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Query: EC:3.4.16.2 (
PCP
)
3,761
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Abnormalities in pulmonary function tests have been observed in AIDS patients with pulmonary disease. In this study, the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to determine if the reductions in transfer factor for lung
carbon monoxide
(TLCO) were due to the presence of HIV-1 or cytomegalovirus (CMV). HIV-1 was detected in cells from bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in 35 out of 60 (58%) of patients. The detection of HIV-1 had no significant effect on pulmonary function. CMV was detected in the BAL of 58% of patients in this study but CMV was the sole viral pathogen in the lung of only two out of 60 (3.3%) individuals. A significant reduction in TLCO was observed in individuals with
PCP
where CMV was also detected in the BAL. This study shows that reduction in TLCO in HIV-seropositive patients is not due to the presence of HIV-1 or CMV alone in BAL cells.
...
PMID:Effect of HIV-1 and cytomegalovirus in bronchoalveolar lavage cells on the transfer factor for lung carbon monoxide in AIDS patients. 166 58
The effects of primary and secondary long-term prophylaxis of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia with aerosolized pentamidine on pulmonary function in HIV+ patients were evaluated. Eighty-one patients, none of whom were drug addicts or had pulmonary Kaposi's sarcoma, were studied. Fifty patients were receiving AP as secondary prophylaxis, 36 monthly and 14 twice-monthly; eight patients with a history of
PCP
served as control subjects. Twenty-three patients were receiving AP as primary prophylaxis, 12 monthly and 11 twice-monthly. Pulmonary function tests, including spirometry, lung transfer capacity for
carbon monoxide
(Tlco) and alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient (P[A-a]O2) were evaluated at M1, ie, one month after the diagnosis of
PCP
, or at the beginning of the AP prophylaxis, and then at three-month intervals (M4 to M13). No differences were observed in the results of spirometry or P(A-a)O2. Among the patients receiving secondary prophylaxis, a significant increase (paired Student's t-test) in Tlco occurred at M7 compared to M1 in the group receiving monthly administrations (p less than 0.01) and in the untreated control group (p less than 0.05); there was no significant difference in Tlco at M13 compared to M1 in the 12 patients who received monthly administrations for this period or at M7 in the 14 patients receiving AP twice-monthly. No significant difference in Tlco was observed at M7 in the primary prophylaxis groups. These results indicate that pulmonary tolerance of AP, as reflected by pulmonary function tests, is good.
...
PMID:Pulmonary tolerance of prophylactic aerosolized pentamidine in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients. 199 16
The present experiments have employed microelectrode techniques (pH and PCO2) and microcalorimetry (total
CO2
concentration) to define parameters of acidification in specific structures of the rat testis and epididymis during control conditions and after administration of the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor acetazolamide (20 or 50 mg/kg). Values for in situ pH during control conditions in seminiferous tubules (ST; 6.96 +/- 0.01), proximal caput (
PCP
; 6.62 +/- 0.01), middle caput (MCP; 6.59 +/- 0.01), middle corpus (MCR; 7.10 +/- 0.02), and proximal cauda epididymidis (PCD; 6.85 +/- 0.01) were significantly more acidic than in testicular artery (TA; 7.36 +/- 0.01) or systemic arterial blood (SAB; 7.40 +/- 0.01) and did not change significantly after acetazolamide. In situ partial pressure of
CO2
(PCO2) in TA (52.2 +/- 0.6 mmHg), ST (52.3 +/- 0.4 mmHg),
PCP
(52.9 +/- 0.4 mmHg), MCP (53.0 +/- 0.7 mmHg), MCR (53.4 +/- 0.4 mmHg), and PCD (52.4 +/- 0.4 mmHg) were indistinguishable from each other, but all values were significantly higher than SAB PCO2 (39.2 +/- 0.5 mmHg). Acetazolamide increased in situ PCO2 significantly in all structures except the MCR. The total
CO2
concentration in normal ST fluid (10.7 +/- 0.5 mM) was significantly higher than in "primary" fluid (6.9 +/- 0.3 mM), and both values were well below TA (26.9 +/- 1.3 mM) or SAB (24.6 +/- 0.4 mM) total
CO2
concentrations. In the epididymis, total
CO2
concentrations were indistinguishable and not different from the value in primary fluid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Direct evaluation of acidification by rat testis and epididymis: role of carbonic anhydrase. 210 57
The effects of non-competitive N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists on amnesia induced by
carbon monoxide
(CO) were investigated, since they have neuroprotective effects on delayed degeneration induced by ischemia. In the mice exposed to CO, acute and delayed amnesia were induced. (+)-MK-801 and (-)-MK-801 improved the delayed amnesia, but the effects of phencyclidine (
PCP
) were weak. (+)-MK-801 and
PCP
potentiated the acute amnesia. From these results, it is suggested that there is a stereoselectivity in the effects of MK-801 on CO-induced amnesia and that CO-induced delayed amnesia animals could be used as an ischemic amnesia model.
...
PMID:MK-801 ameliorates delayed amnesia, but potentiates acute amnesia induced by CO. 215 27
For unknown reasons, manifestations of even heavy opportunistic infection in AIDS patients may be chronic and subtle. We have presented the second fully reported case of an AIDS patient with symptomatic Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in whom the usual screening tests of blood gases and chest roentgenography were normal to all observers. Diffusing capacity for
carbon monoxide
can be an early and sensitive indication of
PCP
.
...
PMID:Pneumocystis pneumonia in a patient with normal chest roentgenograms and normal arterial blood gas values. 348 98
These studies examined the microsomal brain metabolism of phencyclidine (
PCP
) in male and female Sprague-Dawley rats. Several monohydroxylated metabolites of
PCP
were detected including cis- and trans-1-(1-phenyl-4-hydroxycyclohexyl)piperidine (c-PPC and t-PPC) and 1-(1-phenylcyclohexyl)-4-hydroxypiperidine (PCHP). The in vitro formation of these metabolites required NADPH and was inhibited by
carbon monoxide
. c-PPC was formed in the male and female brain microsomes at rates of 7.1 +/- 1.3 and 5.7 +/- 1.1 fmol/min per mg, respectively, while t-PPC was formed at rates of 16.2 +/- 3.3 and 16.5 +/- 4.2 fmol/min per mg. PCHP had the highest formation rate at 50.7 +/- 8.9 and 48.2 +/- 8.8 fmol/min per mg, respectively. Although previous studies with rat liver microsomes find higher levels of
PCP
metabolism in male rats and the formation of an irreversibly bound metabolite in male rats, the present study of brain metabolism found no sex differences in brain metabolism. The formation of
PCP
metabolites in male rat livers is at least partially mediated by the male-specific isozyme CYP2C11, and possibly CYP2D1. Nevertheless, the formation of the major brain metabolite, PCHP, was not inhibited by an anti-CYP2C11 or an anti-CYP2D6 antibody. However, PCHP formation was inhibited by drug inhibitors of CYP2D1-mediated metabolism, suggesting the involvement of a CYP2D isoform. These data indicate brain metabolism of
PCP
is significant, but unlike the liver it is not sexually dimorphic.
...
PMID:Brain microsomal metabolism of phencyclidine in male and female rats. 918 40
A stream of substrate pentachlorophenol [
PCP
, 5 mg min(-1) in water-methanol (1 + 4, v/v)] was merged with 1.5 ml min(-1) of supercritical
carbon dioxide
(scCO2) and delivered to a reactor column (25 cm x 1 cm) of zero-valent palladium-magnesium mixture. The resulting dechlorinations, although very efficient, were not quantitative. For continuous operation at 400 degrees C for 6 h, phenol was the principal product, with lesser quantities of methylated products and only traces of chlorinated products (principally monochlorinated species).
PCP
deoxygenation was not observed and ring methylation was decreased relative to analogous reactions in hydroxylic organic solvent. With time, the reactor column slowly lost dechlorination activity. Reducing the loading of Pd0 on Mg0 from 2% to 1% (w/w) apparently did not change the course of the reaction; however, the dechlorination capacity was decreased correspondingly. None the less, over 6 h or 5 h of continued operation, the dechlorination efficiency was 0.995 for the 2% (w/w) loading of Pd0 on Mg0 and 0.984 for the 1% (w/w) loading.
...
PMID:Dechlorination of pentachlorophenol in supercritical carbon dioxide with zero-valent palladium-magnesium bimetallic mixture. 1209 44
Desulfitobacterium hafniense and Desulfitobacterium sp. strain PCE-S grew under anoxic conditions with a variety of phenyl methyl ethers as electron donors in combination with fumarate as electron acceptor. The phenyl methyl ethers were O-demethylated to the corresponding phenol compounds. O-demethylation was strictly dependent on the presence of fumarate; no O-demethylation occurred with
CO2
as electron acceptor. One mol phenyl methyl ether R-O-CH3 was O-demethylated to R-OH per 3 mol fumarate reduced to succinate. The growth yields with vanillate or syringate plus fumarate were approximately 15 g cells (dry weight) per mol methyl moiety converted. D. hafniense utilized vanillate or syringate as an electron donor for reductive dehalogenation of 3-Cl-4-hydroxyphenylacetate, whereas strain PCE-S was not able to dechlorinate tetrachloroethene with phenyl methyl ethers. Crude extracts of both organisms showed O-demethylase activity in the O-demethylase assay with vanillate or syringate as substrates when the organism was grown on syringate plus fumarate. Besides the homoacetogenic bacteria, only growing cells of Desulfitobacterium frappieri
PCP
-1 have thus far been reported to be capable of phenyl methyl ether O-demethylation. This present study is the first report of Desulfitobacteria utilizing phenyl methyl ethers as electron donors for fumarate reduction and for growth.
...
PMID:Phenyl methyl ethers: novel electron donors for respiratory growth of Desulfitobacterium hafniense and Desulfitobacterium sp. strain PCE-S. 1475 69
The direct involvement of manganese peroxidase (MnP) in the mineralization of natural and xenobiotic compounds was evaluated. A broad spectrum of aromatic substances were partially mineralized by the MnP system of the white rot fungus Nematoloma frowardii. The cell-free MnP system partially converted several aromatic compounds, including [U-C]pentachlorophenol ([U-C]
PCP
), [U-C]catechol, [U-C]tyrosine, [U-C]tryptophan, [4,5,9,10-C]pyrene, and [ring U-C]2-amino-4,6-dinitrotoluene ([C]2-AmDNT), to CO(2). Mineralization was dependent on the ratio of MnP activity to concentration of reduced glutathione (thiol-mediated oxidation), a finding which was demonstrated by using [C]2-AmDNT as an example. At [C]2-AmDNT concentrations ranging from 2 to 120 muM, the amount of released CO(2) was directly proportional to the concentration of [C]2-AmDNT. The formation of highly polar products was also observed with [C]2-AmDNT and [U-C]
PCP
; these products were probably low-molecular-weight carboxylic acids. Among the aliphatic compounds tested, glyoxalate was mineralized to the greatest extent. Eighty-six percent of the COOH-glyoxalate and 9% of the CHO-glyoxalate were converted to CO(2), indicating that decarboxylation reactions may be the final step in MnP-catalyzed mineralization. The extracellular enzymatic combustion catalyzed by MnP could represent an important pathway for the formation of
carbon dioxide
from recalcitrant xenobiotic compounds and may also have general significance in the overall biodegradation of resistant natural macromolecules, such as lignins and humic substances.
...
PMID:Enzymatic Combustion of Aromatic and Aliphatic Compounds by Manganese Peroxidase from Nematoloma frowardii. 1634 96
The synthesis and characterization of several Pt(ii) complexes, including formyl complexes, based on the
PCP
-type pincer ligands C(6)H(4)[CH(2)P(iPr)(2)](2) ((iPr)
PCP
) and C(6)H(4)[CH(2)P(tBu)(2)](2) ((tBu)
PCP
) are described. The chloride complex ((iPr)
PCP
)PtCl (6) and the unsaturated cationic complexes [(
PCP
)Pt](+)X(-) (X = OTf(-), BF(4)(-)) (1, 7), based on both
PCP
ligands, were prepared and the latter reacted with
carbon monoxide
to give the corresponding cationic carbonyl complexes [(
PCP
)Pt(CO)](+)X(-) (X = OTf(-), BF(4)(-)) (2, 8a). Hydride nucleophilic attack on both carbonyl complexes resulted in rare neutral platinum formyl complexes ((iPr)
PCP
)Pt(CHO) (3) and ((tBu)
PCP
)Pt(CHO) (9). Complex 3 undergoes decarbonylation to the corresponding hydride complex within hours at room temperature, while the bulkier complex 9 is more stable and undergoes complete decarbonylation only after 3-4 d. This observation demonstrates the very significant steric effect of the ligand on stabilization of the corresponding formyl complexes. Reaction of complex 9 with triflic acid resulted in the carbonyl complex [((tBu)
PCP
)Pt(CO)](+) OTf(-) (8b) with liberation of H(2), an unusual transformation for a metal formyl. Reaction with methyl triflate resulted in the Fischer carbene-type complex, the methoxy-methylidene [((tBu)
PCP
)Pt(CHOCH(3))](+)OTf(-) (11). The X-ray structures of complexes 2, 6, 8a and 11 were determined.
...
PMID:Reactivity and stability of platinum(II) formyl complexes based on PCP-type ligands. The significance of sterics. 1806 Jan 14
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