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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 ratio NAD+/NADH in cytoplasm and mitochondria of chicken embryo liver does not change up to the stage of hatching. After the hatching this ratio decreases 2-fold in both cytoplasm and mitochondria. The hatching is also accompanied by the decrease of total and mitochondrial contents of oxaloacetate and of oxaloacetate/malate ratio, the activity of
citrate synthase
and the ratio acetyl-CoA/CoA being unchanged.
...
PMID:[Factors regulating gluconeogenesis in chick embryo liver]. 21 30
The activities of five mitochondrial enzymes tested in liver from patients with Reye's syndrome were measured. Citrate synthase, glutamic dehydrogenase, succinic dehydrogenase, pyruvate carboxylase, and pyruvate dehydrogenase were all outside of the range shown by control samples and well below them in activity. The activity of two extramitochondrial enzymes, glucose-6-phosphatase, which is a microsomal enzyme, and fructose-1,6-diphosphatase, which is a soluble enzyme, were in the normal range in samples from Reye's syndrome patients. In both muscle and brain the activities of the mitochondrial enzyme,
citrate synthase
, glutamic dehydrogenase, and succinic dehydrogenase were all within the control range. Pyruvate dehydrogenase was found to be normal in muscle from these patients.
...
PMID:Reye's syndrome: preservation of mitochondrial enzymes in brain and muscle compared with liver. 21 43
Citrate synthase and cytochrome c increase in soleus muscle of rats in response to excess thyroid hormones. The half times of the increase in the levels of
citrate synthase
and cytochrome c in soleus muscle during induction are greater than the half times of the decline in enzyme levels after cessation of treatment (15 days vs. 7 days for
citrate synthase
). Denervation of the soleus does not prevent the increase in
citrate synthase
in response to thyrotoxicosis. This provides evidence that thyroid hormones affect the muscle directly and not via the motor nerves. ATP concentration is reduced in liver, but not in soleus muscle in response to thyrotoxicosis. Creatine phosphate is not significantly altered in soleus muscle. Cyclic AMP is slightly lower in thyrotoxic soleus muscle. Simultaneous treatment with thyroid hormones and propranolol does not affect the increase in
citrate synthase
in response to excess thyroid hormones. It is concluded that the increase in muscle mitochondria associated with thyrotoxicosis is not mediated via the nervous system or by a cAMP-regulated process.
...
PMID:Time course of the T3- and T4-induced increase in rat soleus muscle mitochondria. 21 61
A crude mitochondrial fraction (M) derived from manually disrupted cerebellar tissue and enriched in choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity was fractionated by centrifugation in discontinuous and continuous sucrose gradients. Further purification of 'cholinergic' synaptosomes was achieved (relative specific activity (RSA) of ChAT greater than 3), but the overlap with other synaptosomal populations was still considerable. Hand-homogenized cerebella processed through the full fractionation procedure described here and in previous papers yielded preparations enriched in certain neuronal structures and a fraction in which 'heavy' free mitochondria was concentrated. To characterize these preparations the activities of two transmitter enzymes (CHAT and glutamate decarboxylase, GAD) and 6 mitochondrial enzymes (succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), monoamine oxidase,
citrate synthase
, fumarase and GABA-aminotransferase) were determined. The distribution of the transmitter enzymes was clearly different in the preparations containing various neuronal structures. The GAD:ChAT RSA ratio was 2.4 for the glomerulus particles, 1.3 for the molecular layer fragments, 0.6 for the myelinated axon segments, and 0.2 for the 'cholinergic' synaptosomes. The mitochondrial enzyme profile of the preparations comprising mainly neuronal structures differed markedly from that of the 'free' mitochondrial fraction. Notably the latter was greatly enriched in GDH (RSA 5.6), whereas the SDH:GDH RSA ratio was relatively high in the former preparations. Nevertheless there were notable differences in the enzyme profile of the fractions of predominantly neuronal origin indicating that the enzyme composition of mitochondria of neuronal processes is not uniform.
...
PMID:Subcellular fractionation of rat cerebellum: separation of synaptosomal populations and heterogeneity of mitochondria. 21 84
Typical metabolic patterns are detectable in the livers of growing rats after feeding diets with high (25%) or low (2%) fat contents. In view of the elucidation of problems related to the regulation of the metabolic processes, it is of interest to know in what way these metabolic patterns change after short-time change from the one diet to the other and if there are hierarchies. Within 2 days after change of diet, the enzymes glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NAD-malate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase,
citrate synthase
and fatty acid synthase were affected, only the 3'.5'-c AMP-splitting phosphodieterase showed no change. The metabolites lactate and pyruvate also changed, inversely to lactate dehydrogenase activity, the lactate-pyruvate ratio remaining almost constant. Acetyl CoA also responded in a characteristic manner. The single parameters were differently affected by the kind of the change of diet (from high-fat to low-fat diet or inversely). For example, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase responded very rapidly to the change from the high-fat to the low-fat diet, malate dehydrogenase behaved inversely, and
citrate synthase
responded to both changes. Consequently, the regulatory processes after change of diet start from different sides. It is thinkable that this behaviour is related to the different roles of the determined parameters in fat and energy metabolism.
...
PMID:[Behavior of certain parameters of lipid and energy metabolism. 5. Effects of high-fat and low-fat diets on certain biochemical parameters in rat livers before and after change of diet]. 21 48
The effects of thyroid deficiency (Td) and of chemical sympathectomy (Sx) were studied on marker enzymes of energy metabolism in cardiac muscle of neonatal and of adult rats. Td prevented the normal development of neonatal body weight, relative heart mass, and cardiac levels of cytochrome c (-22%),
citrate synthase
(-27%), phosphofructokinase (-20%) and Mg2+- and Ca2+-ATPase activity of purified myofibrils (-33%, -44%). Exogenous thyroxin replacement restored those parameters studied to normal with the exception that it persistently elevated
citrate synthase
activity significantly above normal control levels. Responses similar to those of Td neonates occurred when adult rats were similarly treated. Sx produced no consistent effects on respiratory and glycogenolytic marker enzymes, but caused a 20% reduction in Ca2+-ATPase activity of both neonatal and adult cardiac myofibrils. These findings suggest that cardiac muscle cells require thyroxin for normal growth and enzyme development. Also, Sx may impair cardiac functional capacity by altering Ca2+ activity of actomyosin ATPase.
...
PMID:Effects of thyroid deficiency and sympathectomy on cardiac enzymes. 21 2
Evidence is presented that a number of derivatives of adenylic acid may bind to the allosteric NADH binding site of Escherichia coli
citrate synthase
. This evidence includes the facts that all the adenylates inhibit NADH binding in a competitive manner and that those which have been tested protect an enzyme sulfhydryl group from reaction with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) in the same way that NADH does. However, whereas NADH is a potent inhibitor of
citrate synthase
, most of the adenylates are activators. The best activator, ADP-ribose, increases the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate, acetyl-CoA, and saturates the enzyme in a sigmoid manner. A fluorescence technique, involving the displacement of 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate from its complex with
citrate synthase
, is used to obtain saturation curves for several nucleotides under nonassay conditions. It is found that acetyl-coenzyme A, coenzyme A, and ADP-ribose all bind to the enzyme cooperatively, and that the binding of each becomes tighter in the presence of KCl, the activator, and oxaloacetic acid (OAA), the second substrate. Another inhibitor, alpha-ketoglutarate, can complete with OAA in the absence of KCl but not in its presence. The nature of the allosteric site of
citrate synthase
, and the modes of action of several activators and inhibitors, are discussed in the light of this evidence.
...
PMID:The interactions of adenylates with allosteric citrate synthase. 22 8
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
A realistic metabolic model of the tricarboxylic acid cycle in the perfused rat heart was constructed to help explain the sequence of biochemical events regulating the metabolism of exogenous pyruvate following a large increase in work load. The unchelated Mg2+ level was the most important controlling factor. The resulting mixture of chelated and unchelated nucleotides and tribasic acids effected coordinated control of
citrate synthase
, aconitase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, succinyl CoA synthetase, fumarase, and nucleoside diphosphokinase, because Mg2+-chelates are generally substrates whereas unchelated species are inhibitors. Succinate dehydrogenase is largely controlled by the ubiquinone redox potential. The fluxes through alpha-ketoglutarate and malate dehydrogenases are largely dependent on thepyridine nucleotide redox potential, but the succinyl CoA-to-CoASH ratio strongly affects the former enzyme as well. The model predicts an accumulation of succinate during the transition to higher work output.
...
PMID:Computer simulation of metabolism in pyruvate-perfused rat heart. II. Krebs cycle. 22 18
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