Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (alanine aminotransferase)
26,722 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The crude protein levels as well as the activities of various enzymes were studied in certain tissues of fetuses (80th through 114th days of development), piglets of different age groups, and pigs for slaughter. In most of the tissues tested the postnatal activities of Na-K-ATPase were beyond those recorded from fetuses. The highest GOT activities were recorded from the liver, myocardium, and kidneys. Activities were found to rise sizeably in some tissues after birth. The activity of GPT, too, exhibited age-dependent variations. The activity of leucine-aminopeptidase increased strongly after birth in liver and kidneys. Acid phosphatase activity was less markedly influenced by development phases. Those enzymes which are involved in the formation of fructose and glucose (aldolreductase, glucuronate-reductase, and sorbite-dehydrogenase) had their highest activities, all age-dependent, in liver and kidneys.
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PMID:[Enzyme arrangement of various tissues in swine. 3. Studies of pre- and postnatal activities of various enzymes (ATPase, GOT, GPT, leucine aminopeptidase, acid and alkaline phosphatases, aldose reductase, glucuronate reductase, sorbitol dehydrogenase) in various tissues]. 22 27

The activity of the following enzymes in clinically normal newborn calves was investigated: glutamate-oxalacetate transaminase (GOT), glutamate-pyruvate transaminase (GPT), alkaline phosphatase (APh), creatine phosphokinase (CPhK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), leucine-aminopeptidase (LAP), aldolase (A), and cholinesterase (ChE). The studies were carried out at the first hour prior to offering colostrum as well as at the 6th, 12th, 24th hr and on the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 10th, 15th, and 20th day following it first intake. Regularly rising values of the enzyme activity up to the 24th hour were observed with APh, GOT, GPT, CPhK, and LAP. The aldolase enzyme (after colostrum had been given for the first time) in all animals showed a statistically significant drop of activity at the 6th hour. The activity of LDH displayed a consistently rising trend up to the end of the experimental period. The cholinesterase activity showed high values immediately following birth, reaching those found in the dams by the end of the observation period.
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PMID:[Dynamics of some serum enzymes in the postnatal development of calves]. 94 95

++Post-alcoholic lesion of liver, pancreas, and heart muscle was estimated by measurement of some enzymes activity. Alcoholic in-patients were divided into two groups in regard to the age and the length of the disease. The activity of enzymes in the blood was measured by kinetic methods using the RA-1000/Technicon analyser. It was shown that the increase of activity of alanine aminotransferase (AlAT), gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGTP), and alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) may indicate the ++post-alcoholic liver damage, while increase of activity of alpha-+-amylase and ++leucine aminopeptidase (LAP) may be useful for the diagnosis of pancreas lesion, and creatine kinase (CK) as well as lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) for the evaluation of postalcoholic lesion of the heart muscle.
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PMID:[Enzymatic diagnosis of alcoholism-induced damage of internal organs]. 257 12

In the diagnosis of chronic (as opposed to acute) liver diseases, combinations of indicators are needed to improve specificity. Alanine aminopeptidase (AAP; microsomal aminopeptidase, EC 3.4.11.2) activity in serum reportedly is a very sensitive indicator of intrahepatic cholestasis and biliary obstruction; it is also particularly useful in diagnosing chronic liver disease when combined with an indicator of hepatocyte damage such as aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase. We optimized the assay of AAP in serum, automated the assay by using a centrifugal analyzer, then used this automated assay to determine activity in 202 individuals, ages one to 73 years. The preliminary results were analyzed in terms of the effects of age, sex, smoking, and alcohol consumption on AAP activity in serum. Striking sex-related differences were observed: AAP activity in males declined 2.5 times more rapidly with age than did that in females; indeed, activity in adult females remained essentially constant. Moreover, AAP values were higher in men who smoked than in those who did not, the difference being of borderline significance by analysis of covariance (p = 0.0865) but significant by partial correlations (p = 0.02). No similar differences were seen for women smokers and non-smokers. When the effects of other variables were held constant, alcohol consumption alone did not significantly correlate with AAP activity in men or women.
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PMID:Alanine aminopeptidase in serum: automated optimized assay, and effects of age, sex, smoking, and alcohol consumption in a selected population. 288 Jun 80

Studied was the enzyme constellation, resp., activity of alkaline phosphatase (AP), glutamate-oxaloacetic transaminase (GOT), glutamate-pyruvate transaminase (GPT), aldolase (ALD), leucin-aminopeptidase (LAP), cholinesterase (CE), creatine phosphokinase (CPK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), ornithine carbamoyltransferase (OCT), and guanase (G) in a total of 360 clinically normal and lactating and dry cows of the Black-and-White and Simmental crossbreeds. Characteristic quantitative changes were found with GOT, GPT, ALD, LDH, and CPK both over the dry period and over the entire period of lactation. The activity of LAP, AP, OCT, and G was not influenced by the functional status of the animals. In the course of the analyses there were changes in the serum ALD, CE, and GOT, associated with the breed. The enzymes referred to were studied with a view to establishing their normal parameters needed for the practice as the base to demonstrate preclinical disturbances in individual organs and tissues of the cows during pregnancy and the puerperium.
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PMID:[Enzyme constellation in cows of the Simmental crossbreed and Black Pied breed during the dry period and lactation]. 367 21

Endopeptidase 24.11 (enkephalinase), an enzyme known to be present in plasma and liver, is capable of metabolizing a substantial number of bioactive peptides. We measured plasma endopeptidase 24.11 activity in normal subjects and in patients with chronic hepatocellular disease or chronic cholestatic liver disease. The mean level of plasma endopeptidase 24.11 activity was 13 times higher in cholestatic patients than in controls or patients with hepatocellular disease (p < 0.01). Plasma endopeptidase 24.11 activity in patients correlated closely with traditional serum markers of cholestasis, including levels of alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase and aminopeptidase (p < 0.01 for all). However, plasma endopeptidase 24.11 activity correlated poorly with serum ALT aminotransferase level (p = NS), indicating that it is not a marker of hepatocellular disease. The lack of overlap between plasma endopeptidase 24.11 activity in cholestatic patients and noncholestatic liver disease controls suggests that this enzyme activity is a useful biochemical marker of cholestasis. In addition, because of the broad spectrum of peptides metabolized by endopeptidase 24.11, increased plasma endopeptidase 24.11 activity may contribute to the pathophysiology of the syndrome of cholestasis.
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PMID:Plasma endopeptidase 24.11 (enkephalinase) activity is markedly increased in cholestatic liver disease. 810 33

Aim of this study was to determine and further characterize the serum aminopeptidase-M in children with liver diseases. Based on our new assay, we have shown two fractions of the enzyme. Activity of the first fraction is expressed in undiluted serum at pH adjusted from 8.5 (pH of storaged serum) to 7.4. Activity of the second fraction (cryptic activity) appears in the serum (pH 7.4) as a result of dilution and/or addition of aniline naphthalene sulfonic acid. In children with Alagille syndrome, extrahepatic biliary duct atresia, Byler's disease, and acute hepatitis due to hepatitis B virus infection, activities of both fractions are highly elevated as compared to healthy children or those with chronic viral hepatitis. Moreover, serum aminopeptidase-M seems to reflect other aspects of the pathological process than those reflected by the alanine aminotransferase and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase. Due to increased activity and broad substrate specificity, the enzyme seems to be also a cofactor of cholestasis and hepatitis.
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PMID:Further studies on aminopeptidase-M in blood in children with cholestatic liver diseases and viral hepatitis. 995 39

This study was designed to assess the effects of long-term adaptation to a high protein diet on energy intake, body weight gain, body composition and splanchnic metabolic indicators in rats. For this purpose, adult male Wistar rats were fed either a 50 g/100 g dry matter (DM) protein diet (P50 group) or a 14 g/100 g DM protein diet (P14 group) for 21 d. These two groups were compared with a P14 pair-fed (P14-pf) group that consumed the same daily energy as the P50 group. The energy intake of the P50 group was 16 +/- 1% less than that of the P14 group (P < 0.05), and the P50 group had significantly lower body weight. The P50 group had significantly less adipose tissue compared with both P14 and P14-pf rats. The activities of the brush border membrane enzymes, neutral aminopeptidase and gamma-glutamyl transferase, were significantly higher in the P50 group than in the P14 rats. Similarly, the activities of alanine aminotransferase, arginase and serine dehydratase were significantly higher in the liver of P50 rats compared with P14 rats. Both amino acid transporter system A and X(A,G-) activities, measured in freshly isolated hepatocytes, were significantly higher in the P50 group (8- and 1.5-fold, P < 0.05, respectively) compared with the P14 group. The 1.5-fold increase in the steady-state activity of X(A,G-) was accompanied by a doubling of EAAT2 mRNA, involved in the system X(A,G-). This study provides confirmation that specific biochemical and molecular adaptive processes of the splanchnic area are involved in the response to variations in the protein content of the diet.
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PMID:Metabolic evidence for adaptation to a high protein diet in rats. 1120 43

Evolutionary shifts in diet composition are presumably accompanied by simultaneous changes in digestive physiology. The adaptive modulation hypothesis predicts that activities of digestive enzymes should match the relative levels of their substrates in an animal's diet so that available membrane space and synthetic energy are not wasted on enzymes in excess of need. However, previous studies on captive passerine birds showed high intraspecific phenotypic flexibility only in proteases but not in carbohydrases in response to varying diet composition. In this study, we measured the activities of pancreatic, intestinal, and hepatic enzymes in six wild-caught passerine species. We predicted that if the adaptive modulation hypothesis holds during evolutionary shifts in diet composition in birds, then mass-specific activities of digestive enzymes should be correlated positively with the content of their relevant substrates in species' diets. Whereas mass-specific activities of proteases (aminopeptidase-N, trypsin, chymotrypsin, alanine aminotransferase) were not correlated with estimated dietary protein content, mass-specific activities of all studied carbohydrases (amylase, maltase, sucrase) were positively correlated with estimated dietary starch content. We conclude that activities of carbohydrases but not proteases are evolutionarily matched to diet composition in passerine birds. We hypothesize that the need for nitrogen and essential amino acids can prevent the evolution of a low activity of proteases, even in species feeding on a low-protein diet.
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PMID:Pancreatic and intestinal carbohydrases are matched to dietary starch level in wild passerine birds. 2146 May 30