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Query: EC:2.7.1.1 (
hexokinase
)
5,274
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effect of peak lactation on the activities of a number of enzymes of glucose and lipid metabolism of perirenal and subcutaneous adipose tissue, skeletal muscle, liver, kidney cortex and mammary parenchyma of sheep are described. Enzymes studied included
hexokinase
(glucose utilization), pyruvate carboxylase (gluconeogenesis), pyruvate dehydrogenase (glucose oxidation and production of acetyl
CoA
for fatty acid synthesis), acetyl
CoA
carboxylase (fatty acid synthesis) and glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (fatty acid esterification). Major changes that were found include a decrease in activities of enzymes of fatty acid synthesis and esterification in adipose tissues, decreased activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase in muscle and adipose tissues and increased pyruvate carboxylase; there was no change in activities of enzyme of fatty acid esterification in liver. Activities of
hexokinase
, acetyl
CoA
carboxylase and glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase have been estimated per tissue; this shows the quantitative importance of limiting glucose utilization by muscle and of suppression of fatty acid synthesis in adipose tissue for efficient partitioning of nutrients for milk production.
...
PMID:Enzymes of glucose and fatty acid metabolism of liver, kidney, skeletal muscle, adipose tissue and mammary gland of lactating and non-lactating sheep. 358 45
The role of heredity in the response of maximal anaerobic capacities and skeletal muscle histochemical and biochemical characteristics to a 15-week cycle ergometer training program involving both continuous and interval work patterns was investigated in 14 pairs of monozygotic twins. The training program consisted mainly of series of ergocycle supramaximal exercises lasting from 15 s to 90 s and performed 4 and 5 times a week. The subjects were submitted to 10 s and 90 s all-out ergocycle tests to estimate maximal anaerobic alactacid (AAC) and lactacid (ALC) capacities, respectively. Muscle fiber types and creatine kinase (CK),
hexokinase
(HK), phosphofructokinase (PFK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), malate dehydrogenase (MDH), 3-hydroxyacyl
CoA
dehydrogenase (HADH), and oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (OGDH) activities were determined in a biopsy from the vastus lateralis. Training increased AAC, ALC, fiber type I proportion, MDH, HADH, and OGDH (P less than 0.05) and decreased fiber type IIb proportion and the PFK/OGDH ratio. No significant change was observed for CK, HK, PFK, and LDH. Large interindividual differences in the response to training were observed for all variables. However, intraclass correlations indicated that the extent of the response of ALC and CK, HK, LDH, MDH, and OGDH activities and of the PFK/OGDH activity ratio to training were significantly similar within pairs of twins. Although the role of heredity appeared absent for the changes in fiber type proportions and in anaerobic alactacid capacity, the present results suggest that the response of anaerobic lactacid capacity and most enzyme activities to high-intensity intermittent training is significantly determined by the genotype.
...
PMID:Inheritance of human skeletal muscle and anaerobic capacity adaptation to high-intensity intermittent training. 373 13
To determine whether sensitivity of muscle characteristics and aerobic performances to endurance training was genotype-dependent, 6 pairs of monozygotic (MZ) twins, 21 +/- 4 yr of age (mean +/- SD), took part in a 15-wk ergocycle endurance training program. Tests were performed before and after 7 and 15 weeks of training. A biopsy of the vastus lateralis muscle was obtained for the determination of fiber type composition and activities of creatine kinase,
hexokinase
, phosphofructokinase, lactate dehydrogenase, malate dehydrogenase, 3-hydroxyacyl
CoA
dehydrogenase, and oxoglutarate dehydrogenase. Maximal oxygen uptake was measured with a progressive maximal ergocycle test, while endurance performance was determined as the total work output during a 90-min maximal ergocycle test. Results indicated that maximal oxygen uptake X kg-1 and endurance performance X kg-1 increased significantly (14 and 31%, respectively) with training, and intra-pair resemblance (intra-class) in response to 15 wk of training ranged from 0.65 to 0.83. Hexokinase (31%), phosphofructokinase (37%), lactate dehydrogenase (21%), malate dehydrogenase (31%), and 3-hydroxyacyl
CoA
dehydrogenase (60%) were significantly increased with training whereas no mean change in fiber-type proportions, oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and creatine kinase activities and the phosphofructokinase/oxoglutarate dehydrogenase ratio was observed. Similarity within twin pairs in the response to enzyme activities was mainly detected in the second half of the training program. The present results confirm, therefore, that both maximal oxygen uptake and endurance performance responses to training are largely genotype-dependent.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Heredity and muscle adaptation to endurance training. 378 81
Five monozygotic twin pairs were submitted to a 10-week isokinetic strength training program and biochemical characteristics measured before and after training to determine the role of heredity in skeletal muscle adaptation, while 5 unrelated sedentary subjects served as control group. Experimental subjects performed twice 3 series of 5 bilateral reciprocal alternating knee flexions and extensions at a velocity of 90 degrees/s 5 times per week. Before and after the training period, for each subject, the peak muscular torque output was measured at the same velocity and the vastus lateralis muscle was biopsied for biochemical determinations. No significant change was observed in the control group. Training increased peak muscular torque output by 24%. The activities of
hexokinase
, malate dehydrogenase and 3-hydroxyacyl
CoA
dehydrogenase also increased significantly by 28, 26 and 38%, respectively. Interindividual variations in the response of these variables to training were noted but these were shown to be independent of the genotype. No overall effect of training was observed for oxoglutarate dehydrogenase activity (OGDH). However, changes were seen in individual pairs of twins and these were in opposite directions in some pairs compared to others, thus explaining the absence of a general training effect. Significant intrapair resemblance in the training response was present for OGDH (r = 0.76), indicating that the sensitivity to isokinetic strength training for OGDH was highly variable, not random and probably genetically determined.
...
PMID:Inheritance of human muscle enzyme adaptation to isokinetic strength training. 379 15
Peripheral hyperinsulinemia may be associated with metabolic consequences that could contribute to the high incidence of macrovascular disease in patients with diabetes mellitus. Arterial wall and striated muscle cells were studied in dogs to examine the effect of hyperinsulinemia on the lipid content and on lipogenic and glycolytic enzyme activity. Eight pancreatectomized dogs received segmental pancreatic autografts with venous drainage into the iliac vein. Glucose disappearance rates (K values) were normal four years after transplantation, but both fasting serum insulin levels (48.9 +/- 4.8 v 11.8 +/- 1.9 microU/mL) and the total area under the glucose-insulin response curve (1797 +/- 196 v 1110 +/- 158 microU X min/mL) were significantly greater than in control animals (P less than 0.05). The hyperinsulinemic dogs had a marked triglyceride elevation in arterial smooth muscle (20.6 +/- 8.0 v 0.5 +/- 0.4 mumol/g) and striated muscle (171.4 +/- 46.6 v 41.2 +/- 7.7 mumol/g) (P less than 0.001). Moreover, key enzymes in lipid synthesis (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, malic enzyme, and 3-hydroxyacyl-
CoA
DH) were significantly increased (P less than 0.01) in the hyperinsulinemic animals, while the glycolytic enzymes, (phosphofructokinase,
hexokinase
, pyruvate kinase, and alpha-glycerophosphate DH) were not significantly different. These data demonstrate substantial enhancement of lipid synthesis in arterial wall and striated muscle in hyperinsulinemic dogs. Altered substrate metabolism in arterial walls, in association with hyperinsulinemia, may have important implications with regard to macrovascular disease in diabetes, particularly in insulin-treated patients. In addition, these studies may serve to stimulate longer term assessments of macroangiopathy in the increasing number of patients with functioning pancreatic allografts draining into the systemic circulation.
...
PMID:The effects of hyperinsulinemia on arterial wall and peripheral muscle metabolism in dogs. 390 54
Six men and three women with insulin-dependent diabetes (without complications) participated in physical training three times a week for 20 weeks. Physical training did not change the concentration of fasting blood-glucose, glucose excretion in urine or glucosylated haemoglobin (HbA1). However, the glucose disposal rate during euglycaemic clamp increased after training. In two patients a minor reduction of insulin dosage was necessary to alleviate slight hypoglycaemic episodes. The training resulted in significant increases in quadriceps isometric and dynamic strength and endurance. Maximal oxygen uptake increased by 8%, the activity of glycolytic enzymes in vastus lateralis muscle by 47% for
hexokinase
, and 30% for tri-osephosphate dehydrogenase and 25% for lactic dehydrogenase, the activity of oxidative enzymes by 42% for citrate synthase and 46% for 3-hydroxy-acyl-
CoA
-dehydrogenase. The glycogen concentration in the vastus lateralis muscle did not change significantly. Lipoprotein lipase activity did not change in muscle, nor in adipose tissue. The mean muscle fibre area increased by 25% and the area of FTa fibres by 30%. The new formation of capillaries around different muscle fibres was significant for FTb fibres (26%). The proliferation of capillaries, however, appeared to be insufficient to cope with the increased area of muscle fibres. As a result, the mean area of muscle fibre supplied by one capillary (a measure of diffusion distance) significantly increased after training for FTa fibres. It is concluded that with the exception of deficient proliferation of capillaries, patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus show a normal central and peripheral adaptation to physical training. Physical training does not apparently improve blood glucose control in most cases, despite an increased insulin sensitivity.
...
PMID:Muscle adaptations and glucose control after physical training in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 394 85
Unequivocal demarcation between immature, nonmigratory yellow eels and migratory silver eels of greater sexual maturity is possible by measuring eye diameter and retinal capillary length, which undergo a 1.5- and 2.3-fold increase during metamorphosis, respectively. Anatomical arrangement of trunk musculature is similar in the two groups except for an increased depth of slow muscle in silver eel. Histochemical analysis reveals a progressive increase in numbers of "displaced" fast fibres within slow muscle of the lateral line triangle in maturing eels, although these are unlikely to affect recruitment pattern of muscle fibre types. Previous studies have suggested greater involvement of fast muscle in locomotion of migratory eels. In contrast, estimates of enzyme activity in fast muscle suggest an inadequate aerobic capacity to fuel sustained activity. Myoglobin content is extremely low, around 0.4 nM g wet wt-1. Prolonged anaerobic metabolism is also discounted as a migratory strategy. Increased energy provision for migration is apparently derived from increased capacity for both aerobic carbohydrate metabolism and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation within slow muscle of silver eels. Activity of
hexokinase
(HK) shows a 1.6-fold increase (to 0.51 microM g wet wt-1) and carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) a 3.1-fold increase (to 0.22 microM g wet wt-1 min-1), suggesting a maximal flux through these pathways of 18 and 14 ATP equivalents, respectively. However, the fatty acyl transferase system of skeletal muscle mitochondria displays up to threefold greater activity with palmitoleoyl
CoA
(C16:1) as substrate than with the usual palmitoyl CoA (C16:0). Slow muscle of silver eel is therefore capable of deriving aerobic energy from free fatty acids and carbohydrate in the ratio 2.3:1. Differences in aerobic enzyme activities are not paralleled by myoglobin content of slow muscle, being 15 and 16 nM g wet wt-1 for yellow and silver eel, respectively. Structural reorganization of muscle fibres during metamorphosis, however, results in a twofold elevation of cytoplasmic myoglobin concentration in silver eel. It would appear that dramatic differences in metabolic capacity between life history stages of eel is required to overcome locomotory inefficiency of yellow eels and to "preadapt" silver eels for migratory activity. This increased locomotory capacity may be amplified by a subsequent training response.
...
PMID:Metamorphosis of the American eel, Anguilla rostrata LeSeur: I. Changes in metabolism of skeletal muscle. 395 May 63
The purpose of this study was to assess the relationship between muscle fiber type distribution and enzymatic characteristics in sedentary male and female subjects. Muscle biopsy samples from the vastus lateralis muscle of 38 females and 37 males were analyzed to determine the fiber type composition (I, IIa, and IIb), the fiber size, and maximal activities of enzyme markers of energy metabolic pathways. Significant correlations were found (p less than 0.05) between percent fiber type I area and
hexokinase
(r = -0.39), phosphofructokinase (r = -0.39), lactate dehydrogenase (r = -0.41), and oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (r = 0.33) activities, whereas such correlations with total phosphorylase (r = -0.02), malate dehydrogenase (r = 0.12), and 3-hydroxyacyl
CoA
dehydrogenase (r = 0.12) activities were not significant. The results of the present study also suggest the presence of a significant but low covariation of less than 30% between the fiber type distribution and muscle enzyme activities. They confirm the presence of an important metabolic heterogeneity independent of the muscle fiber type distribution in sedentary male and female subjects. Moreover, these results indicate that sedentary males exhibit a lower mean value of percent fiber type I and higher glycolytic enzyme activities than sedentary females.
...
PMID:Skeletal muscle histochemical and biochemical characteristics in sedentary male and female subjects. 398 89
Modifications of enzyme activities (creatine kinase and its B subunit; adenylate kinase;
hexokinase
; phosphofructokinase; lactate dehydrogenase; malate dehydrogenase, isocitrate dehydrogenase; citrate synthase; acetylcarnitine transferase; beta-hydroxyacetyl-
CoA
dehydrogenase; cytochrome c oxidase) in gastrocnemius muscle and myocardium were reported after two forms of training with or without administration of anabolic steroid. Endurance training was on a horizontal motor-driven treadmill, 2 km X hr-1, 5 days a week for 0.5 hr per day for 5 weeks. In the case of power endurance training there was a slope of 45 degrees. Enzyme activities in controls and treated guinea pigs, as well as treatment-induced enzyme activity changes are time dependent. Some of these activities correlate linearly with one another; such correlations characterize the effect of adaptation. Endurance training and power endurance training in this study induce similar modifications and seem to differ essentially in the daily work load. The anabolic steroid methandrostenolone (dianabol) induces modifications which training does not bring about but which training at least partially eliminates.
...
PMID:Effects of training and methandrostenolone (an anabolic steroid) on energy metabolism in the guinea pig: changes in enzyme activities in gastrocnemius muscle and myocardium. 407 21
Hindlimb hypokinesia was induced in young and old rats. After 3 weeks, the activities of five enzymes have been measured in soleus and medial gastrocnemius muscles. Soleus showed increased activity of
hexokinase
and decreased activity of phosphofructokinase, lactate dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase in both groups. The activity of 3-hydroxyacyl-
CoA
-dehydrogenase was decreased in the old muscle. Medial gastrocnemius showed decreased activity of phosphofructokinase and lactate dehydrogenase in both groups. The activity of 3-hydroxyacyl-
CoA
-dehydrogenase was decreased in the old muscle whereas
hexokinase
increased its activity in the young one. It is concluded that suspension hypokinesia results in changes at the enzymatic level. These changes appear to be related to the age of the muscle and to its fibre composition.
...
PMID:Enzymatic adaptations to suspension hypokinesia in skeletal muscle of young and old rats. 407 75
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