Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.1.25 (triphosphatase)
1,529 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1 mg/kg L-thyroxine was administered to rats for 14 days to evaluate the potential of the hyperthyroid state to induce heart hypertrophy and its effect on myosin adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) activity. Evidence of hyperthyroidism such as weight loss, elevation of rectal temperature, increased heart rate and oxygen consumption, was observed in all treated rats. Cardiac enlargement was determined by comparison of wet and dry ventricle weights, myocardial RNA, DNA and protein content. Wet and dry ventricle weights and the level of cardiac RNA and protein were augmented by thyroxine treatment. ATPase activity of cardiac myosin was stimulated as the Ca2+ concentration in the incubation medium increased. No difference was found in Ca2+-activation, salt sensitivity or ATPase activity of unreacted and sulphydrylmodified cardiac myosins from euthyroid or hyperthyroid groups. The results showed that in hyperthyroid rats, in contrast to some other species, the biochemical mechanism responsible for the enhancement of cardiac contractility is not an increased myosin ATPase.
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PMID:Thyroxine-induced cardiomegaly: assessment of nucleic acid, protein content and myosin ATPase of rat heart. 9 43

The nucleoside triphosphatase [EC 3.6.1.15] activity of actomysin and that of myosin are measured by varying the concentration of nucleoside triphosphate and that of CaCl2 or MgGl2. The results thus obtained are examined by asking a question of which is responsbile for the activity, the true substrate and the active enzyme in terms of the reaction scheme shown in p. 719. The answers found for the above question are summarized in Table I (see p. 720). It is emphasized that the summmary (Table I) corresponds very well to the fact that myosin alone does not superprecipitate in the presence of either calcium or magnesium ions, whereas actomyosin does superprecipitate in the presence of magnesium ions and not in the presence of calcium ions. Obviously, the true substrate type of reaction scheme represents a kinetic property characteristic of the superprecipitation-coupled nucleoside-triphosphatase. It is also noted of the summary (Table I) that actin is capable of not only activating Mg-nucleoside-triphosphatase but also switiching the reaction scheme from the active enzyme type to the true substrate type. It is known that trinitrophenylation of myosin results in activation of the Mg-ATPase activity of myosin. However, it is now found that trinitrophenylation is not capable of switiching the reaction scheme, that is to say that the Mg-ATPase reaction of trinitrophenyl-myosin stays with the active enzyme type of reaction scheme and that of acto-trinitrophenyl-myosin with the true substrate type of reaction scheme. Effect of actin on the function of myosin seems, therefore, very unique.
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PMID:A new kinetic property characteristic of the actomyosin-nucleoside-triphosphatase. 17 88

The interaction of myosin subfragment-1 (S-1) with 4,4'-bis(1-anilinonaphthalene 8-sulfonate) (bis-ANS) has been studied by monitoring the fluorescence of the latter when the two components form a complex. Because ATP and ATP analogs partially displace complexed bis-ANS it has also been possible to study interactions of S-1 and nucleotides by using the displacement effect. Approximate values of the parameters of these various interactions have been measured. Some possible applications of bis-ANS have been explored. For example, it provides a very convenient method for obtaining the Michaelis constant, Km, in steady-state S-1 nucleoside triphosphatase; this particular application has also provided some evidence for inferring that in Ca2+ (but not in Mg2+) adenosinetriphosphatase (ATP phosphohydrolase, EC 3.6.1.3) S-1 behaves like a mixture of two components, each with its own Km. Clear energy transfer occurs between tryptophan residues and bound bis-ANS. The fluorescence also suggests that S-1 undergoes some slow relaxations following substrate binding.
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PMID:4,4'-Bis (1-anilinonaphthalene 8-sulfonate) (bis-ANS): a new probe of the active site of myosin. 26 28

The dynamic properties of cross-bridge movement were investigated in glycerol-treated muscle fibers under various conditions by analyzing tension responses to two types of length change. First, the fiber bundles were stretched linearly with time for 0.3 s from the rest length (L0) by 2.5% of L0, suddenly released, then fixed at L0 (sudden release of the slow stretch). Second, they were stretched for 0.01 s by 2.5% of L0, then held at the plateau length (a quick stretch). 1. The transient tension responses following both length changes were divided into three phases: (i) very quick recovery of tension (0 approximately 0.05 s), (ii) quick recovery (0.05 approximately 0.3-0.4 s), and (iii) gradual recovery (0.3-0.4 s approximately several seconds). 2. The effects of activating conditions on the rates of the quick phases (0 approximately 0.3-0.4 s) were not associated with those on the nucleoside triphosphatase [EC 3.6.1.3] rates: the rates of the quick phases increased with increase in temperature and Mg2+-ATP concentration, with decrease in Ca2+ concentration, and also on replacement of Mg2+-ATP by Mg2+-ITP or Mn2+-ATP. Only a small amount of ADP, 0.07 mol per mol of myosin (Fig. 24 in the preceding paper), was liberated during the quick recovery phases. 3. The remaining slow tension recovery was concluded to be associated with one cycle of ATP splitting, and progressed very smoothly. This suggests that most of the cross-bridges do not exist in a synchronously dissociated state during one cycle of ATP splitting.
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PMID:Factors affecting the transient tension change after applying stepwise length change to glycerol-treated muscle fibers. Effects of temperature, divalent cations, and modification with p-chloromercuribenzoate. 47 41

Tests conducted on aortic strips of rabbits, portal veins and musculus rectococcygeus in rats showed the urea to nonspecifically increase the effects of norepinephrine at the expense of a greater calcium permeability of membranes and, possibly, also at the expense of a higher sensitivity of the myosin adenosine-triphosphatase to the action of calcium ions without affecting the function of adrenoreceptors.
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PMID:[Nature of the sensitizing influence of urea on the effects of catecholamines]. 65 74

To determine whether the increase in oxidative capacity after respiratory muscle training with chronic inspiratory loads in sheep is specific to a particular fiber type, we measured cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activity in type I and type II fibers. COX activity in individual fibers was examined histochemically and measured as relative optical density by use of an image processing system. Fiber types were differentiated by the myosin adenosine-triphosphatase reaction. We found that COX activity was higher in both fiber types in the trained diaphragms than in the control diaphragms (P less than 0.01). The increase with training was greater in type II (39%) than in type I fibers (21%), resulting in relatively homogeneous COX activity in all diaphragmatic fibers. The proportion of type I fibers increased from 43.4 +/- 5.4% in the control diaphragm to 53.1 +/- 2.9% in the trained diaphragm, whereas the proportion of type II fibers decreased (P less than 0.001). We conclude that respiratory muscle training activates oxidative enzyme activity in both diaphragmatic fiber types; this activation is differentially more in type II fibers, which also decrease in proportion, and less in type I fibers, which increase in proportion.
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PMID:Effect of chronic respiratory load on cytochrome oxidase activity in diaphragmatic fibers. 131 Dec 90

The synthesis is described of a spin-labeled analog of ATP, 2',3'-O-(1-oxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidylidene)adenosine 5'-triphosphate (SL-ATP). The spin-label moiety is attached by two bonds to the ribose ring as a spiroketal and hence has restricted conformational mobility relative to the ribose moiety of ATP. The synthesis proceeds via an acid-catalyzed addition of adenosine 5'-monophosphate to 1-acetoxy-4-methoxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine in acetonitrile. The spiroketal product is pyrophosphorylated, and alkaline hydrolysis with concomitant aerial oxidation gives the required product. The spin-labeled moiety probably takes up two rapidly interconverting conformations with respect to the ribose ring on the basis of the 1H NMR spectra of its precursors and related uridine derivatives [Alessi et al. (1991) J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans.1,2243-2247]. SL-ATP is a substrate for myosin and actomyosin with similar kinetic parameters to ATP during triphosphatase activity. SL-ATP supports muscle contraction and permits relaxation of permeabilized rabbit skeletal muscle fibers. SL-ADP is a substrate for yeast 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, thus permitting regeneration of SL-ATP from SL-ADP within muscle fibers. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of SL-ADP bound to myosin filaments and to myofibrils show a degree of nanosecond motion independent of that of the protein, which may be due to conformational flexibility of the ribose moiety of ATP bound to myosin's active site. This nanosecond motion is more restricted in myofibrils than in myosin filaments, suggesting that the binding of actin affects the ribose binding site in myosin. EPR studies on SL-ADP bound to rigor cross-bridges in muscle fiber bundles showed the nucleotide to be highly oriented with respect to the fiber axis.
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PMID:Synthesis and properties of a conformationally restricted spin-labeled analog of ATP and its interaction with myosin and skeletal muscle. 132 24

Muscle spindles and extrafusal fibers in the tenuissimus muscle of mature golden Syrian hamsters were studied morphologically and quantitatively using several light microscopic techniques. Muscle spindles were identified in serial-transverse frozen-sections of whole muscles stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Five tenuissimus muscles were examined from origin to insertion, and the locations of individual receptors were plotted in camera-lucida reconstructions. Spindles were found in proximity to the main neurovascular bundle in the central core of each muscle. A range of 16-20 receptors was noted per muscle. The mean muscle spindle index (the total number of spindles per gram of muscle weight) was 503 and the average spindle length was 7.5 mm. Oxidative enzyme and myosin adenosine-triphosphatase (ATPase) staining profiles were also evaluated in the intrafusal and extrafusal fibers in each muscle. Even numbers of type I and type IIA extrafusal fibers were distributed homogeneously throughout all muscle cross-sections. Histochemical staining patterns varied along the lengths of the three intrafusal fiber types. Nuclear chain fibers possessed staining properties similar to the type IIA extrafusal fibers and exhibited no regional variations. Bag1 fibers displayed staining variability, particularly when treated for myosin ATPase under acid preincubation conditions. Some spindles were isolated under darkfield illumination and then either treated with 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD)-phallacidin to detect filamentous actin by fluorescence microscopy, or prepared for conventional scanning electron microscopy (SEM). By fluorescence microscopy, a registered actin banding-pattern was observed in the sarcomeres of the intrafusal fibers, and variations in the intensity of banding were noted amongst different fibers. SEM revealed punctate sensory nerve endings that adhered intimately to the surfaces of underlying intrafusal fibers in the equatorial and juxtaequatorial regions. By transmission electron microscopy (TEM) these endings appeared crescent-shaped and were enveloped by external laminae. Each profile contained numerous mitochondria and cytoskeletal organelles. The high spindle density observed in this muscle suggests that the hamster tenuissimus may function in hindlimb proprioception.
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PMID:Morphometry and histoenzymology of the hamster tenuissimus and its muscle spindles. 153 82

Recent studies have reported abnormal platelet morphology and function in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. These abnormalities include increased platelet size and dense body numbers, abnormal aggregation, thromboxane A2 synthesis, serotonin release to adenosine diphosphate and epinephrine stimulus, and decreased myosin-adenosine-triphosphatase-specific activity. It was postulated that a membrane-specific defect in calcium transport may be partially responsible for the abnormalities found. In response to a suggestion in the literature that platelet screening could be clinically useful in scoliosis evaluation as well as in basic research of its pathophysiology, a study was performed to evaluate platelet morphology, biochemistry, and function in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Platelets from nine volunteers with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis were compared with cells from a control group of nine patients. No significant differences in measured platelet parameters were noted between adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients and control groups. Platelets from both groups demonstrated normal aggregation and release patterns with all agents except for a mild decreased aggregation and secretion response to epinephrine. No significant differences were noted in serotonin or adenine nucleotide levels. No significant ultrastructural differences were noted. Earlier findings of an abnormal aggregation and secretion response to adenosine diphosphate, increased numbers of dense bodies, or increased intracellular calcium could not be confirmed. On the contrary, we found normal, if not slightly decreased, numbers of dense bodies per platelet and calcium levels that were not different from controls.
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PMID:Platelet function in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. 155 84

A comparison of kinetic parameters (Km(app) and V) of hydrolysis by heavy meromyosin of natural (ATP and ITP) and modified nucleoside triphosphates showed that in the K+, EDTA-ATPase conformation the enzyme exhibited a higher selectivity towards the structure of the substrate nucleoside moiety than in the case of the Ca2+-stimulated nucleoside triphosphatase activity. In the presence of Ca2+, all the N1- and N6-substituted analogs of ATP as well as ITP, etheno-ATP and the dialdehyde derivative of ATP were hydrolyzed at a high rate irrespective of their markedly decreased affinity for heavy meromyosin. In the presence of K+, EDTA the ATPase activity showed a tendency for a total decrease of the analog affinity for nucleoside triphosphates, i.e., the impossibility of tight binding of the substrate phosphate residues to the protein in the absence of bivalent cations, which was concomitant with an increase in the hydrolysis rate. However, it was found that only in N1-substituted analogs any appreciable changes in the substrate properties were absent. All the other nucleoside triphosphates tested (N6-carboxy-methoxy-ATP, N6-(N'-acetylaminoethoxy)-ATP, etheno-ATP, ITP and the dialdehyde derivative of ATP having a rupture in the ribose ring) lost their ability to be hydrolyzed by heavy meromyosin. The experimental results as well as the literature data are suggestive of differences in the spatial structure of the active center in two different myosin conformations associated with a high catalytic activity, i.e., K+, EDTA-ATPase and Ca2+-ATPase.
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PMID:[Increased substrate selectivity during transition from Ca2+-activated to K+,EDTA-activated nucleoside triphosphatase activity of heavy meromyosin]. 296 18


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