Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The control systems regulating muscle contraction in approximately 100 organisms have been categorized. Both myosin control and actin control operate simultaneously in the majority of invertebrates tested. These include insects, chelicerates, most crustaceans, annelids, priapulids, nematodes, and some sipunculids. Single myosin control is present in the muscles of molluscs, brachiopods, echinoderms, echiuroids, and nemertine worms. Single actin control was found in the fast muscles of decapods, in mysidacea, in a single sipunculid species, and in vertebrate striated muscles. Classification is based on functional tests that include measurements of the calcium dependence of the actomyosin ATPase activity in the presence and the absence of purified rabbit actin and myosin. In addition, isolated thin filaments and myosins were also analyzed. Molluscs lack actin control since troponin is not present in sufficient quantities. Even though the functional tests indicate the complete lack of myosin control in vertebrate striated muscle, it is difficult to exclude unambiguously the in vivo existence of this regulation. Both control systems have been found in animals from phyla which evolved early. We cannot ascribe any simple correlation between ATPase activity, muscle structure, and regulatory mechanisms.
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PMID:Regulation of muscular contraction. Distribution of actin control and myosin control in the animal kingdom. 12 78

The excretory canals of Ascaridia galli (Nematoda) and the protonephridial ducts of Cotylophoron cotylophorum (Trematoda) and Raillietina cesticillus (Cestoda) have been studied with regard to the histochemical localization of lipids, carbohydrates and hydrolytic enzymes. Distinct excretory organs are absent in the acanthocephalan Centrorhynchus corvi. Triglycerides, phospholipids and lipoproteins are seen in association with the wall of excretory canals of A. galli and R. cesticillus, and phospholipids and lipoproteins at the corresponding site in C. cotylophorum. The physiological significance of lipids in association with excretion of substances has been discussed. Low molecular weight glycogen is present in the lumen of excretory canal of A. galli but not in other worms. The common feature of the excretory canals is the presence of enzyme activities of nonspecific alkaline phosphatase and Mg2+-dependent ATPase. Activity of acid phosphatase is seen only in the excretory canals of A. galli. Glucose-6-phosphatase is present in A. galli and C. cotylophorum and absent in R. cesticillus. Weak reaction of 5'-nucleotidase is present in the excretory canals of helminth species studied here. The role of these enzymes in transportation of substances across the wall of excretory canals and also in ionic regulation has been discussed in detail.
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PMID:Comparative histochemical observations on the excretory system of helminth parasites. 19 23

The study of the behaviours of Trichinella spiralis in the host tissues from the histochemical point of view will throw a light on parallelism of the destruction process by the infection and the instruction of the host tissues, i.e., the catabolic effect of the parasite as an indicator of the severity of infection and the anabolic response by the host as a criteria of cure. So, this study revealed a definite increase in catabolic enzymes as acid phosphatase activities. A relative disturbance and a decrease of anabolic enzymes (succinate dehydrogenase, alkaline phosphatase, non-specific esterase and adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) reactivity which indicates the destructive effects of T. spiralis adult worms and encysted larvae on intestinal mucosa alpha striated muscles of tongue and diaphragm. The disturbances of anabolic enzymes activity revealed the continuous trials of the host to get rid of adult worms from the small intestine, and to defeat and isolate the larvae in striated muscles. While the renal tissue changes indicate the disturbance of absorption and excretion functions of renal tissue due to the presence of endmetabolites and products of the parasite in the host blood.
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PMID:Histochemical studies in experimental trichinosis. 157 64

Some histochemical changes in adult C. sinensis collected from rats infected artificially and treated with pyquiton were observed. 1 h after administration the glycogen content showed a slight decrease which became prominent 24h later and almost disappeared at 48h post-medication. There was an increase in protein content in the parenchymal tissues of worms 1h after treatment, especially in the reproductive organ 24h after treatment. RNA content was decreased 1h post administration and continued decreasing gradually so that very little could be seen 48h later. An increase in the activities of SDH, MDH and Ca-ATPase was seen at the beginning and became marked 24h after medication, while that for G-6-PDH was detected 48h after drug administration. No obvious changes in DNA, lipid, AKP, ACP and phenolase were detected within 1-48h after treatment.
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PMID:[Histochemical changes in Clonorchis sinensis after pyquiton treatment]. 169 37

The localization of some enzyme in adult worms of Clonorchis sinensis was studied by histochemical method in this paper. Acid phosphatase was detected mainly in digestive duct, subtegument and the walls of testis, uterus and ovary; acetylcholinesterase was found in oral sucker, ventral sucker, pharynx; and ATPase was found to exist in oral sucker, ventral sucker, pharynx and muscle layer in the subtegument. The eggs of C. sinensis possessed the above three enzymes.
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PMID:[Histochemical studies on some enzymes in Clonorchis sinensis]. 252 40

Histochemical tests were done on newly excysted metacercariae and worms recovered from an abnormal host (rat) and the definitive host (dog) for some oxidoreductases, phosphatases and glycosidases. The results demonstrate that rat worms have enzymatic distribution and intensities more similar to those of metacercariae than to adult worms from dogs. Ultracytochemical examination of acid and alkaline phosphatase and Mg-ATPase activity was also carried out. Acid phosphatase activity occurred exceptionally in the excretory bladder and caeca of dog worms. No activity was observed in rat worms except for lysosomal granules in the tegument. Alkaline phosphatase activity was exhibited in the excretory bladder in both dog and rat worms. Mg-ATPase activity occurred in the tegument and parenchymal cells in dog worms and in the excretory bladder in rat worms. In metacercariae, little or no reaction for these enzymes was present except for Mg-ATPase activity on the excretory ducts. These observations, together with the histochemical results, indicate that metabolic activity in rat worms is higher than in metacercariae although it is strongly reduced compared with dog worms.
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PMID:Studies on host specificity in Paragonimus westermani: II. Histochemical and cytochemical characterization of metacercariae and worms from rats and dogs. 253 34

A Ca-stimulated ATPase activity (pH 9.5) associated with the tegumental membrane enriched (TME) fraction of Schistosoma mansoni adults was partially inhibited by NAP-taurine or by increasing concentrations of chlorpromazine; endogenous calmodulin was found associated with the TME fraction. A similar activity (pH 8.6) was histochemically visualized within the tegument of fixed worms on the cytoplasmic leaflet of both the double surface membrane and the basement membrane; this reaction was inhibited by 1 microM chlorpromazine and it was also observed on the inner side of double membrane vesicles present in the TME fraction. No ATPase activity could be seen at alkaline pH with added Mg or Na/K ions. Without ATP, the addition of external Ca to the fixed worms induced the appearance of lead precipitates on the tegumental discoid bodies; this reaction was inhibited by molybdate and not by chlorpromazine. The intrategumentary regulation of calcium by the systems described and the possible use of phenothiazines against schistosomes are discussed.
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PMID:Tegumental Ca-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase activity in adult Schistosoma mansoni worms. 253 93

The distribution of Ca2+-dependent adenosine triphosphatase (EC 3.6.1.3.) and nonspecific (Na-K-Mg) adenosine triphosphatase activity in the tegument and subtegumental tissues of Schistosoma mansoni from both mixed and single sex infections was investigated cytochemically. Differences in the distribution of tegumental Ca-adenosine triphosphatase activity in 60- to 70-day-old female worms were found which could be related to the degree of sexual development in the two types of females, with little or no tegumental activity being found in 70-day-old females from single sex infections. In contrast, 28-day-old females from single sex infections showed low levels of tegumental Ca-adenosine triphosphatase activity, suggesting that the lack of tegumental activity in 70-day-old single sex females may be due to a loss or suppression of activity as a consequence of the failure of females in single sex infections to pair and develop to full sexual maturity. No differences in the distribution of nonspecific (Na-K-Mg) adenosine triphosphatase activity between females from mixed and single sex infections were found. The sexual status or age of male worms appeared to have little or no effect on the distribution of tegumental adenosine triphosphatases.
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PMID:Schistosoma mansoni: fine structural localization of tegumental adenosine triphosphatases. 282 32

Myosin was purified rapidly from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans by an improved method. Crude actomyosin was extracted from the worms at low ionic strength. Paramyosin was removed by repeating the precipitation of myosin filaments in the presence of Mg2+ and the dissolution of them in 0.6 M NaCl. Actin was removed by ultracentrifugation in the presence of Mg-ATP and finally by column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. This method gave a good yield of myosin (20-30 mg from 50 g wet weight of worms), and its EDTA(K+)-ATPase activity was about 3-fold higher than that of myosin prepared by the method of Harris and Epstein (1979). ATP hydrolysis by nematode myosin showed an initial Pi-burst due to formation of the myosin-phosphate-ADP complex. Tryptophan fluorescence of myosin was enhanced about 8% by ATP. The relationship between the structure and function of myosin is discussed based on the above results and the amino acid sequences of myosins from rabbit skeletal muscle and Caenorhabditis elegans.
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PMID:ATPase characteristics of myosin from nematode Caenorhabditis elegans purified by an improved method. Formation of myosin-phosphate-ADP complex and ATP-induced fluorescence enhancement. 293 26

Adenosine triphosphatase activity stimulated by Mg2+ was greater in muscle mitochondria of fish infected with larval Anisakis simplex nematodes than in uninfected fish. When muscle mitochondria were isolated in a sucrose ethylene-glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)N,N'-tetraacetic acid medium from fresh uninfected fish, they were loosely coupled, and their adenosine triphosphatase activity was comparable to that of mitochondria from rat tissue. Activity in infected fish was dose dependent, increasing with the number of worms per fish. Excretory secretory products or a cytoplasmic fraction of anisakines, when incubated with coupled rat mitochondria, also caused adenosine triphosphatase activity to increase. Storage of fish flesh caused an increase in adenosine triphosphatase activity, but such aging was not significant until 5 and 10 days after death in refrigerated and frozen samples, respectively. The Mg2+ stimulated adenosine triphosphatase activity of muscle mitochondria can be used to estimate the number of nematodes per market fish. The type of medium used to isolate the mitochondria is crucial in such studies; an ionic medium with Nagarse proteinase was optimal for fish muscle mitochondria.
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PMID:Anisakis simplex: uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation in the muscle mitochondria of infected fish. 293 49


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