Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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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)
The activity of certain enzymes of energy metabolism (cytochrome c oxidase,
citrate synthase
, malate dehydrogenase, and lactate dehydrogenase) and of lysosomes (
beta-glucuronidase
, beta-N-acetylglucosamindase, arylsuphatase, ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, acid phosphatase, and cathepsin D) was assayed from m. rectus femoris of mice trained 5 days per week, 1 hr per day for 4 weeks according to 4 different programmes: I. running speed 20 m/min, horizontal track, II. 25 m/min, horizontal track, III. 20 m/min 8 degrees uphill inclination, and IV. 25 m/min 8 degrees uphill inclination. Oxidative capacity increased and anaerobic capacity decreased without distinction between the different traning programmes. Of acid hydrolases assayed the activities of
beta-glucuronidase
and cathepsin D were increased independently of training intensity. Simultaneous histochemical observations on
beta-glucuronidase
and arylsulphatase activities in the contralateral m. rectus femoris showed more intense staining in red as compared to white muscle fibres. It is suggested that training affected the red fibres and that the applied level of loading was probably too low to cause major involvement of white fibres.
...
PMID:Oxidative and lysosomal capacity in skeletal muscle of mice after endurance training of different intensities. 21 99
The activity of eight acid hydrolases and two energy metabolism enzymes were assayed from homogenates of predominantly red (proximal heads of m. vastus lateralis, m. vastus medialis, and m. vastus intermedius) and predominantly white (distal head of m. vastus lateralis) skeletal muscle of mice belonging to one of the following groups: 1) sedentary controls, never trained or exhausted; 2) exhausted controls, exhausted once by running on a treadmill 5, 10, or 20 days before killing; 3) trained mice, exercising until killed; 4) exhausted trained mice, exercising until exhausted 5, 10 or 20 days before killing, not exercising during that period; and 5) detrained mice, terminating training 5, 10, or 20 days before killing. In untrained but not in trained animals, exhaustive exercise caused, 5 days afterward, fiber necrosis and a marked increase in the activities of
beta-glucuronidase
, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, arylsulphatase, ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease, cathepsin D, and cathepsin C, especially in red muscle fibers. Training increased the activities of
citrate synthase
,
beta-glucuronidase
, and cathepsin D in both muscle types and those of beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, arylsulphatase, and cathepsin C in red muscle. Effects of detraining were minor. Exhaustive exercise causes lethal and evidently also sublethal fiber injuries manifesting themselves as an activation of the lysosomal system of muscle fibers 5 days later. Training affects cellular homeostasis by causing an apparent resistance to the damaging effects of exhaustive exercise. Moderately increased hydrolase activities may reflect increased turnover in endurance-trained muscles.
...
PMID:Exhaustive exercise, endurance training, and acid hydrolase activity in skeletal muscle. 22 20
The effects of added load (20% of body mass) on the selected enzyme activities of red and white quadriceps femoris (QF), soleus, and gastrocnemius muscles of rats were studied. The rats were divided into sedentary control (SC), sedentary control with added load (SC+AL), endurance training (ET), and endurance training with added load (ET+AL) groups (n = 10 rats/group). After 6 wk, the SC+AL group had 57% higher (P less than 0.001)
beta-glucuronidase
(beta-GU) activity and 24% lower (P less than 0.05)
citrate synthase
activity in white QF than SC. Citrate synthase activity was also decreased in red QF (P less than 0.05) after the added load was used during nontraining hours. The training with added load induced similar but more pronounced changes than normal endurance training, especially in white QF. The ET+AL group demonstrated higher
citrate synthase
activity in white QF (P less than 0.001) and gastrocnemius (P less than 0.01) and higher malate dehydrogenase activity (P less than 0.05) and beta-GU activity (P less than 0.001) in white QF than the ET group. ET+AL rats also had higher phosphofructokinase (P less than 0.01) and lower creatine kinase (P less than 0.001) activity in white QF than ET rats. In conclusion, the added load without training had minor adaptive influences on muscles. The added load during training hours seemed to be an effective means of influencing the activation and adaptation in muscles that contain fast glycolytic fibers.
...
PMID:Muscle enzyme adaptations to added load during training and nontraining hours in rats. 202 68
The activities of several lysosomal enzymes were assayed in control and in exercise-hypertrophied cardiac muscle of mice (Mus musculus). The repeated running program increased the activity of
beta-glucuronidase
(16.1%) in mouse cardiac muscle. Decreased activities of beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase (10.8%), acid ribonuclease (10.7%), and arylsulphatase (14.2%) were observed in the hypertrophied myocardium. The activities of acid deoxyribonuclease, cathepsin C, cathepsin D, and p-nitrophenylphosphatase as well as the activities of
citrate synthase
and cytochrome c oxidase, mitochondrial enzymes, were unaffected in cardiac muscle. We suggest that lysosomal enzyme responses are selective and highly different in physiologically and pathologically induced cardiac hypertrophies.
...
PMID:Changes in lysosomal enzyme activities in exercise-induced cardiac hypertrophy of mice. 622 47
We studied the effects of running-training, heavy exercise and termination of training on the heart weight, the ratio heart to body weight and the cardiac muscle activities of actomyosin ATPase,
citrate synthase
, succinate dehydrogenase, cytochrome c oxidase, malate dehydrogenase, adenylate kinase and
beta-glucuronidase
with adult male NMRI-mice. Stable hypertrophy (6-7%), estimated by the ratio heart or ventricle weight to body weight, was achieved by 28 exercises and it was dependent on the running speed (20 vs. 25 m X min-1). The withdrawal of training for 5-61 days did not permanently decrease the heart weight or the heart to body weight ratio to the level of sedentary controls. The activity of enzymes of energy metabolism or actomyosin ATPase were not affected by training, heavy exercise or terminated training.
beta-glucuronidase
activity slightly (20-25%) increased in the trained animals and remained at a higher level during the period of terminated training. The results suggest that the capacity for aerobic metabolism of normal mice heart is sufficient to meet the enhanced demand for ATP imposed by running-training and that the heart enlargement occurs in equal proportions with the enzymatic potential of the cardiac tissue.
...
PMID:Selected enzyme activities in mouse cardiac muscle during training and terminated training. 623 64
The sub-cellular localisation of enzymes has been defined by latency analysis, and fractionation by differential centrifugation, in cell-free extracts prepared from the mycelium of Aspergillus nidulans by growth in the presence of 2-deoxyglucose followed by treatment with a mixture of
beta-glucuronidase
, sulphatase and beta-glucanase and exposure to N2 cavitation at 5.2 PMa. In such extracts pyruvate carboxylase and NAD-dependent and NADP-dependent glutamate dehydrogenases are exclusively localised in the cytosol whereas all the other enzymes studied have sub-cellular localisation patterns similar to those described for mammalian liver. Electrophoretic analysis has established the presence of unique mitochondrial and cytosolic isoenzymes for many of the enzymes, e.g. NAD--malate dehydrogenase, NADP--isocitrate dehydrogenase, glutamate/oxaloacetate transaminase, fumarase, which show a marked extent of incomplete latency and the presence of significant activity in the mitochondrial and cytosolic fractions prepared by differential centrifugation. A novel method is described for detection of
citrate synthase
activity following electrophoresis of the cell-free extract. Application of this method confirms the absence of a unique cytosolic isoenzyme of
citrate synthase
and hence shows that
citrate synthase
activity detected in the soluble fraction results from damage to the mitochondria during isolation. A scheme is proposed on the basis of these data to describe the organisation of lipid and amino acid synthesis from glucose in an organism which possesses a cytosolic pyruvate carboxylase.
...
PMID:The sub-cellular localisation of pyruvate carboxylase and of some other enzymes in Aspergillus nidulans. 634 55
This study aimed at comparing the effects of running and swimming training protocols and the termination of training on the activities of two proteases with alkaline pH-optima (alkaline protease and myofibrillar protease) in the tibialis anterior, soleus, and gastrocnemius muscles of male rats. The training on treadmill decreased the activities of alkaline and myofibrillar proteases by approx. 10-20% in the muscles studied. The activities of both proteases were unchanged in swimming-trained rats. Two weeks after the termination of running training the activity of alkaline protease was increased in gastrocnemius muscle but not in the other muscles. Swimming training increased the activity of
citrate synthase
in all muscles studied but training by running only in the soleus muscle. The running protocol increased the activity of
beta-glucuronidase
in the tibialis anterior muscle and decreased the activity in the gastrocnemius muscle. The swimming program did not affect
beta-glucuronidase
activities. These results show diverse effects of running and swimming training on alkaline proteolytic activities as well as on mitochondrial and lysosomal marker enzymes.
...
PMID:Effects of endurance training on alkaline protease activities in rat skeletal muscles. 636 35
Alkaline and myofibrillar protease activities of rectus femoris, soleus, and tibialis anterior muscles and the pooled sample of gastrocnemius and plantaris muscles were analyzed in male NMRI-mice during a running-training program of 3, 10, or 20 daily 1-h sessions. The activity of
citrate synthase
increased during the endurance training, reflecting the increased oxidative capacity of skeletal muscles. The activities of alkaline and myofibrillar proteases continually decreased in the course of the training program in all muscles studied. Instead, the activity of
beta-glucuronidase
(a marker of lysosomal hydrolases) increased in all muscles. The highest activities were observed at the beginning of the training program. Present results, together with our earlier observations, show that the type of training, running as opposed to swimming, modulates the training responses in alkaline protease activities. Further, diverse adaptations in the activities of alkaline proteases and a lysosomal hydrolase suggest difference in the function of different proteolytic systems.
...
PMID:Endurance training decreases the alkaline proteolytic activity in mouse skeletal muscles. 637 21
Mice with generalized influenza or tularemia of similar lethality were studied in an effort to compare biochemical responses of the myocardium during infections of viral and bacterial etiology. A progressive loss of body weight characterized the course of both infections. Accompanying this, the myocardial content of protein and the activities of lactate dehydrogenase,
citrate synthase
, and cytochrome c oxidase all decreased. However, myocardial protein degradation appeared earlier and was more pronounced in influenza, and the protein changes were accompanied by a rapid decline of myocardial RNA. Activation of acid hydrolases, such as cathepsin D and
beta-glucuronidase
, occurred in tularemia but not in influenza, whereas leakage of
beta-glucuronidase
into the plasma occurred in both infections. Conversely, there was a considerably greater activation of myocardial catalase in influenza. These findings suggested that different control mechanisms or metabolic pathways were operative in the degradation of myocardial constituents in influenza as compared with tularemia. The absence of histological signs of myocarditis in either infection appeared to exclude any direct local effects of an inflammatory process on myocardial cells. Since the infections were of comparable lethality (based upon the inoculated dose of organisms), the observed differences in pattern and extent of metabolic responses of the myocardium to these infections may be attributed to different pathophysiological mechanisms evoked by the different microorganisms.
...
PMID:Sequential metabolic alterations in the myocardium during influenza and tularemia in mice. 674 1
Acid proteolytic capacity in mouse cardiac muscle and in predominantly white (distal head of m. vastus lateralis) or predominantly red (proximal red heads of m. vastus lateralis, m. v. medialis, and m. v. intermedius) skeletal muscle was estimated 5 days after 3 h, 6 h or 9 h prolonged running at a speed of 13.5 m/min. The activities of acid protease and
beta-glucuronidase
together with the rate of acid autolysis considerably increased in both skeletal muscle types, especially in red muscle, but did not increase in cardiac muscle. Acid proteolytic capacity and
beta-glucuronidase
activity increased in relation to the duration of running. Protein content and oxidative capacity (the activities of
citrate synthase
and malate dehydrogenase) decreased in red skeletal muscle after 6 h and 9 h running. In white muscle only protein content slightly decreased after 9 h running. No corresponding changes were observed in cardiac muscle. Histopathological changes were traced in mixed skeletal muscle (m. rectus femoris). Necrotic lesions were observed in the red superficial area of m. rectus femoris after 6 h and, in particular, after 9 h running. The results show that prolonged submaximal running also produces lethal and sublethal skeletal muscle fibre injuries, as well as exhaustive exercise or temporary ischaemia as reported earlier. It is suggested that sublethal injuries precede lethal ones and that acid proteolytic capacity increases especially in the sublethally injured muscle fibres.
...
PMID:Acid proteolytic capacity in mouse cardiac and skeletal muscles after prolonged submaximal exercise. 719 62
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