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)

The case of a female patient with cardio-encephalo-myopathy who died of her illness at one year of age, similarly to her three sisters, is reported. In autopsy samples, like muscle, heart, liver and cerebellum activities of several mitochondrial enzymes were determined. In the skeletal muscle serious decrease of carnitine acetyltransferase was observed (from the normal 4.8 U/g to 0.08 U/g wet weight), while in other tissues this activity was normal. In the muscle activities of several other mitochondrial enzymes were also decreased (cytochrome oxidase, NADH cytochrome C oxidoreductase, citrate synthase), while in other tissues there were no similar changes. Serious distortion was observed in the structure of the majority of mitochondria of muscle and heart by electronmicroscopy. The number of the Purkinje-cells in the cerebellum decreased, and the cells were shrunken, their axons were fragmented and disoriented. Also the structure of the mitochondria was abnormal in the Purkinje-cells, while it was normal in other areas of the cerebrum. In te tissues of the patient normal and deleted mitochondrial DNA coexisted as which could explain the genetic background of this disease at molecular level.
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PMID:[Mitochondrial DNA deletion in hereditary cardio-encephalo-myopathy]. 759 86

Previous studies demonstrated that one of the most significant cellular responses of the rabbit urinary bladder to partial outlet obstruction is a 50% decrease in the activities of the mitochondrial enzymes citrate synthase and malate dehydrogenase, when calculated as either activity per unit mass or activity per mg protein. A major question arose from these studies: Are the mitochondrial enzyme activities per mitochondrion reduced, or is the number of mitochondria per unit tissue mass reduced? The current experiments were designed to study the sequential changes in the activities of mitochondrial oxidative enzymes following partial outlet obstruction. The activities of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (NCCR), cytochrome oxidase (CO), citrate synthase (CS) and malate dehydrogenase (MDH) were measured in whole tissue homogenates and in mitochondrial preparations of separated bladder mucosa and muscle, from normal bladders, and, from hypertrophied bladders at 1, 3, and 7 days following partial outlet obstruction. The results can be summarized as follows: 1) Whole tissue homogenates: Activities of all enzymes were reduced to approximately 50% of control at 1 day following partial outlet obstruction. NCCR and CO activities returned to 75 and 85% of control respectively by 7 days post-obstruction; CS activity did not show any significant recovery over the 7 day period. 2) Mucosal and smooth muscle mitochondrial preparations: Activities of all enzymes were decreased significantly by 50% or greater at 1 day following partial outlet obstruction. The cytochrome (NCCR and CO) enzyme activities returned to control levels by 7 days post-obstruction; CS activity showed only a minor recovery over this time period. These results show that mitochondrial enzyme activity is significantly impaired immediately following partial outlet outlet obstruction, and whereas the activity of the cytochrome enzymes NCCR and CO recover to control levels (in the mitochondrial preparations) within 7 days post obstruction, the Krebs cycle enzymes (CS and MD) show no significant recovery. Thus, the regulatory mechanisms for the cytochromes is significantly different from that for the enzymes of the krebs cycle.
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PMID:Alterations of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism in rabbit urinary bladder after partial outlet obstruction. 787 5

To evaluate the effects of physical training on mitochondrial gene expression and mitochondrial biogenesis in slow-twitch muscle, adult female Sprague-Dawley rats were trained for 3, 6, and 12 wk by running on a motor-driven treadmill (speed of 25 m/min and duration of 90 min/day, 5 days/wk), and the activities of citrate synthase, ubiquinol-cytochrome-c oxidoreductase, cytochrome oxidase, mitochondrial cytochrome b mRNA (by Northern blot analysis), and mitochondrial DNA (by slot-blot and Southern blot analyses) were measured in rat soleus muscle. A DNA probe for detection of mitochondrial mRNA and DNA was prepared from a 1,500-bp fragment of human mitochondrial DNA that included the coding region of the cytochrome b gene. Training for 3, 6, and 12 wk significantly increased the activities of citrate synthase (31, 28, and 47%, respectively), ubiquinol-cytochrome-c oxidoreductase (61, 63, and 77%, respectively), and cytochrome oxidase (25, 26, and 32%, respectively) in muscle. The concentration of cytochrome b mRNA in the muscle was proportionally elevated with the enzyme activities. On the other hand, the mitochondrial DNA concentration in the muscle was not altered by training for 3 or 6 wk but increased significantly after training for 12 wk (35% in the slot-blot analysis and 31% in the Southern blot analysis). These results suggest that an increase in the oxidative capacity of slow-twitch muscle by the relatively short-term training is regulated at the pretranslational step in mitochondrial protein synthesis but that the increase by the long-term training involves mitochondrial replication.
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PMID:Enzymatic and genetic adaptation of soleus muscle mitochondria to physical training in rats. 794 19

The effects of three bisethyl polyamine analogs on mitochondrial structure and function were examined in human HeLa and L1210 murine leukemia cells. N, N' Bis-[3(ethylamino)-propyl]1-7- heptane diamine (BEPH), and its octane (BEPO), and butane (BESPM) derivative, were shown by electron microscopy and/or Rhodamine 123 uptake studies to alter the structural integrity of mitochondria when both cell lines were treated at the approximate IC50 dose of each drug. At this dose, BEPH had no marked effects on levels of the naturally occurring polyamines, putrescine, spermidine or spermine, in either cell line whereas BEPO and BESPM treatment did result in pool depletion. Southern blot analysis demonstrated a time and dose-dependent loss of mitochondrial DNA from BEPH-treated L1210 cultures suggesting that loss of mitochondrial integrity extended to the DNA level. Treatment of L1210 cells with all three analogs revealed marked reductions in the activity of two mitochondrial enzymes citrate synthase and cytochrome C oxidase. HeLa cells treated with all three analogs exhibited markedly reduced levels of ATP, complete loss of cytidine triphosphate (CTP) and near total depletion of uridine triphosphate (CTP) and near total depletion of uridine triphosphate (UTP). There was also a loss of colony forming ability in HeLa cells which could be nearly completely reversed by the addition of either uridine or cytidine suggesting that NTP reduction may be the primary antiproliferative determinant in these cells. Growth inhibition by BEPH in L1210 cells was markedly potentiated by the glycolysis inhibitor, 2-deoxyglucose, which had no such effect in otherwise untreated cells. This suggests that BEPH treatment of L1210 cells results in impairment of mitochondrial ATP synthesis and activation of the glycolytic pathway for energy production. 2-deoxyglucose treatment also completely prevented the increase of ATP by BEPH treatment of L1210 cells. It is concluded that all three bisethyl polyamines alter HeLa and L1210 mitochondria both structurally and functionally and that these alterations may play a primary role in the antiproliferative activity of these agents in HeLa cells. In L1210, the different spectra of cellular biochemical changes following bisethyl polyamine treatment suggests that additional mechanisms may be in effect.
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PMID:Anti-mitochondrial effects of bisethyl polyamines in mammalian cells. 801 33

To investigate energy metabolism in migraine, we determined platelet mitochondrial enzyme activities in 40 patients with migraine with aura and in 40 patients with migraine without aura during attack-free intervals and in 24 healthy control subjects. NADH-dehydrogenase, citrate synthase and cytochrome-c-oxidase activities in both patient groups were significantly lower than in controls (p < 0.01), while NADH-cytochrome-c-reductase activity was reduced only in migraine with aura (p < 0.01). No alteration in succinate-dehydrogenase was observed. Monoamine-oxidase activity differed between sexes (p < 0.05) but within each sex group no difference was observed between patients and controls. We hypothesize that the defect in mitochondrial enzymes observed indicates a systemic impairment of mitochondrial function in migraine patients.
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PMID:Abnormal platelet mitochondrial function in patients affected by migraine with and without aura. 820 18

The spatial heterogeneity of myocardial perfusion and metabolism was studied in 11 anaesthetized dogs under resting conditions. In each heart local myocardial blood flow was assessed using the tracer microsphere technique in 256 samples (mean mass: 83.1 mg) taken from the left anterior ventricular wall. In the same samples, the following biochemical parameters were determined: accumulation of [3H]-deoxyglucose (a measure of glucose uptake), free cytosolic adenosine (S-adenosylhomocysteine accumulation technique, a measure of tissue oxygenation and a possible mediator of blood flow regulation), and the specific activities of oxidative (citrate synthase, cytochrome-c-oxidase) and glycolytic (hexokinase, phosphoglycerate kinase) enzymes. Capillary density and mitochondrial and myofibril volume densities were determined by morphometry. Myocardial perfusion in each sample (average 0.77 ml min-1 g-1) varied between 0.1 and 2.5 times the mean (coefficient of variation 0.30+/-0.02). [3H]-deoxyglucose was deposited locally in proportion to perfusion. Samples showing low flow (<0.2 ml min-1 g-1) did not exhibit increased levels of cytosolic adenosine. The specific activities of the oxidative and glycolytic enzymes, however, were uniformly distributed between low and high flow areas. Furthermore, capillary density and mitochondrial and myofibril densities were similar in high and low flow regions. The results show firstly that local glucose metabolism in the heart occurs in proportion to local blood flow, suggesting that high flow regions have a higher than average metabolic rate. Secondly, regions of low flow are not compromized by critical oxygenation and most likely have a lower than average oxygen demand and finally, the homogeneous distribution of oxidative and glycolytic enzymes, as well as the homogeneous myocardial ultrastructure, suggest that areas with high and low blood flow under resting conditions may increase their metabolic rate to similar levels when required.
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PMID:Spatial heterogeneity of blood flow in the dog heart. I. Glucose uptake, free adenosine and oxidative/glycolytic enzyme activity. 876 4

Previous studies have reported that liver mitochondria may be fractionated into different subpopulations. However, no careful studies have been performed to exclude mitochondrial damage and to investigate more thoroughly the possible biochemical differences existing between the subpopulations. In this study, we analysed the integrity and the biochemical properties of rat liver mitochondria. Mitochondrial fractions were obtained by differential centrifugation at different gravitational forces: 1000 g (M1 fraction), 3000 g (M3 fraction) and 10,000 g (M10 fraction). The integrity of these organelles was checked by measuring citrate synthase activity both in the presence and absence of Triton X-100 detergent. Biochemical analyses included polarographic determination of cytochrome oxidase activity and respiratory parameters and spectrophotometric determination of cytochrome content. (1) The integrity of mitochondria was almost homogeneous between fractions (88.5, 80 and 78.3% in M1, M3 and M10 fractions, respectively). (2) The heaviest M1 fraction contains mitochondria which are on average twice as large as M3 and about three times as large as M10. (3) The M1 fraction exhibited the highest specific cytochrome oxidase activity (1040 +/- 20 n Atoms O/min x mg protein) and the highest respiratory rates (72 +/- 3 n Atoms O/min x mg protein and 526 +/- 45 n Atoms O/min x mg protein for States 4 and 3, respectively). Oxidative capacity and respiratory rates decreased as the size of the organelles decreased, reaching values of 1/5 and 1/14 in the M3 and M10 fractions as compared to the M1. (4) These changes are accompanied by a change in the respiratory control ratio (RCR), which varies from 7.3 in M1 to about 2.0 in M10. A similar trend was observed in cytochrome contents but the differences were not as great as cytochrome oxidase activity and State 3 respiration. These results, as a whole, show that a mitochondrial heterogeneity exists in rat liver cell. We suggest that the above-mentioned differences might represent steps of mitochondrial maturation. The maturation would be fundamentally based on the increase of efficiency of the mechanism for ATP synthesis.
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PMID:Biochemical and functional differences in rat liver mitochondrial subpopulations obtained at different gravitational forces. 892 Jun 43

In patients with congestive heart failure, skeletal muscle is characterized by a smaller proportion of slow-twitch oxidative fibers and reduced oxidative enzyme activity. However, whether these changes result from disuse or occur as a direct consequence of heart failure is unresolved. To address this issue, 18 rats with heart failure 8 weeks after left coronary artery ligation and 13 sham-operated control rats underwent quantification of locomotor activity by a photocell activation technique, measurements of hemodynamics and infarct size, histochemical and morphological analyses of the soleus and plantaris muscles, and Northern analyses of muscle contractile protein and oxidative enzyme mRNA expression. Although the rats with heart failure had elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressures (24.1 +/- 2.6 mm Hg) and a mean infarct size of 35.1 +/- 4.1%, activity levels were similar to those found in the sham-operated rats (3849 +/- 304 versus 3526 +/- 130 counts per hour). With heart failure, there was a significant reduction of type I fibers in the soleus muscle and type IIa fibers in the plantaris muscle, with corresponding increases in intermediate staining of type IIab fibers in both muscles. This was associated with a 17% decrease in citrate synthase activity in both the soleus and plantaris muscles (26.2 +/- 1.6 versus 30.7 +/- 3.4 and 29.1 +/- 2.4 versus 35.7 +/- 3.4 mumol/L per minute per gram, respectively [P < .05]). In the soleus muscle, mRNA for both beta-myosin heavy chains and cytochrome C oxidase III (normalized to 18S RNA) was reduced (0.27 +/- 0.02 versus 0.65 +/- 0.02 and 0.23 +/- 0.04 versus 0.64 +/- 0.02 U), whereas the messages for IIx and IIb myosin heavy chains were increased. A similar decrease in messages for cytochrome oxidase and the primary myosin isoform was observed in the plantaris muscle. Both soleus beta-myosin heavy chain and cytochrome C oxidase expression show significant inverse relationships to left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and infarct size. In contrast, there was no relationship between either beta-myosin heavy chain or cytochrome C oxidase expression and locomotor activity. These results indicate that in rats heart failure produces changes in skeletal muscle gene expression at the pretranslational level that cannot be explained by inactivity.
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PMID:Heart failure in rats causes changes in skeletal muscle morphology and gene expression that are not explained by reduced activity. 892 60

The activities of the enzymes NADH dehydrogenase, NADH cytochrome e reductase, succinate dehydrogenase, succinate cytochrome e reductase, cytochrome c oxidase and citrate synthase in normal and sick human skeletal muscle mitochondria were determined. A control group was formed by 13 normal people and without using continuous medication. The patient group was formed by 10 people whose pathological diagnosis indicated suspicion of mitochondrial myopathy. A decrease in the activity of the enzymes in all patient was observed: 7 with abnormality in all the tested enzymes; 2 with deficiencies in all the enzymes except cytochrome e oxidase; and 1 with dysfunction only in the activities of succinate dehydrogenase and succinate cytochrome e reductase. The results indicate multiple or combined deficiencies in the respiratory chain, besides dysfunction of citrate synthase in 9 patients. In one exceptional case, the enzymatic deficiency was restricted to complex II. It is possible to conclude that the methodology used herein is adequate and easily applicable to clinical objectives, and that the results obtained allow characterization of the deficient mitochondrial enzymatic complexes, thus showing that the origin of the diseases is an energetic metabolic dysfunction.
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PMID:[Characterization of mitochondrial myopathies through the evaluation of the enzymatic activities involved in energy metabolism]. 962 85

Recent findings support the view that the bioenergetic part of septic organ failure is not caused by insufficient supply of oxygen but by disturbances of the mitochondrial function. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to investigate key enzymes of energy metabolism in septic hearts to answer the question whether or not impairment of mitochondrial or glycolytic enzymes occur under these conditions. For this purpose the well established model of septic baboons was used. Baboons under general anesthesia were made septic by infusion of Escherichia coli. Single challenge with infusion of high amounts of bacteria was compared with a multiple challenge protocol (less bacteria infused). Some animals obtained no E. coli (sham). The hearts of the baboons were removed after 72 h (survival: yes) or after death (survival: no) of the animals, frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at -80 degrees C until spectrophotometrical measurement of nine mitochondrial and glycolytic enzymes. A reduction of the activity of NADH:cytochrome-c-reductase (Complex I + III) to 67% and succinate:cytochrome-c-reductase (Complex II + III) to 45% was found in the hearts of surviving animals after infusion of high amounts of bacteria. After multiple challenge with lesser amounts of bacteria, no significant changes in enzyme activity were detectable. After lethal septic shock, activities of Complex I + III (12%) and Complex II + III (13%) as well as of phosphofructokinase (16%) were found to be strongly diminished. Decylubiquinol:cytochrome-c-reductase (Complex III, 59%), cytochrome-c-oxidase (51%), succinate dehydrogenase (60%), glucosephosphate isomerase (61%), lactate dehydrogenase (61%), and citrate synthase (120%) were less or unaffected. Similar but less pronounced effects were found after infusion of lesser amounts of bacteria. By means of inhibitor titrations of succinate: cytochrome-c-reductase, it was shown that the loss of activity is not caused by Complex III but by disturbances in Complex II. It is concluded that E. coli-induced sepsis causes decreased activities of Complex I and Complex II in baboon heart mitochondria in a dose-dependent manner.
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PMID:Impaired energy metabolism in hearts of septic baboons: diminished activities of Complex I and Complex II of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. 1035 39


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