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)

When temperature differences are taken into account, turtle brains use glucose at one-sixth the rate reported in rat brains. Na+-K+-ATPase activities are 2- to 2.5-fold higher in rat than in turtle brains. Maximal activities of hexokinase and lactate dehydrogenase are similar, whereas citrate synthase activities are two- to threefold higher in rat than turtle brains at the respective biological temperatures. Voltage-dependent Ca2+ channel densities, when compared between the two species, showed no consistent pattern. These data, along with the threefold differences in density of voltage-dependent Na+ channels reported by Lutz et al., are consistent with the idea that lower rates of channel and pump-mediated Na+ and K+ fluxes result in lower rates of aerobic energy metabolism in turtle brains compared with rat brains.
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PMID:Turtles and rats: a biochemical comparison of anoxia-tolerant and anoxia-sensitive brains. 255 54

The density and distribution of beta-adrenergic receptors in type I and II fibers of human gastrocnemius and quadriceps muscles were characterized in ten healthy sedentary subjects and in a subgroup of six subjects before and after 12 wk of endurance exercise training. Total tissue content of beta-receptors was measured in frozen sections of skeletal muscle biopsies incubated with 125I-labeled cyanopindolol in the presence and absence of 10(-5) M L-propranolol. The relative beta-receptor densities of type I and II fibers were delineated autoradiographically. Muscle fiber types were identified in adjacent serial sections by histochemical staining of myofibrillar adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) activity. Type I fibers had a threefold greater beta-receptor density than type II fibers of the same muscle [P less than 0.001; type I-to-type II fiber ratio of beta-receptor density was 3.06 +/- 0.43 (SD)]. Exercise training elicited a change in muscle fiber subtype composition (+34% type IIa and -42% type IIb; P less than 0.05 and P = 0.066, respectively), a 40% increase in citrate synthase activity of skeletal muscle (P = 0.01), and a 23% rise in peak oxygen uptake (P less than 0.001). However, no change in total tissue content of beta-receptors was observed after exercise training, even when receptor density was adjusted for preconditioning fiber type composition. Thus beta-receptor density of type I fibers of human skeletal muscle is threefold greater than that of type II fibers. Enhanced capacity for aerobic metabolism after endurance exercise training is not associated with upregulation of total beta-receptor density.
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PMID:Effects of fiber type and training on beta-adrenoceptor density in human skeletal muscle. 255 38

To evaluate the participation of proteins derived from mitochondrial genes in the adaptive response of skeletal muscle to increased contractile activity, we administered chloramphenicol (CAP; 200-1,000 mg.kg-1.day-1), an inhibitor of translation from mitochondrial ribosomes, to adult rabbits undergoing electrical stimulation of the tibialis anterior muscle of one hind limb. In unmedicated animals, 10 days of electrical stimulation increased maximum velocity (Vmax) of cytochrome oxidase and citrate synthase by 214 +/- 17 and 201 +/- 16% (P less than 0.01). In a dose-dependent manner, CAP abolished activity-induced increases in cytochrome oxidase Vmax, suggesting that augmented mitochondrial protein synthesis is necessary for the adaptive response of enzymes that require protein subunits encoded by mitochondrial genes. However, CAP failed to inhibit activity-induced changes in Vmax of enzymes derived exclusively from nuclear genes (citrate synthase and aldolase). CAP also failed to inhibit activity-induced increases in mRNA transcribed from the nuclear genes encoding beta-F1 ATPase or myoglobin, or from the mitochondrial genes encoding 12S rRNA, 16S rRNA, or cytochrome b. These latter findings suggest that mitochondrial translation products do not participate in pretranslational regulation of these nuclear or mitochondrial genes in response to changes in contractile activity of skeletal muscle.
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PMID:Effects of inhibition of mitochondrial protein synthesis in skeletal muscle. 289 13

This paper presents a study of the metabolic and contractile types of 34 samples from 30 muscles in five crossbred Pietrain-Large White pigs 6 to 7 months old. The activity of the following enzymes was measured: glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), lactate dehydrogenase using high (LDH-h) or low (LDH-b) pyruvate concentrations in the reaction medium, citrate synthase (CS), and myofibrillar Ca-Mg activated ATPase. Haeminic iron and ultimate pH (pHu) were measured on the same samples. The results showed a negative, rather linear relationship between GAPDH, LDH and ATPase activities on the one hand and CS and haeminic iron on the other. Rather high correlations (r = 0.7 to 0.8) were observed between metabolic and contractile criteria and pHu; the red (slow) muscles had the highest pHu.
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PMID:[Enzyme metabolic and contractile activities of 30 pig muscles. Relation with the final ph attained after death]. 293 86

This study was undertaken to determine biochemical and functional (in vivo) adaptations of the rodent neonatal heart in response to a training program of endurance running. Ten day-old rats were progressively trained on a treadmill (final intensity, 21 m/min, 30% grade, 1 h/day) until 75 days of age. The training program induced 14, 57, and 24% increases in relative heart mass, skeletal muscle citrate synthase activity, and whole-body maximal O2 uptake, respectively (P less than 0.05). Cardiac myosin (ATPase) and Ca2+-regulated myofibril ATPase were both reduced by approximately 15% in trained vs. sedentary animals (P less than 0.05). In the majority of trained hearts examined, the myosin isozyme profile reflected an estimated 14 +/- 3% shift toward the V3 or low ATPase isozyme. Left ventricular functional indices during submaximal exercise, derived from a fluid-filled indwelling cannula, indicated that the trained animals maintained similar left ventricular (LV) systolic pressure, LV + the time derivative of pressure, and systemic arterial mean blood pressure compared with their sedentary counterparts. These functional parameters were maintained even though the trained animals performed with lower submaximal exercise heart rate. These findings suggest that maximal exercise capacity can be enhanced in neonatal rats even though the biochemical potential for ATP degradation in the cardiac contractile system is lowered. We speculate that the trend to maintain the myosin isozyme pattern further in the direction of the V3 isozyme in the trained neonatal rat heart may reflect a means to economize cross-bridge cycling while maintaining normal levels of ventricle performance at a given submaximal work load.
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PMID:Effects of training on biochemical and functional properties of rodent neonatal heart. 293 83

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

This study was undertaken to examine the influence of guanethidine monosulfate-induced sympathectomy on exercise-induced adaptations of cardiac contractile protein and on acute hemodynamic responses to exercise involving female neonatal rats. Four groups of rats were studied: 1) normal sedentary (NS), 2) normal trained (NT), 3) sympathectomized sedentary (SS), and 4) sympathectomized trained (ST). The 9-wk running program, which began at 20 days of age, induced increases in whole-body maximal O2 consumption and skeletal-muscle citrate synthase activity in both NT and ST groups compared with NS (P less than 0.05). Submaximal exercise tests demonstrated circulatory adaptations for NT, SS, and ST groups compared with NC; however, the ST group demonstrated the greatest degree of altered cardiac function (decreased heart rate, left ventricular pressure, and contractility index) during exercise. Also, significant reductions in both myosin- and Ca2+-regulated myofibril adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase) activity and increases in the relative content of the low ATPase myosin isozyme, V3, occurred in the hearts of the two trained groups (P less than 0.05). These findings suggest that chronic exercise involving normal and sympathectomized neonatal rats improves cardiac function without compromising maximal exercise capacity. Also, the exercise-related adaptation involving myosin isozyme shifts are exaggerated when involvement of the sympathetic nervous system is reduced during training.
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PMID:Cardiac biochemical and functional adaptations to exercise in sympathectomized neonatal rats. 293 64

Sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles and mitochondria were prepared from red and white skeletal muscles of the rabbit. The preparations were characterized in terms of their specific activities of citrate synthase, basal (Mg2+-dependent) and Ca2+-dependent ATPase (the latter two in the presence of NaN3 and ouabain), and their specific carbonic anhydrase activities were determined. Skeletal muscle mitochondria had high specific activities of citrate synthase (700-1200 mu. mg protein-1) and low carbonic anhydrase activities (0.1-0.4 u. ml mg protein-1). The latter are likely to be due to a contamination of the preparations with sarcoplasmic reticulum (s.r.) Preparations of s.r. vesicles showed negligible activities of citrate synthase and the expected differing patterns of basal and Ca2+-dependent ATPase in red and white muscles. Specific carbonic anhydrase activities in s.r. from both muscle types were high (2-4 u. ml mg protein-1). The highest carbonic anhydrase activity, 11 u. ml mg protein-1, was found in s.r. from rabbit m. masseter. The inhibition constant of s.r. carbonic anhydrase towards acetazolamide was 4-6 X 10(-8) M and similar but not identical to that of cytosolic carbonic anhydrase II. It appears possible that the carbonic anhydrase II-like enzyme previously found by us in muscle homogenates (Siffert & Gros, 1982) originates from the s.r. Histochemical studies using the dansylsuphonamide method described previously (Dermietzel, Leibstein, Siffert, Zamboglou & Gros, 1985) showed an intracellular pattern of carbonic anhydrase staining compatible with the presence of the enzyme in s.r.: spots homogeneously distributed across the fibre cross-sections in transversely sectioned fibres and thin, longitudinally oriented, bands in longitudinally sectioned fibres. It is estimated that s.r. carbonic anhydrase accelerates CO2 hydration within the s.r. approximately 1000-fold. Thus, CO2 and HCO3- react fast enough to provide a rapid source and sink for protons leaving and entering the s.r. in exchange for Ca2+.
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PMID:Carbonic anhydrase in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of rabbit skeletal muscle. 293 36

Concentrations of high-energy phosphates and activities of key enzymes of energy metabolism were assessed in hearts from species with differing levels of cardiac power output. Positive correlations were found between resting power output and the total adenylate pool and between citrate synthase activity and the total adenylate pool. Maximum in vitro activity levels of enzymes from energy metabolism were compared with calculated resting cardiac power output and maximal cardiac power output (as reflected by total oligomycin-insensitive adenosine-triphosphatase activity). Three indexes of carbohydrate metabolism (hexokinase, pyruvate kinase, and L-lactate dehydrogenase) all plateau at relatively low levels of energy demand. In contrast, enzymes required for aerobic fatty acid metabolism, (carnitine palmitoyltransferase and 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase) and for tricarboxylic acid and electron transport (citrate synthase and cytochrome-c oxidase) show consistent increases as ATP demand is elevated. It appears that as capacity for power development by vertebrate hearts, increases across taxa, the elevated demand for ATP is met by expansion of fatty acid based aerobic metabolism and not carbohydrate metabolism.
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PMID:Matching of vertebrate cardiac energy demand to energy metabolism. 295 61

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


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