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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Male outbred Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a choline-deficient diet containing 0.10% DL-ethionine (CDE) for 4, 6, 10, 14 or 22 weeks followed by a standard diet for up to 59 weeks. Liver sections were histochemically analyzed for the following parameters: basophilia, glycogen content and the activities of glycogen synthase (SYN),
glycogen phosphorylase
(PHO), glucose-6-phosphatase (G6PASE), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), glycerin-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PDH), 'malic enzyme' (MDH),
alkaline phosphatase
(ALKPASE) and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT). The stop experiments revealed that many of the oval cells proliferating during the first 4-6 weeks may undergo necrotic changes and disappear with time, whereas cholangiofibroses appearing in animals fed CDE for at least 10 weeks are persistent lesions. The sequence of lesions seen in this study, leading from persistent oval cells through cholangiofibroses to cholangiofibromas, strongly suggests that the oval cells are the precursor cells of cholangiocellular tumors. The proliferating oval cells and the hepatic foci consisting of clear and acidophilic or mixed cell populations were always spatially separated and no transitions between oval and parenchymal cells were observed. These results argue against a precursor-product relationship between oval and parenchymal cells. Both proliferating and persistent oval cells, cholangiofibroses and cholangiofibromas showed a strong staining for G6PDH, GAPDH, G3PDH, MDH, ALKPASE and GGT; low PHO, SYN and G6PASE activities were also detected in these lesions. Persistent glycogen-storage foci, which developed in all rats fed CDE for 4-14 weeks followed by a normal lab chow for over a year, had increased PHO, G6PDH, MDH, ALKPASE and GGT activities, while SYN, GAPDH and G3PDH activities remained unaltered and G6PASE activity decreased. Mixed cell foci appearing in animals fed CDE for 22 weeks followed by a normal lab chow for 59 weeks had strongly increased G6PDH, GAPDH, G3PDH, MDH, ALKPASE and GGT activities as well as decreased G6PASE activity. These results indicate that the characteristic metabolic pattern of preneoplastic hepatic foci is independent of the further administration of the carcinogenic diet. The shift from glycogen metabolism to glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway occurring during the later stages of CDE-induced hepatocarcinogenesis is an autogenous process apparently directing the disturbed carbohydrate metabolism towards alternative metabolic pathways. A similar metabolic shift also seems to take place during cholangiocarcinogenesis.
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PMID:Persistence of the cholangiocellular and hepatocellular lesions observed in rats fed a choline-deficient/DL-ethionine-supplemented diet. 131 Sep 7
Renal clear cell tubules and clear/acidophilic cell tumors were induced in male Sprague-Dawley rats by 7 weeks oral administration (stop model) of N-nitrosomorpholine (NNM) at a concentration of 12 mg/100 ml in the drinking water. Twelve, 23 and 34 weeks after withdrawal of NNM serial cryostat sections of the kidneys were histochemically analyzed for the following parameters: glucose transporter proteins (GLUT1, GLUT2), glycogen content and the activities of glycogen synthase (SYN),
glycogen phosphorylase
(PHO), glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), hexokinase (HK), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), pyruvate kinase (PK), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), malate dehydrogenase (MDH),
alkaline phosphatase
(
ALP
), acid phosphatase (ACP) and gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT). Clear cell (glycogenotic) tubules first appeared at 23 weeks, and clear/acidophilic cell tumors at 34 weeks after withdrawal of the carcinogen. G6Pase,
ALP
, GGT and GLUT2 were absent in clear cell tubules, clear/acidophilic cell tubules, and clear/acidophilic cell tumors indicating a sequential origin of all these types of lesions from the collecting duct system, in line with previous morphological findings. In comparison to the collecting duct epithelium, glycogenotic tubules demonstrated an increased activity of PHO and reduced activities of glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes, which were accompanied by a strongly reduced expression of GLUT1. Moderately increased activities of glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes were observed in the clear cells of clear/acidophilic cell tubules and tumors compared with those in glycogenotic tubules. They had slightly increased activities of the glycolytic enzymes GAPDH and PK compared with normal collecting duct epithelium, while most of them were nearly lacking in GLUT1. Our findings suggest that glycogen storage is not due to an increased uptake of glucose from the blood, but results from a disturbance in intracellular flux of metabolites. The development of clear cell tubules from the normal collecting duct epithelium is accompanied by a markedly decreased expression of GLUT1 along with a reduction in glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes. This reduction of enzyme activities is replaced by an increase in enzyme activities in clear/acidophilic cell tumors indicating a fundamental shift in carbohydrate metabolism during progression from preneoplastic to neoplastic lesions.
...
PMID:Sequential changes in glycogen content, expression of glucose transporters and enzymic patterns during development of clear/acidophilic cell tumors in rat kidney. 147 41
Male outbred Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a choline-deficient diet containing 0.10% DL-ethionine for up to 30 weeks. Liver slices from rats killed 4, 6, 10, 14, 22 and 30 weeks after starting the treatment were histochemically analyzed for the following parameters: basophilia, expression of cytokeratin 19 (which in the liver is bile duct epithelial cell-specific), glycogen content and activities of glycogen synthetase (SYN),
glycogen phosphorylase
(PHO), glucose-6-phosphatase (G6PASE), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), glycerin-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PDH), 'malic enzyme' (MDH),
alkaline phosphatase
(ALKPASE) and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT). The diet induced necrosis of single parenchymal cells and a massive proliferation of oval cells within 4-6 weeks; thereafter cholangiofibroses, cystic cholangiomas and some cholangiofibromas, but no cholangiocarcinomas, were observed. Oval cells, cholangiofibroses, cystic cholangiomas and cholangiofibromas expressed cytokeratin 19, whereas parenchymal cells, foci of altered hepatocytes and hepatocellular adenomas did not; this observation does not support a precursor-product relationship between oval and parenchymal cells. SYN, PHO, G6PASE, G6PDH, GAPDH, G3PDH, MDH, ALKPASE and GGT activities were detected in oval cells; cholangiofibrotic lesions, cystic cholangiomas and cholangiofibromas stained strongly for GAPDH, G3PDH and MDH. In livers from rats fed the diet for 10 weeks, single hepatocytes storing high amounts of glycogen appeared in the parenchyma. There was no indication of a transition from the oval cell population to hepatocytes storing glycogen in excess. Foci of glycogen-storing cells were scattered all over the lobes after 14 and 22 weeks; they had increased G6PASE, G6PDH, ALKPASE and GGT activities. Mixed cell foci and hepatocellular adenomas developed within 22-30 weeks and exhibited a remarkable decrease of G6PASE activity, a strong increase of G6PDH, GAPDH, G3PDH and MDH activities as well as extremely high ALKPASE and GGT activities. The data support the concept that during hepatocarcinogenesis, a number of sequential changes in the activities of various enzymes involved in carbohydrate metabolism occur and that a correlation between morphology and enzyme pattern in the focal lesions does in fact exist. Furthermore, our results suggest that two different cell lineages are involved in the development of cholangiocellular tumors from oval cells and hepatocellular tumors from hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Enzyme histochemical and immunohistochemical characterization of oval and parenchymal cells proliferating in livers of rats fed a choline-deficient/DL-ethionine-supplemented diet. 170 20
Enzymatic dephosphorylation of the phosphorylated forms of five different yeast enzymes has been studied: fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase,
glycogen phosphorylase
, neutral trehalase, NAD-glutamate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase. Phosphorylated fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and phosphorylated 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase were present in extracts of starved yeast cells which had been incubated for 10 min with glucose. Phosphorylated
glycogen phosphorylase
, neutral trehalase and NAD-glutamate dehydrogenase were obtained by incubation of yeast extract with ATP, cyclic AMP and Mg2+. After incubation with commercially available preparations of
alkaline phosphatase
, all five phosphorylated enzymes studied showed the changes in catalytic activity that would be expected as a consequence of dephosphorylation. The recently purified yeast enzyme which dephosphorylates phosphorylated fructose-1,6-bisophosphatase (Horn and Holzer (1987) however, was found to be active only with the phosphorylated fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, but not with the other four phosphorylated enzymes studied. By contrast, a crude extract from yeast showed dephosphorylating activity towards all five substrates. Substrate specificity with the five phosphorylated enzymes studied of different phosphoprotein phosphatases from yeast prepared by others is discussed.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of the phosphorylated fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase dephosphorylating protein phosphatase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 284 61
Renal tubular lesions induced in male rats by two different carcinogens, N-nitrosomorpholine (NNM) and N-ethyl-N-hydroxyethylnitrosamine (EHEN), using a limited exposure "stop" protocol were investigated histochemically to demonstrate phenotypic cellular changes. The parameters measured included basophilia, glycogen content and the activity of the enzymes glucose-6-phosphatase (G6PASE), glycogen synthetase (SYN),
glycogen phosphorylase
(PHO), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH),
alkaline phosphatase
(
ALP
), acid phosphatase (ACP) and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GT). The lesions observed were predominantly of either basophilic or oncocytic types. In each case, tubular lesions (altered tubules) appeared to give rise to epithelial tumors (epitheliomas) with the same cellular phenotype. Basophilic tubules and epitheliomas proved to be strongly positive for GAPDH and G6PDH while demonstrating a reduction or loss of G6PASE,
ALP
, ACP, gamma-GT, and SDH compared with controls and the surrounding proximal or distal tubules. In addition, large basophilic epitheliomas demonstrated an increase in both SYN and PHO activities. In contrast, most oncocytic tubules and oncocytomas characterized by abundant densely granular cytoplasm showed a reduction in the activity of G6PDH, but were intensely positive for SDH. However, a few oncocytic lesions demonstrated a decrease in both SDH and G6PDH activity. Rarely, decreased SDH and elevated G6PDH activities were observed in altered tubules resembling oncocytic tubules. It remains to be clarified whether these tubules represent a variation of the oncocytic lesions or, perhaps, another type of tubular lesion. The results indicate that basophilic and oncocytic epithelial tumors differ in their cytochemical pattern and histogenesis. In line with earlier suggestions, the basophilic tumors apparently originate from the proximal renal tubules, while the oncocytomas develop from the distal parts of the nephron. The basophilic tumors are characterized by an increased pentose phosphate pathway and glycolysis, with a corresponding reduction in mitochondrial respiration. However, the majority of the oncocytomas show an increased activity of the mitochondrial enzyme SDH, and a marked decrease in the activity of the key enzyme of the pentose phosphate pathway.
...
PMID:Correlative histochemical studies on preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions in the kidney of rats treated with nitrosamines. 287 45
Purified
alkaline phosphatase
and plasma membranes from human liver were shown to dephosphorylate phosphohistones and plasma membrane phosphoproteins. The protein phosphatase activity of the liver plasma membranes was inhibited by levamisole, a specific inhibitor of
alkaline phosphatase
, and by phenyl phosphonate and orthovanadate, but was relatively insensitive to fluoride (50 mM). Endogenous membrane protein phosphatase activity was optimal at pH 8.0, compared to pH 7.8 for purified liver
alkaline phosphatase
. Plasma membranes also exhibited protein kinase activity using exogenous histone or endogenous membrane proteins (autophosphorylation) as substrates; this activity was cAMP-dependent. Autophosphorylation of plasma membrane proteins was apparently enhanced by phenyl phosphonate, levamisole, or orthovanadate. The dephosphorylation of phosphohistones by protein phosphatase 1 was not inhibited by levamisole but was inhibited by fluoride. Inhibition of endogenous protein phosphatase activity by orthovanadate during autophosphorylation of plasma membranes could be reversed by complexation of the inhibitor with (R)-(-)-epinephrine, and the dephosphorylation that followed was levamisole-sensitive. Neither plasma membranes nor purified liver
alkaline phosphatase
dephosphorylated
glycogen phosphorylase
a. These results suggest that the increased [32P]phosphate incorporation by endogenous protein kinases into the membrane proteins is due to inhibition of
alkaline phosphatase
and that the major protein phosphatase of these plasma membranes is
alkaline phosphatase
.
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PMID:Dephosphorylation of phosphoproteins of human liver plasma membranes by endogenous and purified liver alkaline phosphatases. 301 92
Spin-lattice and spin-spin relaxation rates (1/T1 and 1/T2) have been determined for the catalytically essential coenzyme phosphate at the active site of
glycogen phosphorylase
in both activated (R state) and inactive (T state) conformations of the enzyme. Dipolar contributions to 31P relaxation due to exchangeable protons on the phosphate group have been determined by measurement of relaxation rates at different concentrations of H2O and D2O, and field dependence studies have been performed to estimate the contribution of chemical shift anisotropy to the remaining 31P relaxation in D2O. At 109 MHz, dipolar relaxation from exchangeable protons was found to account for 50% of the spin-lattice relaxation for activated phosphorylase in 75% H2O, the remainder being due to chemical shift anisotropy. The spin-lattice relaxation rates in D2O for R-state
glycogen phosphorylase
are very similar to those measured for other proteins of very different size such as actin (Brauer, M., and B. D. Sykes, 1981, Biochemistry. 20:6767-6775),
alkaline phosphatase
(Coleman, J. E., I. D. Armitage, J. F. Chlebowski, J. D. Otvos, and A. J. M. S. Uiterkamp, 1979), and phosphoglucomutase (Rhyu, G. I., W. J. Ray, Jr., and J. L. Markley, 1984, Biochemistry. 23:252-260). In inactive (T state) phosphorylase the spin-lattice relaxation rates were almost an order of magnitude slower, while the spin-spin relaxation rates were essentially identical. These results have been analyzed by calculating the theoretically expected 31P relaxation rates in the presence of internal motions that are included in the relaxation calculation using the model-free approach of Lipari and Szabo (1982, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 104:4564-4559). The analysis suggests the coenzyme phosphate is relatively immobilized in the activated enzymic conformation, but in the inactive (Tstate) conformation it is considerably more mobile with a rotational correlation time one to two orders of magnitude smaller. Since the spin-lattice relaxation rate for the active R-state (immobilized) phosphate is similar to that observed in other phosphoenzymes of different size it is suggested that a librational motion on the nanosecond time scale may constitute a common spin-lattice relaxation pathway for phosphates in macromolecules. The consequences of phosphate motion in terms of recent suggestions concerning the environment and the catalytic role of the coenzyme phosphate are discussed.
...
PMID:31P NMR relaxation studies of the activation of the coenzyme phosphate of glycogen phosphorylase. The role of motion of the bound phosphate. 393 56
When cells of the slime mould Dictyostelium discoideum are allowed to starve in the presence of alpha-chymotrypsin, they are blocked in development at the stage where tight aggregates form tips. Analysis of developmentally regulated enzymes has shown that alpha-mannosidase, beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, threonine deaminase, tyrosine aminotransferase, beta-glucosidase and the carbohydrate-binding protein discoidin are unaffected, but enzymes that show an increase in specific activity during post-aggregative development, namely
glycogen phosphorylase
, UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, UDP-galactose 4-epimerase, UDP-galactose polysaccharide transferase and
alkaline phosphatase
, did not show the characteristic increase when development was blocked by alpha-chymotrypsin. Recovery of cells from the effects of alpha-chymotrypsin was accompanied by the formation of fruiting bodies and a concomitant increase in the specific activity of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Uptake or efflux of 45Ca2+ was not altered in the presence of alpha-chymotrypsin. Cells allowed to develop in alpha-chymotrypsin, or treated with the enzyme for 15 min, had a markedly reduced ability to bind cyclic AMP with low affinity; high-affinity binding was unaffected. Pronase had a similar effect on cyclic AMP binding, but trypsin, which does not alter developmental processes, has no effect on cyclic AMP binding to D. discoideum cells.
...
PMID:Developmentally regulated enzymes and cyclic AMP-binding sites in Dictyostelium discoideum cells blocked during development by alpha-chymotrypsin. 715 Feb 39
Mouse renal cell tumors (RCTs) were induced in male CBA mice by 5 subcutaneous injections of 8 mg 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH)/kg body weight once a week. After a lag period of 2 yr kidneys were removed, and serial cryostat sections of the kidneys were histochemically analyzed for the following parameters: glycogen content, basophilia, and the activities of glycogen synthase (SYN),
glycogen phosphorylase
(PHO), glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), hexokinase (HK), pyruvate kinase (PK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), malic enzyme (ME), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH),
alkaline phosphatase
(ALPase) and gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGT). RCTs displayed the same histochemical profile irrespective of their size and growth pattern. In comparison with the normal kidney epithelium, the neoplastic cells exhibited elevated activities of enzymes for glycolysis (HK, PK, LDH) and the pentose phosphate pathway (G6PDH), while negative G6Pase and low SDH activity were observed in these cells. The majority of RCTs showed high PHO activity and weak staining for SYN. Activities of ALPase and GGT were negative in most of the RCTs. Markedly enlarged cells with atypical nuclei were detected in some advanced RCTs. Higher activities of glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes and G6PDH were found in these enlarged cells than in other tumor cells. Tubular preneoplastic lesions were similar to neoplastic lesions in morphological and histochemical characteristics. The present study revealed that a markedly elevated capacity for glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway occurred in RCTs in mice. A similar histochemical pattern in the few preneoplastic tubular lesions observed suggests that these metabolic aberrations emerge early during carcinogenesis, but additional studies on early stages of renal carcinogenesis are needed to substantiate this assumption.
...
PMID:Enzymic pattern of preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions induced in the kidney of CBA mice by 1,2-dimethylhydrazine. 781 30
A new sensing principle of enzyme activation is demonstrated for the determination of
glycogen phosphorylase
b and its allosteric effector AMP. As the indicator of the phosphorylase catalysed glycogen phosphorolysis, glucose-1-phosphate formation has been detected with an enzyme sequence comprising coentrapped
alkaline phosphatase
, mutarotase and glucose oxidase on a hydrogen peroxide indicating electrode. The optimized three-enzyme sensor was useful for the determination of 0.005-0.2 U.ml-1
glycogen phosphorylase
a and b. A biosensor for AMP and inorganic phosphate has been developed by coupling glycogen entrapped phosphorylases to the three-enzyme indicator membrane. The measurement of AMP is based on the modulation of the phosphorylase b catalysed glycogen phosphorylating activity. The proposed sensor responds to AMP between 5 and 150 microM. The calibration graph of the reagentless phosphate sensor is linear between 0.05 and 1 mM.
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PMID:Enzyme activation for activator and enzyme activity measurement. 825 Nov 31
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