Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (
alanine aminotransferase
)
26,722
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of insulin and the insulin mimetic agent "vanadate" were studied on the activities of
alanine aminotransferase
, aspartate aminotransferase, glutamate dehydrogenase and
arginase
in the cytosolic and the mitochondrial fractions of the kidney in control and alloxan induced diabetic rats. An enhancement in the activities of these enzymes were noted in both the fractions of diabetic kidney. Vanadate treatment (0.6 mg/ml in drinking water) of alloxan induced diabetic rats restored the activities of these enzymes almost completely in the cytosolic and partially in the mitochondrial fractions. Vanadate treatment also normalized hyperglycaemia without altering the depressed levels of insulin secretion in diabetic rats. The effect of insulin treatment was found to be the same as that of vanadate in diabetic rats.
...
PMID:Effects of vanadate and insulin on the activities of selected enzymes of amino acid metabolism in alloxan diabetic rat kidney. 895 44
Cachexia and a decreased immune function are negative prognostic factors for cancer patients. While the decreased immunity results in a greater susceptibility to bacterial infection, the response of the host to the resulting infection is not clear. The experiments reported here were designed to evaluate the toxicity of endotoxin to rats with a transplantable Ward colon tumor (WCT) and to evaluate the mechanism of the observed increase in lethal toxicity. The lethal toxicity of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) at 5 mg/kg, i.p. was evaluated in the first of two experiments. Rats received LPS and were observed for morbidity and weight loss for a period of 11 days. A second experiment was done to evaluate the effect of LPS on the plasma nitrate/nitrite concentrations and plasma indicators of host tissue dysfunction. LPS was administered as previously described but blood and tissues were collected 5 h after LPS administration. LPS resulted in the death of 1 of 12 nontumor-bearing (NTB) rats and a transient weight loss in the survivors. This same dose of LPS, however, resulted in death for 10 of 12 WCT rats with tumor burdens less than 4% of body weight. The response of WCT rats 5 h after LPS was then compared with that of age-matched NTB rats. Plasma albumin concentrations were not affected by LPS in NTB rats but were significantly decreased in WCT rats. Peripheral blood gases were not consistently affected by LPS in either group. Peripheral blood white cell counts, except monocytes, were significantly decreased by LPS in both groups. Monocyte counts in peripheral blood were further reduced in WCT rats compared with NTB rats receiving LPS. The presence of the WCT significantly enhanced the LPS-associated increase in spleen weight. Liver weights were lower in LPS rats but there was no effect of the presence of WCT. The LPS-associated increase in plasma nitrate/nitrite concentration was enhanced by the WCT. The plasma arginine and citrulline concentrations were altered in a manner consistent with an increase in nitric oxide synthesis. An increase in plasma ornithine concentration suggests an increase in arginine metabolism by
arginase
. The plasma concentration of
alanine aminotransferase
was significantly elevated when WCT rats received LPS, suggesting enhanced hepatic dysfunction. The plasma blood urea nitrogen concentration was elevated by LPS to a greater extent in the WCT rats than in the NTB controls, indicating increased renal dysfunction. These results demonstrate that the Ward colon tumor increases the host lethal response to the endotoxin, a toxic product of bacterial infections. The mechanisms of lethality may include an increased nitric oxide synthesis in WCT rats and enhanced liver and renal toxicity.
...
PMID:Influence of the Ward colon tumor on the host response to endotoxin. 917 90
Sea raven (Hemitripterus americanus) given intraperitoneal implants of coconut oil containing cortisol (50 mg kg-1) and sampled 5 days later had plasma cortisol, glucose and urea concentrations higher than in a sham-implanted group. No differences in plasma ammonia, free amino acid or fatty acid concentrations were apparent between the cortisol- and sham-treated groups. There was no change in hepatic glycogen content, whereas glutamine synthetase, allantoicase,
arginase
, aspartate aminotransferase, tyrosine aminotransferase,
alanine aminotransferase
, glutamate dehydrogenase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase and 3-hydroxyacyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase activities were higher in the cortisol-treated fish liver compared with the sham-implanted fish. On the basis of these general increases in enzyme activities, our results suggest that cortisol stimulates nitrogen metabolism in the sea raven. Amino acid catabolism may be a major source of substrate for gluconeogenesis and/or oxidation, while fatty acid mobilization may provide the fuel for endogenous use by the liver in cortisol-treated sea raven. These results further support the hypothesis that cortisol plays a role in the regulation of glucose production in stressed fish.
...
PMID:Metabolic effects of cortisol treatment in a marine teleost, the sea raven 931 10
Pesticides and their metabolites are excreted mainly by the kidneys. The effect of these compounds on the kidney parenchyma was evaluated on the basis of determinations of the activity of the following enzymes: alkaline phosphate, N-acetylglucosaminidase, lactate dehydrogenase,
alanine aminotransferase
, aspartate aminotransferase and
arginase
in urine of workers employed at the department producing organophosphorous pesticides (32 males and 53 females) as well as those employed at the production of chlorfenvinphos (35 males). The activity of most of the estimated enzymes was significantly higher as compared to control groups. The dynamic of changes of enzyme activity was traced in the workers employed at the department producing chlorfenvinphos over their first 18 months of employment.
...
PMID:The assessment of nephrotoxic effect of organophosphorous pesticides based on the determination of the activity of some selected enzymes in urine. 947 90
We quantified
liver-type arginase
in sera of 47 patients undergoing partial liver transplantation with use of an ELISA method. The level of
liver-type arginase
fluctuated slightly beyond the normal range in successful liver recipients, while it changed more drastically or precipitously in unsuccessful ones, accompanying or unaccompanying elevation of AST and
ALT
levels. A higher elevation pattern of the
arginase
level (above 100 ng ml-1) was observed in each of the unsuccessful recipients with critical condition, except for one patient. Other hepatic markers (LDH, ALP, and T-BIL) remained relatively unchanged until the terminal stage of deceasing patients. The finding that the
liver-type arginase
emerged in large quantity in the blood stream immediately after reperfusion of the liver graft indicates that the enzyme leaks out of hepatocytes damaged, presumably, by storage in the absence of circulation. A half-life of the
liver-type arginase
in the human blood was estimated to be 1 h, that is clearly shorter than that of AST. The short half-life of the
arginase
appears to be ascribable, at least partly, to formation of an immune complex with circulating autoantibody which appears in many liver recipients. These results suggest that
liver-type arginase
behaves uniquely in the serum among many hepatic enzymes, and could serve as a distinct marker of hepatic lesions, particularly during and after liver transplantation.
...
PMID:Liver-type arginase in serum during and after liver transplantation: a novel index in monitoring conditions of the liver graft and its clinical significance. 956 54
The relation of excessive doses of vitamin A with various kidney pathologies is well known however, information concerning the relation of kidney enzyme activity with acute hypervitaminosis A is rather scarce. In this study we describe the kidney enzymatic alterations observed in rats that received daily intramuscular injections of 10,000, 30,000, 50,000 and 100,000 IU of vitamin A palmitate (VA) during seven days (TREATED GROUPS). A comparison is made with the enzyme activity in healthy rats pair-fed and treated with sodium palmitate by intramuscular injection (CONTROL GROUP). The treated rats showed a proportional increase (p < 0.05) in activity of acid maltase, transminases or aminotransferases (GOT and
GPT
), alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and acid protease with all doses of VA administered. Amylase, lipase and
arginase
tend to decrease (p < 0.05) in activity only with doses of 50,000 and 100,000 I.U. of VA. Several factors are responsible for these findings, such as kidney necrosis due to release of lysosomal acid hydrolases produced by hypervitaminosis A.
...
PMID:Alterations in kidney enzyme pattern in acute hypervitaminosis A. 983 Apr 87
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.
...
PMID:Metabolic evidence for adaptation to a high protein diet in rats. 1120 43
To determine the ability of cockatiels (Nymphicus hollandicus), a granivorous avian species, to adapt metabolically to high dietary protein levels, adult males (n = 26) were fed isocaloric diets containing 11, 20, 35 or 70% crude protein (CP) for 11 mo. Throughout the trial, body weight and breast muscle weight were maintained by 11, 20 or 70% CP. The 35% CP diet resulted in significantly greater body weight (P < 0.05) and whole-body lipid content (P < 0.05) compared with the 11% CP diet. The 20% CP diet resulted in greater breast muscle mass compared with 70% CP (P < 0.05). Activity of the amino acid catabolic enzymes
alanine aminotransferase
, aspartate aminotransferase and
arginase
as well as the gluconeogenic enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase were significantly increased with 70% CP (P < 0.05). Serum essential amino acids, urea and uric acid were also increased with 70% CP (P < 0.05), but the magnitude of their increase was similar to that found in omnivorous chickens fed a similar diet. There was no evidence of visceral gout, articular gout or renal pathology; however liver lesion severity, and specifically liver lipogranuloma severity, was significantly increased above 11% CP (P < 0.05). We conclude that cockatiels are able to up-regulate enzymes for amino acid catabolism as well as mechanisms for nitrogen excretion in response to high dietary protein levels, and that high dietary protein levels are not associated with kidney dysfunction in this avian species.
...
PMID:Adult cockatiels (Nymphicus hollandicus) metabolically adapt to high protein diets. 1143 23
Inorganic sulfites are chemical compounds with antioxidative, antibacterial and antimycotic properties diffusely employed in agro-food and pharmaceutical industries. In spite of their continuous use there still are many questions regarding their safety, and their possible influence in several nutrients and enzymatic systems, as according to reports in the literature cited. In this study it is determined the effect of increasing doses of sodium bisulphite, 10 to 50 mg/kg/day, injected intramuscularly during seven days on the activity of the following serum enzymes: phosphohexoseisomerase (PHI), gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (gamma-GT), cholinesterase (CHE),
arginase
, acid maltase (AM), alkaline phosphatase (AIP), lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), transaminases (GOT and
GPT
) and 5'-nucleotidase (5'-N) on male Wistar rats (treated groups). The results indicate that in rats treated with sodium bisulphite there is a significant increase (p < 0.05) in the activity of PHI, gamma-GT,
arginase
, AIP, GOT,
GPT
and 5'-N as well as an equally significant decrease (p < 0.05) in the activity of LDH, AM and CHE; these variations are proportional to the doses of the compound applied. These findings indicate there is cellular damage to rat liver, kidney or others organs as a result of bisulphite injected or by its metabolic derivatives. It is suggested that measurements of serum levels of LDH, AM and CHE are particularly helpful in the clinical assessment of pathologies caused by sulfites in allergology.
...
PMID:[Changes in serum enzymes in rats treated with sodium bisulfite]. 1146 Jul 97
Autoantibody against human
liver-type arginase
was detected in blood of patients treated with partial liver transplantation and consisted of all subclasses of IgG, i.e., IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4, and IgM. We newly constructed an ELISA system for the antibodies by the aid of
arginase
protein immunopurified from extracts of human liver tissues. Addition of 2.0 mol/l urea in 0.1 mol/l citrate buffer(pH 4.5) was effective for elimination of immunoglobulins, such as IgG and IgM, and rheumatoid factors adsorped non-specifically to
liver-type arginase
-autoantibody complexes on the plate. We found that, during a short period of about two months after operation, in successful cases,
liver-type arginase
increased, remarkably and repeatedly, in blood of recipients followed by elevation of IgM level within a week and also IgG2 level two or three weeks later. Thus the change in IgG2 level seemed to depend on those of the
arginase
and/or IgM. However, in unsuccessful cases, such fluctuation was not so clear as the successful cases. To be noteworthy was production of autoantibodies directed to
liver-type arginase
in blood of patients with liver injury although the
arginase
, as well as AST and
ALT
, is an enzyme which leaks out of liver tissue. Appearance of the autoantibodies in blood supports occurrence of liver injury, in part, in graft liver because the enzyme exists exclusively in the liver. Among immunoglobulins to
liver-type arginase
, IgG2 seemed to be the most helpful index to know rightly postoperative conditions of recipients of liver transplantation, and its measurement could be useful for long-term follow-up of the patients.
...
PMID:[Clinical significance of anti-liver-type arginase autoantibody in blood of recipients after partial liver transplantation]. 1151 24
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