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Target Concepts:
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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)
The aim of the present work was to study by means of histochemical and chemical methods the 7-day course of changes in carbohydrate metabolism in the liver of male rats induced by a single dose of isoprenaline of 50 mg/kg administered subcutaneously. A statistically significant reduction was seen both in the level of free glycogen and lactate within 24 hours. The decrease of pyruvate level was not so marked. At the same time, there was increased, and within the hepatic lobules also extended activity of enzymes catalyzing glycogenolysis, i.e. alpha-glucan phosphorylase and particularly the branching Q-enzyme,
glucose-6-phosphatase
and LDH, whereas the level of malate and activity of SDH, which are constituents of the Krebs cycle, were found to be reduced.
Cytochrome oxidase
activity was changed after 24 hr compared to the controls. The obtained results indicate that an extensive glycogenolysis occurs in the liver of rats in the 24 hr following s.c. administration of isoprenaline, the major part of liver glycogen being degraded through glucose-6-phosphate to blood glucose and its metabolism via the Krebs cycle reduced. The observed metabolic changes are of reversible character and tend to normalize over the 2nd and 3rd day following isoprenaline administration.
...
PMID:Study of histochemical and biochemical changes in the liver of rats induced by high doses of isoprenaline. 20 78
Proximal tubules were isolated in highly pure form from rabbit cortices by a mechanical procedure that is known to preserve the structural and metabolic aspects of the tubular cells. Postnuclear supernates prepared from the isolated tubules were subjects to isopycnic centrifugation in linear sucrose gradients. The enzyme activities associated with the plasma membrane (gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, amino-peptidase M, alkaline phosphatase, Na-K-ATPase, and phosphodiesterase I) exhibited sharp unimodal frequency-density profiles with a median density near 1.16 g/ml, which shifted to a heavier density when treated with digitonin. The lysosomal enzymes, N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, alpha-mannosidase, and cathepsin B, and the peroxisomal enzyme catalase exhibited particle-associated activity near a density of 1.22 g/ml. Disruption of these particles by freezing and thawing resulted in these activities appearing in the rho = 1.10 g/ml region of the gradient where the soluble cytosolic enzyme, phosphoglucomutase, exhibited activity.
Cytochrome oxidase
activity typical of mitochondria gave a sharp unimodal profile at rho = 1.18 g/ml. Microsomal
glucose-6-phosphatase
and NADPH: cytochrome c reductase activities gave median densities near 1.16 g/ml, which did not change after incubation with digitonin. Galactosyl transferase activity gave a skewed profile at rho = 1.16 g/ml and showed a slight shift to heavier density after digitonin. This study of the enzymatic activities and density gradient distribution of the components of the proximal tubule cells provides the methodology for the further study of the cellular processing of endogenous and exogenous substances by this vital cell type.
...
PMID:Analytical cell fractionation of isolated rabbit renal proximal tubules. 730 Jan 16
THE ALDEHYDES INTRODUCED IN THIS PAPER AND THE MORE APPROPRIATE CONCENTRATIONS FOR THEIR GENERAL USE AS FIXATIVES ARE: 4 to 6.5 per cent glutaraldehyde, 4 per cent glyoxal, 12.5 per cent hydroxyadipaldehyde, 10 per cent crotonaldehyde, 5 per cent pyruvic aldehyde, 10 per cent acetaldehyde, and 5 per cent methacrolein. These were prepared as cacodylate- or phosphate-buffered solutions (0.1 to 0.2 M, pH 6.5 to 7.6) that, with the exception of glutaraldehyde, contained sucrose (0.22 to 0.55 M). After fixation of from 0.5 hour to 24 hours, the blocks were stored in cold (4 degrees C) buffer (0.1 M) plus sucrose (0.22 M). This material was used for enzyme histochemistry, for electron microscopy (both with and without a second fixation with 1 or 2 per cent osmium tetroxide) after Epon embedding, and for the combination of the two techniques. After fixation in aldehyde, membranous differentiations of the cell were not apparent and the nuclear structure differed from that commonly observed with osmium tetroxide. A postfixation in osmium tetroxide, even after long periods of storage, developed an image that-notable in the case of glutaraldehyde-was largely indistinguishable from that of tissues fixed under optimal conditions with osmium tetroxide alone. Aliesterase, acetylcholinesterase, alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, 5-nucleotidase, adenosine triphosphatase, and DPNH and TPNH diaphorase activities were demonstrable histochemically after most of the fixatives.
Cytochrome oxidase
, succinic dehydrogenase, and
glucose-6-phosphatase
were retained after hydroxyaldipaldehyde and, to a lesser extent, after glyoxal fixation. The final product of the activity of several of the above-mentioned enzymes was localized in relation to the fine structure. For this purpose the double fixation procedure was used, selecting in each case the appropriate aldehyde.
...
PMID:Cytochemistry and electron microscopy. The preservation of cellular ultrastructure and enzymatic activity by aldehyde fixation. 1397 66