Unilateral overload of medial gastrocnemius muscle indicated that both fast-twitch oxidative-glycogenolytic and fast-twitch glycogenolytic fiber types undergo enzyme changes in response to the functional stress. However, changes in the former were in closer agreement with the net changes seen in the plantaris than the latter. Soleus muscle responded to overload primarily with marked reductions in respiratory capacity. These findings suggest that certain enzyme systems are altered with functional overload in different fiber types. However, the alterations in certain enzyme systems may, in part, be independent of the process of hypertrophy.
...
PMID:Effect of functional overload on enzyme levels in different types of skeletal muscle. 13 68
The effect of prolonged digoxin treatment (1 mg/kg day for 8 days) on the activity levels of some enzymes of energy metabolism (
phosphofructokinase
, lactate dehydrogenase,
citrate synthase
, succinate dehydrogenase) in rat myocardium was studied. In the control animals receiving the solvent mixture (glycerol:ethanol:water in 1:1:1) a transient decrease in the lactate dehydrogenase and
citrate synthase
activity levels was observed. In the hearts of digoxin treated rats the level of activity of
phosphofructokinase
was permanently lowered by the fourth day and the level of activity of
citrate synthase
permanently increased after the first day of treatment. A transient increase in the activity level of succinate dehydrogenase in the myocardium of digoxin treated animals was seen between days 1 and 6. In this study a permanent decrease in
phosphofructokinase
and an increase in
citrate synthase
activity levels in rat heart muscle was noted during prolonged digoxin treatment.
...
PMID:Enzyme activities of myocardial energy metabolism during prolonged digoxin treatment in rats. 14 96
The activities of
phosphofructokinase
, pyruvate kinase,
citrate synthase
and creatine kinase were determined in blastocysts from rabbits at 144 h post coitum and in similar blastocysts cultured for 24 h with or without oestradiol-17beta (1 microgrm/ml). There was a significant increase in all the enzymes during the 24-h culture period but oestradiol had no effect.
...
PMID:Regulatory enzymes of carbohydrate and energy metabolism in the rabbit blastocyst. 14 40
The activities (Vmax) of hexokinase, glycogen phosphorylase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase,
phosphofructokinase
, lactate dehydrogenase,
citrate synthase
, cytochrome c oxidase, and 3-OH-acyl-CoA dehydrogenase in human skeletal muscles were compared with the in vitro utilization of glucose and palmitic acid assessed under optimal conditions. Statistically significant correlations between substrate fluxes and enzyme activities were found suggesting that the substrate incorporation rate in vitro in some way reflects the capacity of metabolic pathways. The incorporation rate of leucine into muscle proteins was also statistically significantly correlated to the RNA concentration in the muscle tissue. Glycolytic and glycogenolytic enzymes correlated significantly to each other and correlations were also found between aerobic enzymes supporting the validity of constant proportions between certain key enzymes in human skeletal muscles.
...
PMID:Incorporation rate of glucose carbon, palmitate carbon and leucine carbon into metabolites in relation to enzyme activities and RNA levels in human skeletal muscles. 17 28
The effects of thyroid deficiency (Td) and of chemical sympathectomy (Sx) were studied on marker enzymes of energy metabolism in cardiac muscle of neonatal and of adult rats. Td prevented the normal development of neonatal body weight, relative heart mass, and cardiac levels of cytochrome c (-22%),
citrate synthase
(-27%),
phosphofructokinase
(-20%) and Mg2+- and Ca2+-ATPase activity of purified myofibrils (-33%, -44%). Exogenous thyroxin replacement restored those parameters studied to normal with the exception that it persistently elevated
citrate synthase
activity significantly above normal control levels. Responses similar to those of Td neonates occurred when adult rats were similarly treated. Sx produced no consistent effects on respiratory and glycogenolytic marker enzymes, but caused a 20% reduction in Ca2+-ATPase activity of both neonatal and adult cardiac myofibrils. These findings suggest that cardiac muscle cells require thyroxin for normal growth and enzyme development. Also, Sx may impair cardiac functional capacity by altering Ca2+ activity of actomyosin ATPase.
...
PMID:Effects of thyroid deficiency and sympathectomy on cardiac enzymes. 21 2
The realtionship between growth rate and the metabolic activity of certain liver enzymes was studied using two strains of White Plymouth Rock chickens which had been selected in divergent directions for eight-week body weight. The activities of hexokinase, glucokinase,
phosphofructokinase
, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase,
citrate synthase
, glycogen synthetase, glutamate dehydrogenase and aspartate transaminase were measured at 4, 8 and 20 weeks of age. The mean percentage rate of growth of the birds selected for high eight-week body weight exceeded that of the birds selected for low eight-week body weight only during the early growth period. Thereafter, and until sexual maturity, the low-line birds grew at a faster rate, relative to body size. The mature body weight of the high-line birds exceeded that of the low-line birds by a factor of approximately 1.5. A close similarity was noted between the metabolic activity of certain liver enzymes and the growth rate (relative to body size) of the birds studied. At four and eight weeks of age, the faster-growing birds (whether high- or low-line) generally exhibited a greater capacity for glucose phosphorylation and glycolysis, but a poorer capacity for glycogen synthesis, than the slower-growing birds. At twenty weeks, growth rate and metabolic activity were similar in both strains.
...
PMID:Activity of certain liver enzymes in fast- and slow-growing lines of chickens. 118 17
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>