Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.1.7 (acetylcholinesterase)
28,390 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Lentil grains treated with malathion and stored under laboratory conditions for 12 months formed bound residues. Bioavailability and the effects of lentil-bound residues of malathion in rats were studied. The amount of bound residues in lentils treated with 14C-malathion at 10 ppm and 50 ppm gradually increased to 9.52% and 13.01% of the initially applied doses after 12 months. When rats were fed these 14C-bound residues, radioactivity excreted in urine accounted for 34.49% of the administered dose. In feces, 26.15% of given dose was methanol-extractable while 18.67% was determined as nonextractable. Various tissues including liver, kidney, fat and lungs contained 8.93% while radioactivity in expired air (14CO2) was low (1.51%). The results indicate that lentil-bound malathion residues are highly bioavailable to rats. Analysis of the lentil material containing bound residues indicated that the main compound was malathion. Lentil-bound malathion residues were administered to albino rats at 0.95 and 6.51 ppm in the feed for 3 months. Body weights were determined during and at the end of the experiment. Terminal organ weights were also determined and a number of blood chemistry parameters were examined. A significant reduction in serum cholinesterase activity and an increase in blood urea nitrogen and in white cell count suggest a toxocological potential of the bound residues.
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PMID:Bioavailability and toxicological potential of lentil-bound residues of malathion in rats. 152 55

Chlorpyrifos, an organophosphate insecticide, has often been used as a termite-control agent since the advent of regulatory measures against the use of chlordanes in September 1986. A current concern is hazards such as organophosphorus poisoning among termite-control workers. In this study, the blood cholinesterase activity, the number of hours engaged in termite-control work, general conditions, and various test values were examined regularly in eight workers at a termite-control office. The results are summarized as follows. 1. The plasma cholinesterase level was within the normal range from October 1986 until April 1987 in all workers, but started decreasing after May following the initiation of the full-scale termite-control season. It remained lower than the normal range (0.6 pH) from June until August in five of the six termite-control workers. The lowest level observed during this period was less than 50% of the mean value for each worker prior to the busy season in the six termite-control workers and was less than 10% of the pre-season values in three of them. In two workers, engaged mainly in sales, the plasma cholinesterase activity remained higher than in termite-control workers throughout the season. The lowest level in this minimally-exposed group during this period was not less than 50% of the mean value for each worker before the busy season. With the arrival of the off season, the level began to recover and returned to normal in all workers in January 1988. 2. The red cell cholinesterase activity remained within the normal range throughout the observation period, but it was generally low during the busy season from June to September and relatively high during the off season from December 1987 to January 1988. On the average, the red cell cholinesterase activity during the season was about 30% lower than that in the off season. 3. No marked subjective or objective abnormalities were seen in the workers. The results of other tests were generally normal, although a slight decrease in the red cell and white cell counts as well as abnormalities in serum lipid and lipase were noted in some workers. Further observations are necessary. 4. A significant negative correlation was noted between the number of hours engaged in termite-control work and variations in the plasma cholinesterase activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Variations in blood cholinesterase activity and exposure to chlorpyrifos in termite-control workers]. 169 4

Vesicles are released during the in vitro culture of sheep reticulocytes which can be harvested by centrifugation at 100,000 X g for 90 min. These vesicles contain a number of activities, characteristic of the reticulocyte plasma membrane, which are known to diminish or disappear upon reticulocyte maturation. The activities include acetylcholinesterase, cytochalasin B binding (glucose transporter) nucleoside binding (i.e. nucleoside transporter), Na+-independent amino acid transport, and the transferrin receptor. Enzymes of cytosolic origin are not detectable or are present at low activity in the vesicles. Cultures of whole blood, mature red cells, or white cells do not yield comparable levels of these activities, supporting the conclusion that the activities arise from the reticulocytes. In addition, the lipid composition of the vesicles shows the high sphingomyelin content characteristic of sheep red cell plasma membranes, but not white cell or platelet membranes, also consistent with the conclusion that the vesicles are of reticulocyte origin. It is suggested that vesicle externalization may be a mechanism for shedding of specific membrane functions which are known to diminish during maturation of reticulocytes to erythrocytes.
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PMID:Vesicle formation during reticulocyte maturation. Association of plasma membrane activities with released vesicles (exosomes). 359 17

The hypothesis that the toxic effects of imidocarb mediated by reduced cholinesterase activity might be intensified by hypomagnesaemia was tested in calves. Hypomagnesaemia was induced in 12 males (50 kg) using an artificial milk based on a commercial nondairy coffee creamer. Although plasma magnesium levels reached 0.33 mmol litre-1 in two weeks no clinical signs were detected. In 12 control calves a daily magnesium supplement of 0.6 g was inadequate although the published requirement is 0.45 g; it was raised to 1.2 g to keep plasma magnesium normal. Lighter calves developed hypomagnesaemia more readily and fast-growing calves had lower plasma urea concentrations. Plasma calcium, but not plasma magnesium, showed significant positive correlation with plasma albumin. The only statistically significant effects of hypomagnesaemia were slight elevations of white cell count and plasma sodium. The hypomagnesaemic and normomagnesaemic calves were divided into two equal groups and treated with 3.3 mg kg-1 of imidocarb dipropionate or a placebo. The drug produced the expected clinical signs of mild toxicity and depression of cholinesterase but no other adverse effects. Transient slight depressions of plasma calcium and potassium concentration, a transient rise of plasma sodium and elevation of creatine kinase occurred. None of the effects of imidocarb treatment was intensified by hypomagnesaemia except, perhaps, constriction of the pupils; generally, hypomagnesaemic animals were affected less.
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PMID:Effect of induced hypomagnesaemia on the toxicity of imidocarb in calves. 370 46

Tributyltin (TBT) is widely used as a biocide in antifouling paints. Astyanax bimaculatus adult fish were acclimatized in a laboratory and isolated in groups of eight individuals. Two groups were used as a control (similar handling and corn oil control) and one group was exposed to TBTCI dissolved in corn oil (0.0688 +/- 0.0031 microg TBT.g(-1)) every 6 days for 32 days. Light and transmission electron microscopy were used to investigate the morphological effects on liver. A muscle fragment was excised for the determination of the acetylcholinesterase activity and blood smears were obtained for differential white cell counts. The results indicated nuclear irregular shapes, chromatin condensation, presence of intranuclear lipid bodies, and degenerative nuclei. Acetylcholinesterase activity was not affected by TBT exposure. The increasing number of neutrophils may represent cytotoxic and stress conditions facilitating the invasion of opportunist organisms. According to the authors' data, TBT was confirmed as a powerful aquatic contaminant to fish in tropical ecosystem.
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PMID:Evaluation of tributyltin subchronic effects in tropical freshwater fish (Astyanax bimaculatus, Linnaeus, 1758). 1197 36