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)

Insulin- and contraction-stimulated skeletal muscle glucose transport is governed largely by the GLUT-4 isoform of the glucose transporter. Recently, it has been demonstrated that denervated muscle has decreased GLUT-4 protein content, suggesting that regulation of GLUT-4 protein is related to neuromuscular activity. However, until now the effects of the opposite situation, enhanced neuromuscular activity, could only be speculated on from exercise training studies. In the present investigation the effect of chronic low-frequency electrical stimulation (10 Hz, 8 h/day) on GLUT-4 protein content and citrate synthase activity was determined in the predominantly fast-twitch plantaris. Chronic electrical stimulation enhanced GLUT-4 protein content and citrate synthase activity in the muscles stimulated for 10-20 days. Electrical stimulation lasting 30-40 days resulted in no further enhancement of GLUT-4 protein content while citrate synthase activity continued to increase. Further prolongation of electrical stimulation (60-90 days) resulted in a plateauing of citrate synthase activity. The results suggest that increased neuromuscular activity can act independently of systemic changes to increase total GLUT-4 protein content. They also suggest that both GLUT-4 protein content and citrate synthase activity are positively related to increased neuromuscular activity but that their rates of increase differ substantially.
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PMID:Effect of chronic electrical stimulation on GLUT-4 protein content in fast-twitch muscle. 847 25

Voluntary wheel running for 4 or 8 wk was used to assess whether a volitional training stimulus would induce adaptations in the oxidative capacity [citrate synthase activity (CS)], glucose phosphorylation capacity [hexokinase activity (HK)], and glucose transporter protein level (GLUT-4) of rat respiratory muscles. Running distances averaged approximately 10-13 km/day over the final 5 wk of training. Peak oxygen consumption by the trained animals was 17% greater (P < 0.05) than by age-matched sedentary control animals after 8 wk. CS, HK, and GLUT-4 in soleus and plantaris muscles all increased because of exercise training. CS increased in the rectus abdominis (+17%), external oblique (+28%), and internal oblique (+17%) but not in the costal or crural diaphragm after 4 wk of training. However, after 8 wk, CS in the costal diaphragm was 39% greater than control but was unchanged in the crural diaphragm. Whereas HK was significantly greater than control in the costal diaphragm (+18%) and rectus abdominis (+54%) after 4 wk, 8 wk of running were required for increases in HK in the external oblique (+17%) and internal oblique (+14%). HK in the crural diaphragm was not significantly altered by the exercise training. GLUT-4 did not change significantly in any of the respiratory muscles studied. These results indicate that significant adaptations in the glucose phosphorylation capacity and oxidative capacity of both inspiratory and expiratory muscles can take place in response to voluntary exercise. However, this same stimulus is not sufficient to cause an adaptive response in GLUT-4 protein level in these respiratory muscles.
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PMID:Metabolic responses of rat respiratory muscles to voluntary exercise training. 856 34

We have used an animal model of insulin resistance-the obese Zucker (fa/fa) rat-to test whether oral administration of the non-sulfhydryl-containing angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor, trandolapril, alone or in combination with the Ca2+-channel blocker, verapamil, can induce a beneficial effect on insulin-stimulated glucose transport and metabolism in skeletal muscle. Insulin-stimulated 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) uptake in the isolated epitrochlearis muscle was less than 50% as great in obese animals compared with lean (Fa/-) controls (P < .05), but was significantly improved in the obese group by both short-term (6 hours, +33%) and long-term (14 days,+70%) oral treatment with trandolapril. Verapamil treatment alone did not alter insulin-stimulated 2-DG uptake in muscle, but simultaneous administration of verapamil and trandolapril resulted in the most pronounced effect on insulin-stimulated 2-DG uptake (+106%). Long-term treatment with trandolapril alone and in combination with verapamil significantly increased muscle glycogen (+26% to 27%), glucose transporter GLUT-4 protein (+27% to 31%), and hexokinase activity (+21% to 49%), and decreased plasma insulin levels (-23% to -29%). Muscle citrate synthase activity was enhanced only when trandolapril and verapamil were administered in combination (+24%). We conclude that the long-acting, non-sulfhydryl-containing ACE inhibitor, trandolapril, alone and in combination with the Ca2+-channel blocker, verapamil, can significantly improve insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity in skeletal muscle of the insulin-resistant obese Zucker rat, and that this improvement is associated with favorable adaptive responses in GLUT-4 protein levels, glycogen storage, and activities of relevant intracellular enzymes of glucose catabolism.
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PMID:Effects of trandolapril and verapamil on glucose transport in insulin-resistant rat skeletal muscle. 862 94

Hindlimb weight bearing after a 3-day period of hindlimb suspension (reweighting) of juvenile rats results in a marked transient elevation in soleus glycogen concentration that cannot be explained on the basis of the activities of glycogen synthase and phosphorylase. We have hypothesized that enhanced glucose transport activity could underlie this response. We directly tested this hypothesis by assessing the response of insulin-dependent and insulin-independent glucose transport activity (in vitro 2-[1,2-3H]deoxy-D-glucose uptake) as well as glucose transporter (GLUT-4) protein levels during a 48-h reweighting period. After a net glycogen loss (from 29 +/- 2 to 16 +/- 1 nmol/mg muscle; P < 0.05) during the first 2 h of reweighting, glycogen accumulated at an average rate of 1.4 nmol.mg-1.h-1 up to 18 h, reaching an apex of 38 +/- 1 nmol/mg. During this same reweighting period, insulin-independent, but not insulin-dependent, glucose transport activity was significantly enhanced (P < 0.05 vs. weight-bearing control values) and was associated with an elevated level of GLUT-4 protein and the specific activity of total hexokinase. The specific activity of citrate synthase was also increased. By 24 h of reweighting, although insulin-independent glucose transport activity and GLUT-4 protein remained elevated, glycogen accumulation had ceased, likely due to enhanced phosphorylase activity at this time point. These results are consistent with the interpretation that the glycogen supercompensation seen during reweighting of the rat soleus may be regulated in part by an enhanced glucose flux arising from an increase in insulin-independent glucose transport activity and hexokinase activity.
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PMID:Role of glucose transport in glycogen supercompensation in reweighted rat skeletal muscle. 872 37

The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between skeletal muscle GLUT-4 protein and postexercise glycogen storage in human subjects fed adequate carbohydrate. Eleven men completed 2 h of cycling, and a biopsy of the vastus lateralis was performed immediately after exercise cessation for the determination of muscle GLUT-4 protein and glycogen concentrations, glycogen synthase activity, and citrate synthase activity. The subjects ingested meals providing 2.0 g carbohydrate/kg body weight at 0, 2, and 4 h postexercise, and a second biopsy was performed 6 h postexercise. Muscle glycogen concentration increased significantly during the 6-h recovery period (glycogen immediately postexercise, 27.2 +/- 5.4 mmol/kg wet weight; glycogen storage, 52.4 +/- 2.9 mmol x kg wet weight-1 x 6 h-1; P<0.05). Glycogen storage during recovery was directly related to GLUT-4 protein (2.20 +/- 0.33 arbitrary standard units; r = 0.63; P<0.05) and inversely related to glycogen immediately postexercise (r = -0.70; P < 0.05). A direct correlation existed between glycogen storage during recovery and the activity of the I form of glycogen synthase (r = 0.60; P < 0.05). These results suggest that muscle GLUT-4 protein concentration, as well as factors relating to glucose disposal, may affect postexercise glycogen storage in humans fed adequate carbohydrate.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle GLUT-4 and postexercise muscle glycogen storage in humans. 892 77

The potential role of neurotrophic factors in the decline of glucose transporter (GLUT-4) protein levels and citrate synthase (CS) activity was studied by comparing distally with proximally denervated juvenile rat soleus muscle. Severing of the tibial nerve produced distal (long stump) or proximal (short stump) denervation. GLUT-4 levels and CS activities were measured at 24-h intervals for up to 96 h after denervation. No differences were observed in GLUT-4 or CS activity between soleus muscles left with short or long nerve stumps at any time point. However, within just 24 h, denervation decreased (P < 0.05). GLUT-4 and CS (67.4 +/- 3.3 and 63.4 +/- 1.7% of innervated control values, respectively). Both parameters continued to decline up to 96 h (44.4 +/- 3.1 and 48.7 +/- 4.0%, respectively). There was a significant correlation between the GLUT-4 protein level and CS activity over this 96-h period of denervation (r = 0.653, P < 0.001). A similar response in the 24-h denervated soleus of adult rats was observed. In contrast, 24-h denervation of red gastrocnemius (type IIa fibers) left with a long nerve stump resulted in a prevention of the decline of GLUT-4 and CS seen in red gastrocnemius left with a short nerve stump in both juvenile and adult animals. These results suggest that unlike type IIa muscles, the decline in GLUT-4 level and CS activity in type I soleus muscle after denervation results from a lack of coordinated electrical activity but likely does not involve a neurotrophic agent. These results also support the hypothesis that there is coregulation of decreased expression of GLUT-4 protein and CS activity in this model of reduced neuromuscular activity.
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PMID:GLUT-4 protein and citrate synthase activity in distally or proximally denervated rat soleus muscle. 903 39

Skeletal muscle glucose transport can be regulated by hormonal factors such as insulin and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I). Although it is well established that exercise training increases insulin action on muscle glucose transport, it is currently unknown whether exercise training leads to an enhancement of IGF-I-stimulated glucose transport in skeletal muscle. Therefore, we measured glucose transport activity [by using 2-deoxy-D-glucose glucose (2-DG) uptake] in the isolated rat epitrochlearis muscle stimulated by submaximally and maximally effective concentrations of insulin (0.2 and 13.3 nM) or IGF-I (5 and 50 nM) after 1, 2, and 3 wk of voluntary wheel running (WR). After 1 wk of WR, both submaximal and maximal insulin-stimulated 2-DG uptake rates were significantly (P < 0.05) enhanced (43 and 31%) compared with those of sedentary controls, and these variables were further increased after 2 (86 and 57%) and 3 wk (71 and 70%) of WR. Submaximal and maximal IGF-I-stimulated 2-DG uptake rates were significantly enhanced after 1 wk of WR (82 and 61%, and these increases did not expand substantially after 2 (71 and 58%) and 3 wk (96 and 70%) of WR. This enhancement of hormone-stimulated 2-DG uptake in WR muscles preceded any alteration in glucose transporter (GLUT-4) protein level, which increased only after 2 (24%) and 3 wk (54%) of WR. Increases in GLUT-4 protein were significantly correlated (r = 0.844) with increases in citrate synthase. These results indicate that exercise training can enhance both insulin-stimulated and IGF-I-stimulated muscle glucose transport activity and that these improvements can develop without an increase in GLUT-4 protein.
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PMID:Voluntary exercise training enhances glucose transport in muscle stimulated by insulin-like growth factor I. 904 30

The effects of exercise training on maximal glucose transport activity and cell surface GLUT-4 were examined in rat epitrochlearis muscle. Five days of swim training (2 x 3 h/day) produce a significant increase in citrate synthase activity (24.5 +/- 0.6 vs. 20.1 +/- 0.7 micromol x min(-1) x g(-1)), GLUT-4 content (22.9 +/- 0.8 vs. 17.4 +/- 0.4% GLUT-4 standard), and glycogen levels (54.3 +/- 9.4 vs. 28.6 +/- 9.4 micromol/g). Maximally, insulin-stimulated glucose transport activity and cell surface GLUT-4 are increased by 55 (1.50 +/- 0.11 vs. 0.97 +/- 0.10 micromol x ml(-1) x 20 min(-1)) and 48% [12.0 +/- 0.8 vs. 8.1 +/- 0.9 disintegrations x min(-1) (dpm) x mg(-1)], respectively, in exercise-trained epitrochlearis muscles. In contrast, hypoxia-stimulated glucose transport activity and cell surface GLUT-4 are reduced by 38 (0.78 +/- 0.08 vs.1.25 +/- 0.14 micromol x ml(-1) x 20 min(-1)) and 40% (5.7 +/- 0.9 vs. 9.4 +/- 1.2 dpm/mg), respectively, in exercise-trained epitrochlearis muscles. These results demonstrate that changes in insulin- and hypoxia-stimulated glucose transport activity after exercise training are fully accounted for by the appearance of cell surface GLUT-4 and support the concept of two intracellular pools of GLUT-4. Finally, we propose that high levels of muscle glycogen with exercise training may contribute to the decrease in hypoxia-stimulated glucose transport activity.
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PMID:Effects of exercise training on glucose transport and cell surface GLUT-4 in isolated rat epitrochlearis muscle. 912 41

We examined skeletal and cardiac muscle responses of mature (8 mo) and old (23 mo) male Fischer 344 rats to 14 days of hindlimb suspension. Hexokinase (HK) and citrate synthase (CS) activities and GLUT-4 glucose transporter protein level, which are coregulated in many instances of altered neuromuscular activity, were analyzed in soleus (Sol), plantaris (PI), tibialis anterior (TA), extensor digitorum longus (EDL), and left ventricle. Protein content was significantly (P < 0.05) lower in all four hindlimb muscles after suspension compared with controls in both mature (21-44%) and old (17-43%) rats. Old rats exhibited significantly lower CS activities than mature rats for the Sol, Pl, and TA. HK activities were significantly lower in the old rats for the Pl (19%) and TA (33%), and GLUT-4 levels were lower in the old rats for the TA (38%) and EDL (24%) compared with the mature rats. Old age was also associated with a decrease in CS activity (12%) and an increase in HK activity (14%) in cardiac muscle. CS activities were lower in the Sol (20%) and EDL (18%) muscles from mature suspended rats and in the Sol (25%), Pl (27%), and EDL (25%) muscles from old suspended rats compared with corresponding controls. However, suspension was associated with significantly higher HK activities for all four hindlimb muscles examined, in both old (16-57%) and mature (10-43%) rats, and higher GLUT-4 concentrations in the TA muscles of the old rats (68%) but not the mature rats. These results indicate that old age is associated with decreased CS and HK activities and GLUT-4 protein concentration for several rat hindlimb muscles, and these variables are not coregulated during suspension. Finally, old rat skeletal muscle appears to respond to suspension to a similar or greater degree than mature rat muscle responds.
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PMID:Muscle adaptations to hindlimb suspension in mature and old Fischer 344 rats. 917 53

This study tested the hypothesis that alterations in the metabolic integrity of grafted muscle contribute to its diminished ability to sustain power. Compared with control muscles, muscles studied 120 days after the grafting procedure had lower specific force and sustained power. The sustained power protocol resulted in a depletion of muscle glycogen in control (83%) and grafted (85%) animals. Grafts had lower pre- and poststimulation glycogen, diminished citrate synthase activity, and greater hexokinase activity. No differences were observed in phosphofructokinase activity, glucose transporter GLUT-4 content, fiber type, beta-adrenergic-receptor (beta-AR) density, or binding affinity. Isoproterenol-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity was lower in grafted vs. control muscle, suggesting an uncoupling of the beta-AR-effector complex. Thus the diminished ability of the grafted muscle to sustain power may be explained, in part, by a decrease in energy available from glycogen stores and/or a decrease in oxidative capacity.
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PMID:Functional deficits in medial gastrocnemius grafts in rats: relation to muscle metabolism and beta-AR regulation. 921 46


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