Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.3.9 (glucose-6-phosphatase)
3,081 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty experiments were conducted on dogs. The effect of hypothermia of different degree (from 18 to 20 degrees C and from 4 to 6 degrees C) on the carbohydrate metabolism and the extent of solubilization of hepatic enzymes (lactate dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase, urokaninase, DNA-ase, glucose-6-phosphatase) in prefusion-free preservation of the liver was studied. The preservation efficacy was assessed during the subsequent two-hour normothermic perfusion. A marked solubilization of the enzymes under study followed preservation of the liver at 18--20 degrees C; this indicated the loss of intactness of the cell membranes during the preservation. A moderate expenditure of the glycogen stores in the liver, and of sugar in the perfusate followed preservation of the liver at a temperature of 4--6 degrees C; this suggested an even suppression of hepatic metabolism and the prevalence of normal tissue respiration over glycolysis in the restoration of circulation in the liver.
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PMID:[Effect of hypothermia on metabolism in the liver during its preservation]. 68 13

An increased sensitivity of adrenalectomized (Adex) rats to intravenous (IV) injection of recombinant human tumor necrosis factor (rHuTNF) was manifested by a marked increase in the rate of mortality. The rats that died exhibited severe hypoglycemia and hypothermia. Administration of 2.5 or 10 micrograms/100 g body weight (3% or 12%) of the lethal dose in sham-operated rats (90 micrograms/100 g body weight) rHuTNF caused a mortality rate of 50% or 100%, respectively, within 4 hours of its injection. Pre-administration of dexamethasone or intermittent glucose infusion protected the animals from the lethal effect of rHuTNF. Indomethacin did not change the mortality rate in rHuTNF-treated Adex rats, but prevented it in sham-operated rats. The rats that died exhibited a marked decrease in body temperature, but only Adex rats developed hypoglycemia after low doses of TNF. Pretreatment with dexamethasone prevented the hypothermia in both Adex and sham-operated rats, while indomethacin was effective only in sham-operated rats and did not prevent the hypothermia or the hypoglycemia in Adex rats. In the surviving rHuTNF-treated Adex rats, a rapid increase in body temperature occurred, blood glucose decreased to 30 mg/dL, serum insulin concentration decreased to 6 microU/mL, liver glycogen content was reduced by 98%, and a significant reduction in liver phosphoeonolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) and liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase activities was observed. Repeated administration of glucose IV to rHuTNF-treated Adex rats caused an increase in blood glucose and insulin concentrations, and some repletion in liver glycogen content. Injection of rHuTNF, 2.5 to 10 micrograms/100 g body weight, to sham-operated rats caused a significant but slower increase in body temperature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Lethal hypoglycemia and hypothermia induced by administration of low doses of tumor necrosis factor to adrenalectomized rats. 215 69

An ultrastructural, morphologic and histochemical study was made on the livers of rats exposed to eight different acute stressors: fasting, cortisol injecions, reserpine injections, restraint, spinal cord transection, immersion in hot water, exposure to cold and forced muscular exercise in a revolving drum. After 48 hours of exposure to stress, electron microscopy of the liver revealed rough endoplasmic reticulum fragmentation and dilatation, glycogen depletion, and mitochondrial enlargment. The most striking change, however, was an increase in the number and size of autophagic vacuoles which were limited by single or multiple membranes. A cytochemical study revealed that in the former case, the vacuolar membranes did not show a glucose-6-phosphatase positive reaction, whereas they did in the latter case. The vacuoles contained acid phosphatase positive material as well as organelles in various stages of degradation. Following exposure to most of the stressors, a marked increase of plasma corticosterone was noted, with a lowered rectal temperature and the appearance of the typical stress triad (adrenal hypertrophy, thymicolymphatic involution and gastrointestinal ulcers). The severity of the morphologic changes appeared to parallel the degree of hypothermia caused by the stressor. The results suggest that autophagy in the liver may be an adaptive response to stressors at the subcellular level.
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PMID:Liver ultrastructure during acute stress. 743 33