Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.3.3.1 (citrate synthase)
4,488 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seven hyperthyroid patients were studied by repeated muscle biopsies (vastus lateralis) before and after a period of medical treatment which averaged 10 months. The biopsies were analysed with regard to fibre-type composition, fibre area, capillary density, glycogen content and enzyme activities representing the glycolytic capacity (hexokinase, 6-phosphofructokinase), oxidative capacity (oxoglutarate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase) and Ca2+- and Mg2+-stimulated ATPase in muscle. In the pretreatment biopsy (hyperthyroid state), there was a significantly lower proportion of type I fibres (30% vs. 41%), a higher capillary density (23%), lower glycogen content (33%), and higher hexokinase activity (32%) compared with the post-treatment biopsy. No significant changes in the activity of the remaining enzymes were observed. The present study indicates that hyperthyroidism induces a transformation from type I to type II fibres in human skeletal muscle. The increase in hexokinase activity probably reflects a higher glucose utilization by skeletal muscle in order to compensate partially for the reduced glycogen content.
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PMID:Effect of hyperthyroidism on fibre-type composition, fibre area, glycogen content and enzyme activity in human skeletal muscle. 293 5

Activities of total creatine kinase (CK), its isoenzyme MB (CK-MB), total lactate dehydrogenase (LD) and its isoenzyme LD1, phosphofructokinase (PFK), aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT) and citrate synthase (CS) were determined in skeletal muscle biopsies obtained from physically trained and untrained men and in myocardial biopsies from patients subjected to open heart surgery because of valve disease. The LD1, ASAT and CS activities were higher in trained than in untrained skeletal muscle and still higher in heart muscle than in either trained or untrained skeletal muscle. The CK-MB activity was higher in trained than untrained skeletal muscle and the myocardial CK-MB activity was similar to that in trained skeletal muscle. Total CK activity was slightly lower in trained than in untrained skeletal muscle and the myocardial CK activity was approximately one third of the skeletal muscle CK. Both the PFK and the total LD activity was of similar magnitude in the different muscle types. In conclusion, as estimated by enzyme activities, the oxidative capacity is 2-3 times larger in myocardial than in skeletal muscle, while the glycolytic capacity as estimated by PFK appears to be the same.
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PMID:Activities of key enzymes in the energy metabolism of human myocardial and skeletal muscle. 294 12

The evaluation of the specific activity of some enzymes related to energy transduction was performed in 7 fresh samples of malignant gliomas and in 4 samples of normal brain tissue. Compared with normal brain tissue, the hexokinase, phosphofructokinase and citrate synthase activities are lower; the lactate dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase are unchanged, while glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and NADP+-isocitrate dehydrogenase activities are higher in gliomas.
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PMID:Enzymes related to energy metabolism in human gliomas. 294 16

The muscle enzymatic changes subsequent to 6 months of strength training followed by 3 months of detraining were examined in 21 physically active men. They were assigned either to a heavy-resistance (HR) or an explosive strength (EX) training program. Muscle biopsies were obtained from m. vastus lateralis for the assessment of activities of the enzymes hexokinase (HK), myofibrillar ATPase (ATPase), citrate synthase (CS), phosphofructokinase (PFK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), myokinase (MK) and creatine kinase (CK). The activities were measured on freeze-dried tissue samples using fluorometrical assays. Both groups displayed increased (P less than 0.01-0.001) fast-twitch (FT) fiber area consequent to training with no concomitant hypertrophy of slow-twitch (ST) fiber area. Mean fiber area increased by 16% (P less than 0.001) in HR and 9% (NS) in EX. Following detraining, mean fiber area returned to pretraining value only in EX. HK decreased in both groups (P less than 0.01-0.001) and CK decreased in HR (P less than 0.05). When the two groups were treated together, all enzymes, except for LDH, decreased their activity (P less than 0.05-0.001). It is concluded that 6 months of strength training performed either as heavy-resistance or explosive training is not associated with any increased activities of enzymes reflecting phosphagen, glycolytic, or oxidative metabolism. Instead, the present results suggest that exercise-induced hypertrophy is accompanied by attenuation of certain enzyme activities of importance for ATP regeneration.
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PMID:Enzymatic adaptations consequent to long-term strength training. 295 91

Precondition for the evaluation of indirect calorimetry data by standard procedures is an undisturbed physiological metabolic situation. Metabolic changes in stress metabolism, which are a reduction of enzyme activity, increased rates of gluconeogenesis und ketogenesis, and simultaneous occurrence of lipolysis and lipogenesis cannot be considered by those calculations. Various problems concerning the evaluation of data obtained on traumatized patients confirm the presumption that standard procedures are not suitable in the case of posttraumatic metabolic disturbances. Therefore, we developed two computer-supported metabolic models, which assume a reduced activity of the three key enzymes: pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH), phosphofructokinase (PFK) and citrate synthetase (CS). The blocked metabolites are bypassed to gluconeogenesis, lipogenesis and in so called 'pools' ('glucose-pool', 'acetyl-pool'). In addition, a detailed simulation of amino acid degradation is permitted. The models were applied to evaluate indirect calorimetric data of four patients, which could not be evaluated by standard procedures. It was shown that an evaluation of all data was possible by at least one model. All enzymes presented a slight to complete blockade. The calculated maximal activities of PFK was 1.59 mol/d, of PDH 6.31 mol/d and that of CS 6.55 mol/d. These activities were far below the values of normal human beings. As a result of these enzyme inhibitions, high rates of gluconeogenesis (max. 387 g/d) and lipogenesis (max. 511 g/d) as well as high values for the glucose-pool (max. 387 g/d) and the acetyl-pool (max. 641 g/d) were calculated. The interpretation of the pools was difficult. Renal elimination of the metabolites was not found in our patients, an accumulation was impossible for osmotic reasons. Therefore, despite the catabolic hormonal character of stress metabolism, storage as molecules of high molecular weight should be taken into account.
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PMID:[Metabolic models for the interpretation of indirect caloric measurements in intensive care patients]. 295 95

The purpose of this study was to determine if changes in intra-muscular myoglobin concentration accompany histochemical and enzymatic adaptations to supra-maximal exercise training. Subjects were assigned to either a training group (N = 11), who trained 2 to 3 times weekly for 6 wk, or a control group (N = 6). Training progressed from two 15-s and two 30-s "all-out" sprints on a cycle ergometer during week 1 to six 15-s and six 30-s bouts per session during week 6. The Wingate test was performed before and after the 6 wk, but performance variables were not changed in either group. In the training group, peak lactate after the Wingate test was significantly higher after training. No significant changes in enzyme activities, myoglobin concentration, or fiber-type frequency were observed in the control group. In contrast, in the training group, the percent fast twitch oxidative fibers increased, myoglobin decreased, and both citrate synthase and phosphofructokinase activities increased (P less than 0.05). The results suggest that muscle myoglobin concentration is not increased by 6 wk of supra-maximal exercise training and that such training induces cellular adaptations without accompanying performance changes. Alternatively, the Wingate test is not a sensitive test of adaptations to the training.
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PMID:Sprint training effects on muscle myoglobin, enzymes, fiber types, and blood lactate. 295 71

The adaptation of enzyme activities, notably in the oxidative metabolism, and of prerequisites for tissue transport of oxygen in the claudication leg was evaluated by comparing muscle biopsies from the gastrocnemius muscle of the claudication and the symptom-free leg of seven patients with unilateral claudication. The claudication leg had higher activities of a marker enzyme for mitochondrial oxidative capacity, citrate synthase (CS), as well as of the MB and the mitochondrial isoenzyme of creatine kinase (CK), which are considered to be involved in the transfer of high energy phosphate from the mitochondria to the resynthesis of ATP in the cytoplasm. The difference between claudication and healthy leg in activities of these CK isoenzymes were well correlated with the corresponding side difference in CS activity. No significant differences between claudication and healthy leg were found in distribution of muscle fibre types or fibre dimension, capillary density or myoglobin content, nor was there any side difference in phosphofructokinase or lactate dehydrogenase. Side differences tended to be greater in those patients with the most advanced obstructive arterial disease as estimated from non-invasive pressure measurements. It is concluded that in reasonably physically-active patients, the mode of ischaemia to which the claudication leg is subjected leads to a metabolic adaptation characterized by increased activities of enzymes involved in the oxidative metabolism, but no significant adaptation of either the conditions for local oxygen transport, as estimated by myoglobin content, and capillary density, or capacity for anaerobic metabolism.
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PMID:Calf muscle adaptation in intermittent claudication. Side-differences in muscle metabolic characteristics in patients with unilateral arterial disease. 296 71

The fatigue characteristics and the activities of oxidative and glycolytic enzymes were determined in tetrodotoxin (TTX)-induced disuse muscles and in muscles of animals recovering from TTX-induced disuse (TTX-rec). In addition, the effects of additional daily exercise (grid-climbing and swimming) on the fatigue and metabolic profiles of muscles from TTX-rec and control animals were investigated. The activities of citrate synthase (CS), phosphofructokinase (PFK), and alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (alpha-GPD) were depressed following 28 days of inactivity produced by the chronic neural application of TTX. The response of these muscles to a pattern of stimulation that has been used to classify fast-twitch motor units according to their fatigability (6) (330 ms, 40 Hz, l/s, 4 min) was not affected to any great extent by inactivity, except for a loss in the ability to summate or maintain forces during each 330-ms burst, as fatigue developed. After 28 days of recovery, the concentration of CS had returned to normal, whereas the concentrations of PFK and alpha-GPD remained depressed. TTX-rec muscles, on the other hand, appeared more resistant to fatigue than control muscles, based on several indices of muscle fatigue. Control and TTX muscles responded similarly to daily training. Swimming but not climbing increased the activity of CS and the fatigue resistance of the muscle. Neither exercise influenced the activity of PFK and alpha-GPD. Although the activity of CS was influenced by the level of neuromuscular usage, the former did not appear to play a dominant role in determining the fatigue resistance of the muscle, emphasizing the need to consider other factors as primary determinants of muscle fatigue.
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PMID:Recovery of muscle from tetrodotoxin-induced disuse and the influence of daily exercise. 2. Muscle enzymes and fatigue characteristics. 297 Sep 77

Tibialis anterior (TA) muscles of four small mammals were subjected to chronic nerve stimulation for 28 days (10 Hz, 10 hours per day). Total cellular activities of phosphofructokinase (PFK), hexokinase (HK), citrate synthase (CS), 3-hydroxy-acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (HADH) and 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase (HBDH) were measured in the stimulated and unstimulated contralateral muscles. Normal TA muscles displayed ranges of oxidative and glycolytic capacities with rabbit TA showing the lowest and mouse TA the highest oxidative capacity. Chronic stimulation was almost without effect in mouse TA. In all other species, glycolytic capacity was decreased and reference enzymes of aerobic-oxidative pathways were increased. Rabbit TA displayed the highest increment in oxidative capacity with approximately three-fold increases in CS and HADH and eleven-fold increases in HBDH. Different responses were also observed for HK. In some cases, the extent of adaptation appeared to be independent of the initial enzyme activity levels, while in other cases it appeared to follow an order which corresponded to the size of the animals. Thus, there exist species-specific ranges of adaptation and adaptive alterations in one species may not necessarily reflect the adaptive response of another species.
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PMID:Specific effects of low-frequency stimulation upon energy metabolism in tibialis anterior muscles of mouse, rat, guinea pig and rabbit. 297 3

Selected biochemical characteristics of diaphragm muscle were compared among several orders of adult mammals (cattle, swine, rabbit, guinea pig, rat, and mouse) with known differences in resting breathing frequencies (f, range = 15-138). Diaphragms from smaller animals had significantly higher citrate synthase (CS) and phosphofructokinase (PFK) activities and substrate oxidation rates than larger animals. Ranges of activities for CS and PFK were 93-27 and 58-39 mumol.g-1.min-1, respectively; and 34-5 and 19-2 nmol.g-1.min-1 for [U-14C]glucose (GLU) and [1-14C]palmitate (PAL) oxidation, respectively. The percent of native fast myosin (FM) isoforms was significantly different among groups. Mouse diaphragm had the highest % FM (88.6%), whereas the lowest values (7.5%) were observed in cattle diaphragm. Myosin ATPase (M-ATPase, pH 9.8) activity was significantly lower in cattle (0.06 mumol.mg protein-1.min-1) and swine (0.38 mumol.mg protein-1.min-1) diaphragm than in other mammals (range of 1.14-0.67 mumol.mg protein-1.min-1). Correlation coefficients determined among means of measured biochemical parameters and established values of f indicated that CS activity and substrate oxidation rates were significantly correlated with f (r = 0.92, 0.92, 0.86 for CS, GLU, PAL, respectively) and the % FM increased with f. M-ATPase (pH 9.8) was significantly correlated with % FM (r = 0.85), whereas PFK and M-ATPase activities were not closely associated with f. It was concluded that f in mammals is significantly correlated with the biochemical parameters of aerobic capacity and is associated with the percent of FM isoforms in the diaphragm.
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PMID:Biochemical characteristics of mammalian diaphragms. 297 5


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