Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.1.8 (cholinesterase)
12,691 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Frog sartorius muscles were treated with an irreversible cholinesterase inhibitor and then incubated in isotonic potassium propionate solution (isotonic KPr). Total and bound, presumably vesicular, acetylcholine (ACh) in the tissue and ACh in the medium were assayed by mass fragmentography, miniature end-plate potentials (MEPPs) were recorded and the end-plates were investigated by electron microscopy. 2. Incubation in isotonic KPr for 30 min stimulated ACh release and concomitantly decreased total and bound ACh. Nerve stimulation for 30 min by trains of impulses (0.1 s trains of 100 Hz, 1 train s-1) in normal-potassium propionate-containing solution had the same effects. 3. When the tissue was incubated in normal-K+ Ringer solution for 3 h, following chemical or electric stimulation, bound ACh recovered to about 75% of the initial value, provided that Cl- ions were present in the medium. In the presence of propionate instead of Cl- ions almost no recovery of bound ACh took place. There was also recovery of bound ACh in the presence of either NO3- or gluconate ions. In NO3- it was the same as in Cl-, but in gluconate it was less than found in Cl- -containing medium. 4. Recovery of total ACh, in contrast to bound ACh, took place even in the presence of propionate ions, showing that extracellular Cl- is not required for the synthesis of ACh. 5. In terminals recovered in normal Ringer solution, many synaptic vesicles were found, but terminals 'recovered' in propionate solution were depleted of vesicles. 6. From these and other results it is concluded that the recycling of synaptic vesicles normally requires the presence of extracellular chloride.
...
PMID:The effect of anions on bound acetylcholine in frog sartorius muscle. 278 83

Apart from analyses for elemental contaminants in field collected specimens, very little is known about the assimilation, accumulation and toxic effects of inorganic contaminants in reptiles. This study examined the chronic accumulation of Cd in a European lacertid lizard (Podarcis carbonelli) following dietary provision of an environmentally realistic concentration of Cd for 21 weeks. Lizards were provided with Cd that had either been biologically incorporated into crickets, or as Cd(NO3)2 added superficially to crickets just prior to feeding. Among both treatment groups Cd accumulated in tissues in the following order of concentration: gut>liver>kidney>carcass. The majority of the Cd was retained within the gut, and transfer to internal organs was low. Morphological indices, brain and plasma cholinesterase activities, gut and liver metallothionein content, and standard metabolic rate were measured as biomarkers of exposure and effect; however, no differences between control lizards and Cd-treated lizards were observed.
...
PMID:Bioaccumulation of Cd by a European lacertid lizard after chronic exposure to Cd-contaminated food. 1746 2