Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.1.3.9 (
glucose-6-phosphatase
)
3,081
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
2-Deoxy-D-galactose, in a dose of 3 mmol/kg, was administered intraperitoneally twice daily to young rats for periods up to 12 weeks. This dosage schedule resulted in recurrent phosphate trapping predominantly in liver. UTP deficiency was excluded by simultaneous uridine injections. Phosphate trapping was caused by the rapid accumulation of 2-deoxy-D-galactose 1-phosphate and was most pronounced in liver but also demonstrated in small intestine, brain, spleen, and thymus. The marked, although transient, drop in the hepatic content of inorganic phosphate triggered the catabolism of adenine nucleotides and a loss of ATP. Other metabolic pathways affected by phosphate deficiency include glycogenolysis and glycolysis. Increasing with time, repeated doses of the galactose analog led to retardation and arrest of growth,
hepatomegaly
, and splenomegaly. The average relative liver and spleen weights were elevated 2.5- and 4.5-fold, respectively, after 12 weeks of treatment. Liver damage was indicated by hyperbilirubinaemia and a progressive rise in the activity in plasma of sorbitol dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, and gamma-glutamyltransferase. Examination by light and electron microscopy showed increasing numbers of vacuoles, surrounded by a single membrane, in hepatocytes, sinusoidal endothelial cells, and Kupffer cells. Focal cytoplasmic degeneration in hepatocytes was occasionally indicated by formation of autophagic vacuoles and finger print lysosomes. Hepatocytes of 2-deoxy-D-galactose-treated rats showed a dissociation and fragmentation of the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Sinusoidal endothelial cells and Kupffer cells were markedly enlarged, the latter contained a PAS-positive but amylase resistant substance. Extrahepatic changes included an increased occurrence of vacuolated cells in thymus. Phosphate trapping and its metabolic consequences are common phenomena in the experimental injury induced b 2-deoxy-D-galactose and in some hereditary diseases such as uridylyltransferase deficiency galactosaemia, fructose intolerance and
glucose-6-phosphatase
deficiency.
...
PMID:Consequences of recurrent phosphate trapping induced by repeated injections of 2-deoxy-D-galactose. Biochemical and morphological studies in rats. 4 10
Congenital enzymopathic hyperlactacidemia results from a defect of utilisation of pyruvate either at the level of the pyruvate junction (pyruvate-carboxylase, pyruvate-dehydrogenase and Kreb's cycle), or at the level of the unidirectional enzymes on neo-glucogenesis and of neo-glycogenogenesis, e.g.
glucose-6-phosphatase
, phosphoenol-pyruvate-carboxykinase and glycogen synthetase. The enzymopathies which affect neoglucogenesis associate hyper-lactacidemia and fasting hypoglycemia and more or less marked
hepatomegaly
. Type I glycogenesis (von Gierke's disease) is the best known example. Enzymopathies which affect the pyruvate junction and the Krebs cycle, may be manifested in addition by: --either chronic neuropathies, e.g. Leigh's disease, recurrent ataxia, and moderate hyperalactacidemia,--or, as in congenital lactic acidoses, which have a rapid and severe prognosis with major hyperlactacidemia. Functional investigation, in particular, loading tests are of great value in orientation and justify the practice of tissue biopsy which permits the enzyme diagnosis. Recent, still unconfirmed knowledge of the pathogenesis of these diseases emphasizes the considerable importance of estimation of blood lactic acid in the investigation of metabolic acidoses of hereditary origin.
...
PMID:[Enzymopathic congenital hyperlactacidemia]. 18 25
Epithelial cells and not fibroblasts from human liver and amniotic fluid contain inducible
glucose-6-phosphatase
(
G-6-Pase
) activity. The diagnosis of Von Gierke's disease has been made in a patient with
hepatomegaly
utilizing cultured epithelial cells grown from a liver biopsy.
G-6-Pase
activity in epithelial cells from this patient could not be induced by dibutyryl cyclic AMP and theophylline. This is the first use of epithelial cells for diagnosis of a metabolic disease.
G-6-Pase
activity in cloned epithelial cells from amniotic fluid increases 2- to 3-fold after 24-hr exposure to dibutyryl cyclic AMP and theophylline. The prenatal diagnosis of Von Gierke's disease may be possible in a laboratory experienced with these techniques if epithelial cell growth is obtained from amniotic fluid.
...
PMID:Epithelial cells and Von Gierke's disease. 19 49
The effect of repeated (4 weeks) oral administration of 2,4-, 2,5- or 2,6-xylidine (at dose levels of 400--500 mg/kg/day) on the morphology and microsomal drug metabolising enzyme activity of the liver was studied in rats. All 3 isomers caused
hepatomegaly
which was considered to be due to proliferation of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum. Decreases in glycogen content and
glucose-6-phosphatase
activity were demonstrated histochemically. Biochemical investigations showed increases in microsomal protein and cytochrome P-450 content in rats dosed with 2,4- or 2,5-xylidine and in glucuronyltransferase activity in rats given 2,4-, 2,5- or 2,6-xylidine. Aniline hydroxylase activity was increased in all treated rats except males dosed with 2,6-xylidine. The results of the study indicate that all isomes of xylidine can be inducers of microsomal drug-metabolising enzyme activity, that they may be metabolised by oxidation and that the xylidine molecule may be eliminated as a conjugate with glucuronic acid.
...
PMID:Hepatic effects of xylidine isomers in rats. 22 31
The classical features of Type I glycogen storage disease (McKusick 23220) (GSD) are
hepatomegaly
, hypoglycaemia, and acidosis, enlargement of the kidneys and short stature. Glucose-6-phosphatase (
EC 3.1.3.9
) activity is defective not only in liver and kidney but also in small intestine (Field et al., 1965). In addition to the classical features, many patients suffer from episodes of diarrhoea (Fine et al., 1969). At the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street, patients with the commoner forms of hepatic glycogen storage disease have episodes of diarrhoea or loose stools more commonly than was suspected. We have investigated small intestinal function in three patients with Type I GSD by both in vitro and in vivo techniques.
...
PMID:Disordered intestinal function in glycogen storage disease. 22 44
Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) treatment is effective in preventing or delaying the onset of various genetic and induced disorders of mice and rats. Associated with the beneficial therapeutic effects exerted by action of this steroid is the development of
hepatomegaly
. To determine whether the changes associated with
hepatomegaly
also involve alterations in activities of tissue enzymes, we evaluated the effects of DHEA (0.45% in food, w/w) on hepatic protein kinases, phosphatases, and lipogenic enzymes in mice of various strains. The rates of fatty acid and cholesterol syntheses also were evaluated. DHEA administration resulted in profound changes in the sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns of endogenous radiophosphorylated proteins obtained by incubation of liver homogenates with (gamma-32P]ATP. These changes were dependent upon the medium used for homogenization. Thus, when homogenates of liver tissue of DHEA-treated mice were prepared in Tris buffer containing sucrose (0.25 M) there was a marked decrease in phosphorylation of the proteins of relative molecular weight approximately 116,000 (Mr approximately 116,000), approximately 82,000, approximately 80,000, approximately 58,000, approximately 56,000, approximately 48,000, approximately 34,000, and approximately 31,000 compared with controls. With liver homogenates of DHEA-treated mice prepared in Tris buffer alone, there was a marked increase in phosphorylation of the proteins of Mr approximately 70,000, approximately 49,000, approximately 34,000, approximately 31,000, and 28,000 compared with controls. Moreover, the specific activity of kinases for endogenous protein acceptors in liver of control mice was higher than that in liver of DHEA-treated animals. The specific activities of casein kinase, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and cGMP-dependent protein kinase remained unchanged with DHEA treatment, but the specific activity of histone kinase was increased approximately 30%. Long-term administration of DHEA also was associated with increases in the specific activities of liver AMPase and GTPase (approximately two times), but not of other nucleotidases, alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase,
glucose-6-phosphatase
, or phosphotyrosine phosphatase. The activity of hepatic NADP-linked malic enzyme was increased significantly (two to three times) by DHEA treatment of female mice of three different strains, but was unchanged in male C57BL/6 mice. The specific activities of hepatic glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NADP-linked isocitrate dehydrogenase, and ATP-citrate lyase were not affected significantly by DHEA treatment of mice. The rate of hepatic lipogenesis, determined by incorporation of tritium from 3H2O into fatty acids, was decreased approximately 70% in DHEA-treated mice, while the rate of cholesterol synthesis was increased approximately 44% compared with controls.
...
PMID:Dehydroepiandrosterone feeding and protein phosphorylation, phosphatases, and lipogenic enzymes in mouse liver. 215 82
The hepatic
glucose-6-phosphatase
system was studied with a novel microanalytical technique in adult patients undergoing liver biopsy. 4 patients were diagnosed as having type 1 glycogen storage disease (GSD). 3 of these patients, who had hypoglycaemic symptoms, had variations of type 1a GSD, which is caused by a defect in the hepatic microsomal
glucose-6-phosphatase
enzyme. The fourth, with
hepatomegaly
and no hypoglycaemic symptoms, had a normal
glucose-6-phosphatase
enzyme but a defect in the hepatic microsomal phosphate/pyrophosphate translocase T2; this is the first report of an adult with type 1c GSD. Adult type 1 GSD should be considered in patients with unresolved hypoglycaemic symptoms and/or unresolved
hepatomegaly
.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of type 1a and type 1c glycogen storage diseases in adults. 288 97
Although butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) is non-mutagenic, at high doses it has recently been associated with an increased incidence of liver tumours in laboratory rodents. To establish whether chronic liver cell injury may be involved in the genesis of these tumours, BHT was administered to rats by orogastric gavage at doses of 0, 25, 250 or 500 mg/kg/day for up to 28 days and also at daily doses of 1000 and 1250 mg BHT/kg for up to 4 days (sublethal doses). The sublethal doses induced centrilobular necrosis within 48 hr, whereas administration of BHT for 7 or 28 days caused dose-related
hepatomegaly
and at the highest dose level induced progressive periportal hepatocyte necrosis. The periportal lesions were associated with proliferation of bile ducts, persistent fibrous and inflammatory cell reactions, hepatocyte hyperplasia and hepatocellular and nuclear hypertrophy. Biochemical changes consisted of dose-related induction of epoxide hydrolase, dose-related changes in the ratio of cytochrome P-450 isoenzymes and depression of
glucose-6-phosphatase
. Measurement of BHT demonstrated a dose-related accumulation in fat but not in the liver. Changes in hepatic activating and detoxifying enzyme profiles are implicated both in the mechanism of periportal hepatocyte damage and in the change of site of damage according to the dose and duration of the treatment. The persistent and active nature of the lesions in rats dosed with 500 mg BHT/kg for 28 days, combined with evidence of cell damage at doses equivalent to those associated with hepatic tumours (250 mg BHT/kg), suggests that chronic liver cell damage may be involved in their aetiology. In this and several other studies, there was no evidence that BHT causes liver damage at a dose level of 25 mg/kg/day. As this is several hundred times higher than the normal human intake, it is considered unlikely that BHT poses a threat to human health.
...
PMID:Hepatic responses to the administration of high doses of BHT to the rat: their relevance to hepatocarcinogenicity. 302 37
Type IV glycogenosis is due to branching enzyme deficiency and is usually manifested clinically by progressive liver disease with cirrhosis and hepatic failure between the second and fourth years of life. We describe a 5-year-old boy who, following an acute febrile illness at 2 years of age, was first noted to have
hepatomegaly
with mildly elevated serum transaminase levels. Liver biopsy revealed hepatic fibrosis with periodic-acid Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant inclusions in hepatocytes and fibrillar inclusions characteristic of amylopectin by electron microscopy. Enzymatic assay revealed deficient hepatic branching enzyme activity with normal activity of
glucose-6-phosphatase
, debranching enzyme and phosphorylase activities. During the succeeding 3 years, he grew and developed normally with apparent resolution of any clinical evidence of liver disease and only intermittent elevation in serum transaminase levels associated with fever and prolonged fasting. Repeat liver biopsy at 4 years of age showed persistence of scattered hepatocellular periodic-acid Schiff-positive, diastase-resistant inclusions, but no progression of hepatic fibrosis in spite of persistent deficiency of hepatic branching enzyme activity. Skeletal muscle and skin fibroblasts from the patient also showed deficient enzyme activity. Skin fibroblasts from both parents exhibited half the normal control activity, suggesting a heterozygote state. This is the first documented patient with deficiency of branching enzyme but without evidence of progressive hepatic disease. This patient, coupled with reports of other patients with late onset hepatic or muscle disease with branching enzyme deficiency, suggests that the defect resulting in Type IV glycogen storage disease is more heterogenous and possibly more common than previously suspected.
...
PMID:A new variant of type IV glycogenosis: deficiency of branching enzyme activity without apparent progressive liver disease. 316 25
A four-month-old boy affected by glycogen storage disease type I is presented. The child suffered from
hepatomegaly
, lactic acidosis, fasting hypoglycemia and failure to thrive. He had repeated infectious and cyclic neutropenia. Immunoglobulin and chemotactic neutrophil motility was impaired. Liver biopsy showed increased amounts of glycogen in hepatic cells as assessed by morphological and biochemical grounds. The activity of
glucose-6-phosphatase
as well as other glycogenolytic enzymes was normal in the frozen liver. The aforementioned characteristics suggested the diagnosis of glycogen storage disease type Ib. The child was first treated by enteral continuous feeding and later on by frequent meals during the daytime and enteral continuous feeding during the night time, improving the hypoglycemia as well as the other biochemical and metabolic abnormalities.
...
PMID:[Present-day status of glycogenosis Ib. Report of a new case]. 319 58
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