Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (aspartate aminotransferase)
21,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This retrospective analysis tests the hypothesis that topical cardiac hypothermia is an unnecessary adjunct to intraoperative myocardial protection and an avoidable cause of pulmonary morbidity in patients with coronary disease receiving blood cardioplegia. The hospital records of 150 nonrandomized consecutive patients undergoing elective and emergency isolated coronary revascularization were reviewed. All patients received multidose cold blood cardioplegia followed by warm blood cardioplegic reperfusion distributed through grafts. Fifty patients received iced slush, 50 received topical 4 degrees C saline, and no topical cooling was used in 50 others. Patients groups were comparable in number of grafts (3.7 versus 3.5 versus 3.5) and crossclamp time (61 versus 62 versus 61 minutes). More emergency operations were performed in the patients receiving no topical hypothermia (12/50 versus 8/50 versus 7/50). Postoperative x-ray films were reviewed by a radiologist who did not know of patient grouping. Postoperative results were comparable in hemodynamics, inotropic requirements (10/50 ice versus 8/50 saline versus 5/50 no cooling), myocardial infarction (1/50 versus 2/50 versus 2/50), and enzymes (aspartate aminotransferase myocardial band creatine kinase). No patient died. Ice topical hypothermia (versus no topical cooling) was associated with more left pleural effusions (25/50 versus 9/50; p less than 0.05), atelectasis (33/50 versus 18/50; p less than 0.05), elevated left hemidiaphragms (13/50 versus 0/50; p less than 0.05), and longer postoperative hospitalization (11.2 versus 8.5 days; p less than 0.05). Topical 4 degrees C saline reduced diaphragmatic elevation and pleural effusion (versus topical ice) but was associated with more atelectasis (34/50 versus 18/50; p less than 0.05) than no topical cooling. These data suggest that routine topical hypothermia is an unnecessary adjunct to blood cardioplegic protection in patients with coronary disease, since supplemental topical cooling does not improve postoperative hemodynamics or reduce inotropic requirements, enzyme release, or prevalence of postoperative myocardial infarction, and it increases pulmonary morbidity, which can be reduced by its avoidance.
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PMID:Topical cardiac hypothermia in patients with coronary disease. An unnecessary adjunct to cardioplegic protection and cause of pulmonary morbidity. 151 52

Endotoxin administration causes liver injury. Patients with alcoholic liver disease frequently have portal vein and systemic endotoxemia, and some investigators have suggested that endotoxin plays an etiologic role in alcoholic liver injury. Many of the metabolic effects of endotoxin are mediated by the cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF). It was the purpose of this study to determine whether TNF plays a role in ethanol-enhanced endotoxin liver injury. Rats were fed either a diet in which 36% of the calories were from ethanol or an isocaloric control diet. After 6 weeks, groups of 10 rats were intravenously injected with either saline, 1 mg/kg endotoxin, or 30 micrograms/kg of a prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) analogue + 1 mg/kg endotoxin 24 hr prior to sacrifice. Ethanol/endotoxin-treated rats had significantly higher liver enzyme levels (ALT: 1064 +/- 355 IU/liter, AST: 2024 +/- 515 IU/liter) compared with isocaloric/endotoxin controls (ALT: 237 +/- 54 IU/liter, AST: 602 +/- 80 IU/liter). Ethanol/endotoxin rats also had significantly higher peak serum TNF concentrations (992 +/- 200 units/ml) compared with isocaloric/endotoxin controls (344 +/- 96 units/ml). Pretreatment of ethanol/endotoxin rats with PGE1 caused significant attenuation of liver injury (ALT: 267 +/- 64 IU/liter, AST: 612 +/- 77 IU/liter) and a diminished serum TNF response. In contrast to chronic ethanol administration, acute gavage with 2 mg/kg ethanol (30% w/v) followed by intravenous injection of 2 mg/kg endotoxin produced significantly lower peak serum TNF concentrations (401 +/- 76 units/ml) than gavage with distilled water (1152 +/- 208 units/ml).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor in alcohol enhanced endotoxin liver injury. 153 Jan 27

Groups of 20 rats and 20 mice of each sex were administered monochloroacetic acid (MCAA) once daily, 5 days per week, in water by gavage for up to 13 weeks. Doses used were 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, or 150 mg/kg for rats and 0, 25, 50, 100, 150, or 200 mg/kg for mice. Compound-related deaths occurred at the four highest dose levels in rats and at the highest dose level in mice. Mean body weights of treated groups of rats and mice surviving until the end of the study were similar to those of the controls. A dose-related increase in blood urea nitrogen, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, as well as a dose-related increase in the relative liver and kidney weights was observed in rats but not in mice. A dose-related increase in the incidence and severity of cardiomyopathy occurred in rats. This lesion may be related to the inhibition of heart mitochondrial aconitase activity. No compound-related lesions were observed in mice. The results of this study indicate that F344 rats are more sensitive than B6C3F1 mice; sexes within the species were equally sensitive. The no-observable-effect level was estimated as 30 mg MCAA/kg body weight for rats and 100 mg MCAA/kg body weight for mice.
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PMID:Toxicity of monochloroacetic acid administered by gavage to F344 rats and B6C3F1 mice for up to 13 weeks. 153 74

Adding less than 0.5% w/w of culture material of strain MRC 826 of the fungus Fusarium moniliforme to a carbohydrate diet low in fat resulted in an atherogenic plasma lipid profile in a non-human primate. Simultaneously increased plasma fibrinogen and activity of blood coagulation factor VII could enhance atherogenesis. This unique potential for promotion of atherosclerosis was probably secondary to chronic hepatotoxicity as indicated by liver fibrosis and elevated cholesterol, albumin and the enzymes AST, ALT, LD, GGT and ALP in serum. The cholesterol and enzymes responded in proportion to the calculated doses of fumonisin mycotoxins in the F. moniliforme MRC 826 cultures. Fumonisins are water soluble and heat stable. Thrombotic, hepatotoxic, carcinogenic and cerebral effects of MRC 826 culture material and fumonisins are well known in non-primates. The estimated fumonisin concentrations tested fall within a range due to natural contamination of human foods. The results suggest that all maize grain products should be analysed for fumonisins.
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PMID:Atherogenic effects in a non-human primate of Fusarium moniliforme cultures added to a carbohydrate diet. 163 55

The aspartate aminotransferase mutant Y70F exhibits kcat = 8% and kcat/KM = 2% of the wild type values for the transamination of aspartate and alpha-ketoglutarate. The affinity of the enzyme for the noncovalently bound inhibitor maleate is reduced 17-fold by the mutation, while only a 2.5-fold reduction is observed for alpha-methylaspartate, which forms a stable, covalent external aldimine. The high population of the quinonoid intermediate formed in the reaction of the wild type with beta-hydroxyaspartate is more than 75% diminished by the mutation. The values of the Y70F C alpha-H kinetic isotope effects for the aspartate reaction are larger than those of wild type (DV = 2.4 vs 1.52; D(V/K) = 2.5 vs 1.7). Conversely, the Y70F value of D(V/K) for the glutamate reaction is decreased compared to wild type (1.75 vs 2.5). These results, combined with previous studies of Lys258 mutants, eliminate Tyr70 as an essential component of the catalytic apparatus, with the caveat that the functionally of the deleted hydroxyl group is possibly replaced by a water molecule.
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PMID:Tyrosine 70 fine-tunes the catalytic efficiency of aspartate aminotransferase. 167 69

Dose- and time-related effects of Cd (II) (0.5 or 1.0 mg/kg, Cd as CdCl2.H2O, subcutaneously, daily for 48 h, 1, 3, or 6 wk) were investigated in rats. A dose-related increase in the activity of plasma alkaline phosphatase (ALP), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), aspartate aminotransferase (GOT), and alanine aminotransferase (GPT) was evident only at 6 wk, whereas an early rise in ALP and LDH was seen at 3 wk in 1.0 mg Cd group only. The hepatic and renal metallothionein (MT) induction displayed a dose- as well as time-related increase with Cd accumulation. A significant increase in hepatic Zn and renal Cu, no change in hepatic Cu, and a slight increase in renal Zn was observed. Urinary ALP and leucine aminopeptidase (LAP) showed an initial increase at 48 h, thereafter returned to near normal. A second phase of enzymuria (ALP, LAP, GOT, GPT, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase), proteinuria, and aminoaciduria occurred at 6 wk in a dose-related manner. The urinary excretion of specific renal enzymes appeared closely related to the MT induction and organ Cd levels.
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PMID:Biochemical response to cadmium. Dose-time effect. 171 72

Aspartate aminotransferase (mitochondrial isoenzyme from chicken) has been found to racemize very slowly dicarboxylic amino acid substrates in the presence of their cognate oxo acids [Kochhar, S. & Christen, P. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem. 175, 433-438]. Tyrosine, phenylalanine and alanine are racemized at the same rate although they undergo the transamination reaction 3-5 orders of magnitude more slowly than the dicarboxylic substrates. Similarly, the truncated enzyme aspartate aminotransferase-(27/32-410) catalyzes the racemization at the same rate as the native enzyme, while its rate of transamination is decreased to 3% of that of the native enzyme. Apparently, the rate-limiting step in racemization is not immediately linked to the transamination cycle. Decreasing the water concentration in the reaction medium by adding methanol at 0 degrees C drastically reduces the rate of racemization without affecting the rate of transamination. On the basis of these and additional kinetic data and the model of the three-dimensional structure of the active site, we conclude that a water molecule is responsible for the protonation of C alpha of the coenzyme-substrate intermediate from the wrong side. The diffusion of the water molecule into the interior of the enzyme appears to be the rate-limiting step in aspartate-aminotransferase-catalyzed racemization.
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PMID:Mechanism of racemization of amino acids by aspartate aminotransferase. 173 41

The photocoagulating properties of the water-jet-cooled Nd:YAG laser (1,064 nm) have been studied in a rat tumor model. A colon carcinoma CC531 was implanted in the liver; 20 days after inoculation, laser therapy was performed with 600 J, 850 J, 1,200 J, 1,700 J, or 2,400 J at a power setting of either 10 or 20 W. Liver damage was determined in tissue specimen on day 1 after treatment and by serum levels of alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase on day 1 and 2. Tissue specimen of day 36 were used to evaluate tumor remission. Liver function was assessed by antipyrine clearance on day 2. Light microscopic examination on day 1 showed coagulative necrosis up to 10 mm in diameter at 1,700 J and 20 W. At 20 W, liver damage was 22% larger than at 10 W (P = 0.0001). A significant relationship was found between laser energy and liver damage with complete tumor destruction in all animals at 2,400 J. No deterioration in liver function was found. The results of this study show the ability of the water-jet-cooled Nd:YAG laser to produce tumor coagulation necrosis with minor liver damage.
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PMID:Water-jet-cooled Nd:YAG laser coagulation: selective destruction of rat liver metastases. 181 80

Hydrated sodium calcium aluminosilicate (HSCAS), an anticaking agent for mixed feed, was added to the diets of growing wethers (mean body weight, 34.0 kg) and was evaluated for its ability to diminish the clinical signs of aflatoxicosis. The experimental design consisted of 4 treatment groups of 5 wethers each, consuming concentrations of 0 g of HSCAS and 0 g of aflatoxin (AF)/kg of feed (control; group 1); 20 g of HSCAS/kg (2.0%; group 2), 2.6 mg of AF/kg (group 3); or 20 g of HSCAS (2.0%) plus 2.6 mg of AF/kg (group 4). Wethers were maintained in indoor pens, with feed and water available ad libitum for 42 days. Lambs were observed twice daily and weighed weekly, and blood samples were obtained every 2 weeks for hematologic and serum biochemical analyses and for measurement of mitogen-induced lymphocyte-stimulation index. At the termination of the study, wethers were euthanatized and necropsied. Body weight gain was diminished significantly (P less than 0.05) by consumption of 2.6 mg of AF/kg of feed, whereas body weight of lambs consuming HSCAS plus AF did not differ from that of control wethers. The AF-alone treatment increased serum aspartate transaminase and gamma-glutamyltransferase activities, prothrombin time, and cholesterol, uric acid, and triglyceride values and decreased albumin, glucose, and urea nitrogen values, and urea-to-creatine ratio.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Diminution of aflatoxin toxicity to growing lambs by dietary supplementation with hydrated sodium calcium aluminosilicate. 185 May 85

Absorption and circular dichroism spectra of stable enzyme-substrate intermediates of aspartate aminotransferase were recorded at subzero temperatures (down to -65 degrees C) in the cryosolvent water/methanol. The intermediates were formed either between the pyridoxal form of the enzyme and its amino acid substrates, or between the pyridoxamine form and its oxo acid substrates. Kd values determined by spectroscopic titration were very close to the Km values reported for the different substrates. The adsorption complex of the pyridoxal form was probably obtained on addition of cysteine sulfinate. This complex is characterized by an increased absorption at 430 nm together with a positive Cotton effect, as also observed in the case of the complex with the competitive inhibitor maleate indicating protonation of the internal aldimine. Addition of the substrates aspartate or glutamate to the pyridoxal form seemed to result in the direct accumulation of the external aldimine which showed a slight decrease in both the absorbance and the Cotton effect at 360 nm. Additionally, a bathochromic shift of 5 nm was observed in the case of glutamate. At 430 nm, only a minor increase in absorbance, but not in circular dichroism, was observed with aspartate, and no changes were found with glutamate and the substrate analog 2-methylaspartate, indicating a deprotonated external aldimine. Presumably, the ketimine intermediate was obtained on addition of the oxo acids 2-oxoglutarate or oxalacetate to the pyridoxamine form. The intermediate showed a slight bathochromic shift (2 nm) of the absorption band and decreased circular dichroism. On formation of the ketimine, a tyrosine residue, probably active-site Tyr225, becomes partly ionized. The finding that the external aldimine can probably be accumulated in the conversion of the pyridoxal to the pyridoxamine form with the natural substrates would confirm the proton abstraction at C alpha to be the rate-limiting step in the tautomerization, although with cysteine sulfinate, the formation of the external aldimine might contribute to the rate limitation. Accumulation of the ketimine in the reverse direction would indicate that the proton abstraction at C4' is rate-limiting in this half-reaction. The results demonstrate the feasibility of further structural investigations of true enzyme-substrate intermediates.
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PMID:Spectroscopic characterization of true enzyme-substrate intermediates of aspartate aminotransferase trapped at subzero temperatures. 193 64


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