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

Individual muscle fibers from patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy at an early stage in their disease, and from apparently normal boys of similar age, were analyzed for 13 enzymes of energy metabolism. This approach avoided the serious problems with muscle homogenate assays from increases in nonparenchymal components and permitted assessment of disease changes in different fiber types. Some enzymes of glycogenolysis (phosphorylase, phosphoglucomutase, and pyruvate kinase) were decreased in dystrophic fibers of all types. Phosphofructokinase was decreased in presumptive type II fibers. Lactate dehydrogenase was increased in type I fibers and essentially unchanged in type II. Phosphoglucoisomerase was near normal. Two enzymes of glucose metabolism not involved in glycogenolysis, hexokinase and glycogen synthase, were near normal, but a third, fructose bisphosphatase, was sharply reduced. Two enzymes of oxidative metabolism, citrate synthase, and beta-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase, were unchanged or increased. Two enzymes of high energy phosphate transfer, creatine kinase and adenylokinase, were only marginally affected. The net result is to leave the type II fibers, which normally exert the greatest force, with a severe deficit in the glycogenolytic enzyme machinery to maintain that force.
...
PMID:Effect of Duchenne muscular dystrophy on enzymes of energy metabolism in individual muscle fibers. 360 Feb 88

An interest in both biochemical and clinical carnitine investigation has recently developed. A more complete and extensive study is obtained if acetyl-carnitine as well as carnitine are investigated. This research, using an improved and simplified method for carnitine and acetyl-carnitine determination in the same sample (1 ml) without radioisotopic tracer use, investigates if there are the same differences in their plasma levels at different times of the day. The sample was eluted in a chromatographic column (55 X 15 mm) containing Sephadex G-25M with phosphate buffer (25 mmol/l, pH 7.4). The fraction containing acetyl and free carnitine was divided and employed separately for two assays. The carnitine assay uses an enzymatic reaction catalyzed by carnitine acetyl-transferase (CAT) and measurements are carried out spectrophotometrically. The calibration curve shows r = 0.987 and sensitivity at 5 mumol/l (reference plasma values: 38 +/- 3 mumol/l in 9 subjects). The acetyl-carnitine assay is carried out concentrating the sample by lyophilization and then measuring the enzymatic coupled reactions catalyzed by CAT, malate dehydrogenase and citrate synthase fluorimetrically. The calibration curve gives r = 0.991 and sensitivity at 1.4 mumol/l (reference plasma values: 2.8 +/- 0.3 mumol/l in 9 subjects). Both assay methods are measured at the end point. The carnitine and acetyl-carnitine measured in the plasma of 6 normal subjects at different times of the day vary respectively from 28 to 37 mumol/l and from 1.1 to 5.2 mumol/l in agreement with plasma free fatty acid (FFA) variation from 230 to 779 microEq/l.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Plasma carnitine and acetyl-carnitine levels at different times of the day. 362 93

We determined representative enzyme activities of glycogenolysis (glycogen phosphorylase) glycolysis (d-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, GAPDH), beta oxidation of free fatty acids (1-3-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase, HADH), citric acid cycle (citrate synthase, CS), lactate fermentation (lactate dehydrogenase LDH), and creatine phosphate metabolism (creatine kinase, CK) in left ventricular samples of 36 patients to investigate if the metabolic capacities of the energy-supplying pathways are differently affected in different heart diseases. There were 17 patients with mitral valve diseases (MVD), 8 patients with aortic valve diseases (AVD), and 11 patients who suffered from dilative cardiomyopathies (DCM). The main metabolic characteristic on the level of enzymatic organization in patients with DCM was an increased ratio of GAPDH/HADH activities and a decreased ratio of HADH/CS activities compared to the valve-diseased patients. This result indicates that the capacity of glucose oxidation is enhanced at the expense of fatty acid metabolism in patients with DCM. Furthermore, we determined significantly lower myocardial CK activities in this group of patients, most probably reflecting a diminished content of myofibrils. Citrate synthase activity was lowest in patients with AVD. Although we cannot rule out that the impaired left ventricular function is in part responsible for the shift of the capacities of the energy-supplying metabolism in patients with DCM, we favor the assumption that it is a specific feature of this myocardial disease.
...
PMID:Comparative analysis of myocardial enzyme activities of the energy-supplying metabolism in patients with dilative cardiomyopathies and valve diseases. 370 46

Maximum activities of some key enzymes of metabolism were studied in elicited (inflammatory) macrophages of the mouse and lymph-node lymphocytes of the rat. The activity of hexokinase in the macrophage is very high, as high as that in any other major tissue of the body, and higher than that of phosphorylase or 6-phosphofructokinase, suggesting that glucose is a more important fuel than glycogen and that the pentose phosphate pathway is also important in these cells. The latter suggestion is supported by the high activities of both glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase. However, the rate of glucose utilization by 'resting' macrophages incubated in vitro is less than the 10% of the activity of 6-phosphofructokinase: this suggests that the rate of glycolysis is increased dramatically during phagocytosis or increased secretory activity. The macrophages possess higher activities of citrate synthase and oxoglutarate dehydrogenase than do lymphocytes, suggesting that the tricarboxylic acid cycle may be important in energy generation in these cells. The activity of 3-oxoacid CoA-transferase is higher in the macrophage, but that of 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase is very much lower than those in the lymphocytes. The activity of carnitine palmitoyltransferase is higher in macrophages, suggesting that fatty acids as well as acetoacetate could provide acetyl-CoA as substrate for the tricarboxylic acid cycle. No detectable rate of acetoacetate or 3-hydroxybutyrate utilization was observed during incubation of resting macrophages, but that of oleate was 1.0 nmol/h per mg of protein or about 2.2% of the activity of palmitoyltransferase. The activity of glutaminase is about 4-fold higher in macrophages than in lymphocytes, which suggests that the rate of glutamine utilization could be very high. The rate of utilization of glutamine by resting incubated macrophages was similar to that reported for rat lymphocytes, but was considerably lower than the activity of glutaminase.
...
PMID:Metabolism of glucose, glutamine, long-chain fatty acids and ketone bodies by murine macrophages. 380 Sep 71

Samples of bovine muscle (post rigor) were frozen at different temperatures between -5 degrees and -196 degrees C at different freezing rates, and thawed at room temperature. The activities of the mitochondrial enzymes lipoamide dehydrogenase, citrate synthase and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase were determined in the supernatant of the tissue homogenates in phosphate buffer (total enzyme activity), as well as in the press juice of the intact tissue (enzyme activity in the sarcoplasma). Neither the temperature nor the rate of freezing (varying from 25.5 to 0.01 min/degrees C) showed a significant influence on the total enzyme activities. Freezing at -5 degrees and -10 degrees C (at different rates but without intracellular freezing) and thawing did not result in an appreciable release of enzymes. Below -10 degrees C the release of the three enzymes from their binding to the inner membrane of the mitochondrion into the sarcoplasmic fluid increased upon rapid freezing with decreasing temperature i.e. with increasing intracellular ice formation, whereas at slow freezing (with extracellular ice formation only) freezing below -20 degrees C did not cause further enzyme release. At freezing temperatures below -20 degrees C rapid freezing resulted in a significantly stronger release of the three enzymes than slow freezing. From these results it was concluded that the damage to mitochondrial membranes upon fast freezing is primarily a result of intracellular (and perhaps also intramitochondrial) ice formation, whereas the membrane damage during slow freezing is primarily due to dehydration caused by the migration of water from the muscle fibers into the extracellular space as a result of osmotic effects. Ion concentration in the nonfreezing fraction of tissue water seems to be only of minor importance for the disintegration of mitochondrial membranes.
...
PMID:[Lipoamide dehydrogenase, citrate synthase and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase in skeletal muscle. VIII. The influence of temperature and rate of freezing of bovine muscle on the activity and subcellular distribution of the enzymes in the thawed tissue]. 384 Mar 12

Samples of bovine muscle (post rigor) were frozen at -30 degrees C at two different rates (1.27 min/degrees C and 13.10 min/degrees C) and thawed at different rates between 1.6 (22 degrees C) and 430 min/degrees C (0 degrees C). The activities of the mitochondrial enzymes lipoamide dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase were determined in the supernatant of the tissue homogenate in phosphate buffer (total activity) and in the press juice of the intact tissue (activity in the sarcoplasma). The rate of thawing did not show a significant influence on total enzyme activities. In most cases, however, slow thawing caused a greater release of the enzymes from the mitochondria into the sarcoplasmic fluid than fast thawing, this effect being apparently independent of the rate of freezing. The greater damage to mitochondrial membranes upon slow thawing cannot be due to a longer exposure of the muscle cell to increased ionic strength in the non-freezable part of the cell water at the "critical" temperature around -3 degrees C because freezing of muscle samples at -3 degrees C and incubating them at -3 degrees C for five days resulted neither in changes of the total enzyme activities nor in a release of the three mitochondrial enzymes. From these results it is concluded that the influence of thawing rate on the damage to muscle mitochondria is probably not due to ionic effects or to recrystallization phenomena in the ice phase.
...
PMID:[Lipoamide dehydrogenase, citrate synthase and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase in skeletal muscle. IX. The influence of the rate of thawing on activity and subcellular distribution in fast and slow frozen bovine muscle]. 384 Sep 38

The influence of storage of bovine and porcine muscle at -20 degrees C for 12 months and of thawing on the total extractable activity and subcellular distribution (activities in the supernatant of a phosphate buffer extract and in the press juice of the thawed tissue) of the mitochondrial enzymes lipoamide dehydrogenase (LIPDH), citrate synthase (CS) and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase (HADH) was studied. The total activity of LIPDH decreased during frozen storage whereas the activities of CS and HADH did not change appreciably. From the increase of CS and HADH activities in the muscle press juice it was concluded that--additionally to the effect of freezing and thawing itself--frozen storage results in further damage to the inner membrane of muscle mitochondria, which may be recognized from the increased release of membrane-bound enzymes. In this respect porcine muscle mitochondria seem to be more sensitive than bovine muscle mitochondria.
...
PMID:[Lipoamide dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase in skeletal muscles. X. The influence of frozen storage of bovine and porcine muscle on activity and subcellular distribution]. 384 Sep 39

The effect of electrical stimulation (ES) of beef carcasses at 450 V on the total extractable activity and subcellular distribution of the mitochondrial enzymes lipoamide dehydrogenase, citrate synthase and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase in skeletal muscle (activities in the supernatant of a phosphate buffer extract and in muscle press juice) was studied. There was no influence of ES on the total activity and the subcellular distribution of these enzymes in the muscle tissue stored at +2 degrees C for 7 days nor did ES influence the extent of the release of the three enzymes from the mitochondria into the sarcoplasm by freezing (-20 degrees C) and thawing. From these results it can be concluded that ES does not result in an appreciable disintegration of the inner membrane of muscle mitochondria.
...
PMID:[Lipoamide dehydrogenase, citrate synthase and beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase in skeletal muscle. 12. The influence of electric stimulation of beef carcasses on activity and subcellular distribution]. 384 Dec 48

Muscular glycolytic fuels, intermediates and end-products (glycogen, glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, pyruvate, lactate), Krebs cycle intermediates (citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, malate), related free amino acids (glutamate, alanine), ammonia, energy store (creatine phosphate), energy mediators (ATP, ADP, AMP) and energy charge potential were evaluated. Furthermore the maximum rate (Vmax) of the following muscular enzyme activities was evaluated in the crude extract and/or mitochondrial fraction: for the anaerobic glycolytic pathway: hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase; for the tricarboxylic acid cycle: citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase; for the electron transfer chain: total NADH cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome oxidase. The rat gastrocnemius muscles were analyzed in normoxia and after repeated, alternate hypoxic and normoxic exposures (12 hours of hypoxia daily; for 5 days). Naftidrofuryl was administered daily at three different doses: 10, 15 and 22.5 mg/kg i.m., 30 min before the beginning of the experimental hypoxia. The biochemical adaptation to intermittent normobaric hypoxic-normoxic exposures was characterized by the decrease of the muscular contents of creatine phosphate, citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate. This adaptation occurred in absence of significant changes in the Vmax of the muscle enzymes tested. By naftidrofuryl treatment, in gastrocnemius muscle from hypoxic rats both alpha-ketoglutarate and creatine phosphate contents maintained normal values, while glutamate concentration remained reduced to subnormal values. With the exception of hexokinase, naftidrofuryl treatment did not modify the Vmax of marker enzymes related to energy transduction.
...
PMID:Adaptation of skeletal muscle energy metabolism to repeated hypoxic-normoxic exposures and drug treatment. 401 59

Muscular glycolytic fuels, intermediates and end-products (glycogen, glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, pyruvate, lactate), Krebs cycle intermediates (citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate, succinate, malate), related free amino acids (glutamate, alanine), ammonia, energy store (creatine phosphate), energy mediators (ATP, ADP, AMP) and energy charge potential were evaluated. Furthermore the maximum rate (Vmax) of the following enzyme activities was evaluated in the crude extract and/or mitochondrial fraction: for the anaerobic glycolytic pathway: hexokinase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase; for the tricarboxylic acid cycle: citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase; for the electron transfer chain: total NADH cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome oxidase. The rat gastrocnemius muscles were analysed in normoxia and after normobaric intermittent hypoxia (12 hours continuously daily; for 5 days). Cytidine and/or uridine were administered daily at the dose of 120 mg/kg, i.p., 30 min before the beginning of the experimental hypoxia. The intermittent normobaric hypoxia induced a biochemical adaptation characterized by the decrease of the muscular contents of creatine phosphate, citrate, alpha-ketoglutarate and glutamate. This adaptation occurred in the absence of significant changes in the Vmax of the tested muscle enzymes. In gastrocnemius muscle from hypoxic rats, the two biological pyrimidines tested induced various discrete, but often related, modifications of the contents of some Krebs cycle intermediates (i.e., alpha-ketoglutarate, malate) and related free amino acids (i.e., glutamate, alanine). In any case, the treatment with cytidine and/or uridine did not modify the Vmax of marker enzymes related to energy transduction.
...
PMID:Modification of the skeletal muscle energy metabolism induced by intermittent normobaric hypoxia and treatment with biological pyrimidines. 402 89


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>