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)

Male Sprague-Dawley rats consumed a diet to which 100 ppm of various polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) mixtures (Aroclors 1248, 1254, and 1262) were added for one year. Rats were hepatectomized at 13, 26, and 52 weeks during feeding and at 13 weeks following the discontinuation of the PCB diets. The liver homogenates of these rats had an increase in protein and RNA on a DNA basis and an increase in lipid and a decrease in DNA on the liver weight basis. The hepatic microsomes from these livers also had an increase in protein and cytochrome P-450. The RNA/microsomal protein levels were decreased, and no marked alterations were recorded for the phospholipids and cholesterol on a microsomal protein basis. Increased enzymatic activity was recorded for N-demethylase and nitroreductase. However, the specific activity of glucose-6-phosphatase was decreased throughout the treatment period.
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PMID:Responses of rats exposed to polychlorinated biphenyls for fifty-two weeks. II. Compositional and enzymatic changes in the liver. 12 Jan 38

1. Cataract formation in streptozotocin-induced diabetes in rats was reduced by approximately 85% when a diet rich in maize oil (300 g/kg diet) (fat diet) was given, thus confirming results of earlier studies. However, the concentration of sorbitol in the lens of diabetic animals remained high, the values for diabetic rats given the standard diet and the fat died being 65 and 40 mumol/g protein respectively. 2. With the standard diet, the fatty acid profile of the triglycerides of the epididymal fat pads was characterized by a greater relative proportion of saturated fatty acids for the diabetic animals compared to that for the normal animals. The fat diet moderated the tendency towards saturation in the diabetic animals. 3. The fat diet had other effects on the diabetic animals; these included a reduced mortality rate, increased body-weight, a decrease in the daily water intake, and in the daily urinary excretion of glucose and urea. 4. In the diabetic animals the fat diet had no effect on the specific activities in the liver of hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.1), glucokinase (EC 2.7.1.2), phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.11) and pyruvate kinase (EC 2.7.1.40). However, the specific activity of glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) was reduced, while that of malate dehydrogenase (decarboxylating) (NADP) (EC 1.1.1.40) was increased. The NAD+:NADH ratio, as calculated from liver pyruvate and lactate concentrations, tended to increase. 5. The results suggested that the fat diet moderated the long-term metabolic effects of diabetes.
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PMID:The effect of an unsaturated-fat diet on cataract formation in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 13 11

Oral heavy water (D20) administration and enzymatic changes were studied in rat testis. D20 caused marked gradual decrease in the weight of the body as well as the testes throughout the treatment interval ranging from 1 to 6 weeks. Following D20 oral administration, an overall marked fall in the activity of acid phosphatase and glucose-6-phosphatase was seen. However,, the activity of lactic and succinic dehydrogenases, alkaline posphatase, and adenosine triphosphatase increased following treatment. These results suggest on altered metabolism of the testes in response to D20 administration and corroborate the view that biological systems do discriminate between hydrogen and deuterium.
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PMID:Oral D2O administration and enzymatic changes in rat testis. 13 64

A permanent cell line (HLC-1) was established from the pleural effusion of a human lung adenocarcinoma. The cell line was characterized by the monolayered and multilayered organoid growth of epithelioid cells with the doubleing time of about 33 hr and the modal chromosome number of 68. Cloning efficiency was 17.9% in liquid medium and 8.3% in soft agar. The cell produced a large amount of epithelial mucin. Electron microscopic examination revealed many secretory granules and terminal bars. They formed spherical aggregates in a gyratory culture which showed adenocarcinoma-like tubular structures histologically. Enzyme-histolochemically, they showed the characteristics of lung adenocarcinoma cells except for a few enzymes such as glucose-6-phosphatase and ATPase. Heterotransplantation of the cells produced the tumor. These characteristics confirm that HLC-1 cell line is a human lung adenocarcinoma cell line.
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PMID:Establishment and characteristics of a human lung adenocarcinoma cell line. 14 93

Extensive studies of parameters conditioning selection and high plating efficiency of epithelial liver cells at primary seeding allowed us to set up a technique for the routine culture of liver cells from rats of various ages (18 day-old pc to 7 month-old) in Ham F10 medium supplemented with 10 p. cent fetal calf serum and 10 p. cent human serum. Cultures, after several passages, or sometimes at primary seeding were free of fibroblasts. The quality of water for culture medium preparation was found to be a very important parameter. G-banding caryotype showed that cells in culture were diploid until 15-20 passages. Various metabolic pathways have been studied in primary culture and in cell lines: enzymes of the anaerobic metabolism of hexoses and metabolism of steroid hormones and xenobiotics. Activity of glucose-6-phosphatase was nearly lost in all cultures. Activity of glucose-6-phosphatase was nearly lost in all cultures. Aldolase showed a specific liver activity with a cleavage ratio of phosphofructoses (F-1,6-diP/F-1-P) equal to 1 or about 1 in several primary cultures and cell lines. Many metabolites arising from incubation of cell lines with 14C-labelled corticosterone, corticosterone-21-sulfate, testosterone and progesterone have been isolated and quantitated by gas liquid chromatography (GC) and mass fragmentography coupled to GC, using 14C/12C isotope ratio measurements. These metabolites indicate the presence in cultured cells of 3 alpha/beta-steroid-reductases, 4-ene steroid reductases and hydroxylases at various positions: 2 alpha, 2 beta, 6 alpha, 6 beta, 7 alpha, 17 beta and 16 alpha. These cell lines were able to activate carcinogens through the epoxide-diol pathway and are suitable for drug metabolism study.
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PMID:[Hepatic tissue enzymes: study in cultures of rat liver epithelial cells. Control and analysis of cells by cytogenetic and mass spectrometric methods. Pharmacological applications]. 15 68

Changes in the levels of serine dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphatase induced by dietary stimuli or starvation in hyperplastic nodules of rat liver during diethylnitrosamine or N-2-fluorenylacetamide feeding were studied by immuno- and enzyme histochemical methods. The study was performed during carcinogenesis through a combined method of enzyme histochemistry and radioautography. Serine dehydratase was observed diffusely in the cytoplasm of the original hepatocytes in the periportal zone and was induced markedly during diethynitrosamine feeding but only slightly during N-2-fluorenylacetamide feeding. The enzyme was deficient and not inducible in hyperplastic nodules during their developing phase. Later during the feeding period, however, there was an elevation of the level of serine dehydratase and its inducibility with time in the majority of the nodules. A good correlation was observed between serine dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphatase in their elevated levels and response to enviornmental stimuli. There was a minor group of hyperplastic nodules in which the deficiencies of these enzymes persisted and enzyme induction was not observed. A greater number of hyperplastic nodules with persistent enzyme deficiency was seen during diethylnitrosamine carcinogenesis. These results provide further information about the changing biological nature of hyperplastic nodules with respect to their metabolic adaptability and enzyme levels during hepatocarcinogenesis.
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PMID:The regulation of serine dehydratase and glucose-6-phosphatase in hyperplastic nodules of rat liver during diethylnitrosamine and N-2-fluorenylacetamide feeding. 16 97

We have examined the effect of chronic diabetes mellitus upon cell membrane composition and turnover in streptozotocin-treated rats and control animals maintained for four to eight weeks. Liver plasma membranes, prepared from diabetic animals, showed enhanced activities of alkaline phosphatase and glucose-6-phosphatase and depressed 5'-nucleotidase when compared with controls. Studies of the nonprotein constituents of liver plasma membranes and red cell "ghosts" showed similar changes in both tissues: sialic acid and cholesterol content were reduced in the membranes of diabetic animals, while phospholipids (total and individual classes) and neutral sugars were unchanged. To look for changes in relative turnover rates of individual membrane proteins, we combined a double-label in-vivo technic using [3H] and [14C] leucine with polyacrylamide gel separation of membrane proteins. No significant differences were observed between control and diabetic animals. In chronically diabetic animals, cell membranes may show significant changes in overall composition with no significant changes in the rate of protein turnover.
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PMID:Cell membrane changes in chronically diabetic rats. 16 76

Carbamyl phosphate : glucose phosphotransferase and glucose-6-phosphate (Glc-6-P) phosphohydrolase activities have beeh demonstrated in pancreas, adrenals, brain, testes, spleen, and lung. Catalysis of these activities by classical multifunctional glucose-6-phosphatase (D-glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase; EC 3.1.3.9) has been firmly established for the first four of these tissues on the basis of characteristic catalytic properties of the transferase pH-activity profiles, apparent Km values for carbamyl phosphate and glucose, substrate specificity, susceptibility to inhibition by molybdate, and activation by deoxycholate. Additional such activity due to non-specific acid (and alkaline) phosphatase action also is indicated at very high glucose concentrations. The possible physiological significance of the newly-elucidated presence of glucose-6-phosphatase-phosphotransferase in these various tissues, in addition to previously extensively studied liver, kidney, and mucosa of small intestine, is discussed briefly.
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PMID:Mammalian carbamyl phosphate : glucose phosphotransferase and glucose-6-phosphate phosphohydrolase: extended tissue distribution. 16 20

Studies were performed to examine the effects of alloxan- or streptozotocin-induced diabetes on carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) liver injury. Male rats were pretreated with single i.v. injections of alloxan monohydrate (40 or 80 mg/kg) or streptozotocin (65 mg/kg). A challenging dose of CCl4 (0.1 ml/kg i.p.) was given to rats 4 days after alloxan pretreatment or 5 days after streptozotocin pretreatment, and the animals were sacrificed 24 hours later. Biochemical and morphologic evidence was obtained to show that pretreatment with the diabetogenic agents markedly enhanced CCl4-induced hepatotoxity. The challenging dose of CCl4 had no effect on the serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) activity in control rats. However, the administration of this dose of CCl4 to rats pretreated with 40 and 80 mg/kg of alloxan as well as to rats pretreated with streptozotocin resulted in 11-, 68-, and 32-fold increases, respectively, in SGPT activity. Hepatic triglyceride concentrations in the diabetic rats were also markedly elevated above control values after CCl4 challenge. Alloxan- or streptozotocin-pretreatment alone did not enhance these biochemical parameters of liver injury. Hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase activity, which increased in the rats given a diabetogenic agent, was lowered as a result of CCl4 injection. Insulin treatment of rats given alloxan (80 mg/kg) markedly protected against CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity. The severity of the morphologic changes in diabetic rats given CCl4 correlated with the biochemical findings.
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PMID:Potentiation of carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatotoxicity in alloxan- or strepto- zotocin-diabetic rats. 16 33

Plasma membranes isolated from Yoshida ascites hepatoma AH-130 by a modification of the method of T.K. Ray (Biochim. Biophys. Acta 196:1, 1970), were subfractionated into three fractions having densities (d) 1.12, 1.14 and 1.16 by discontinuous sucrose density-gradient. Membrane subfractions were characterized by electron-microscopy, by assay of marker enzymes and by lipid composition. All subfractions appeared to be essentially free from whole mitochondria, lysosomes and nuclei. Subfraction d 1.16 had the highest 5'-nucleotidase, Mg++-ATPase and (Na+ +K+)-ATPase activities; cytochrome c oxidase was undetectable in any fraction and glucose-6-phosphatase was measurable only in fraction d 1.14 and 1.16. Cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase was nearly equally distributed in the fractions. Adenylate cyclase, 5'-nucleotidase and Mg++-ATPase activities of tumor membrane were lower with respect to liver plasma membrane, while cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase and (Na" +K+)-ATPase were found to have similar activities in the two membrane preparations. With respect to liver membrane, hepatoma membrane contained a higher amount of glycolipids and a higher amount of phospholipids accounted for mainly by sphingomyelin, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidic acid. The possible significance of the decrease of adenylate activity in the hepatoma membrane is briefly discussed.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the plasma membrane from Yoshida hepatoma cells. 16 55


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