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

We have previously shown that acute coronary occlusion in the dog is often accompanied by increased adrenaline release into the blood. In the present study the consequences of this humoral reaction were studied in anaesthetised healthy mongrel dogs subjected to adrenaline infusion administered at a rate relevant to spontaneous release of this amine in coronary occlusion. Adrenaline was infused in a dose of 1.2 microgram.kg-1.min-1 for 4 h. Dogs receiving saline served as the control. Adrenaline administration led to the decrease in insulin/glucose ratio, to a significant fall in serum triiodothyronine and in blood pH. Free fatty acid levels doubled. Histochemically, a diminution in succinic dehydrogenase and ATPase activity in adrenaline-treated hearts was found. A significant fall in the activity of mitochondrial hexokinase in these hearts was detected spectrophotometrically. Electron microscopic study revealed alterations in the mitochondrial structure. These findings indicate that an excess of adrenaline in ammounts similar to that seen in experimental infarction leads to profound metabolic and hormonal disturbances and exerts a detrimental effect upon myocardium.
...
PMID:Evidence for the detrimental effect of adrenaline infused to healthy dogs in doses imitating spontaneous secretion after coronary occlusion. 2 14

The effects of ischemia on the canine myocardial (Na+ + K+)-ATPase complex were examined in terms of alterations in cardiac glycoside binding and enzymatic activity. Ability of the myocardial cell to bind tritiated ouabain in vivo was assessed after 1, 2, and 6 h of coronary occlusion followed by 45 min of reperfusion, and correlated with measurements of in vitro (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity and in vitro [3H]ouabain binding after similar periods of ischemia. Regional blood flow alterations during occlusion and reperfusion were simultaneously determined utilizing 15 mum radioactive microspheres to determine the degree to which altered binding of ouabain might be flow related. Anterior wall infarction was produced in 34 dogs by snaring of confluent branches of the left coronary system. Epicardial electrograms delineated ischemic and border zone areas. Coronary reperfusion after 2 and 6 h of occlusion was associated with impaired reflow of blood and markedly impaired uptake of [3H]ouabain in ischemic myocardium. In both groups, in vivo [3H]ouabain binding by ischemic tissue was reduced out of proportion to the reduction in flow. Despite near-complete restoration of flow in seven dogs occluded for 1 h and reperfused, [3H]ouabain remained significantly reduced to 58 +/- 9% of nonischemic uptake in subendocardial layers of the central zone of ischemia. Thus, when coronary flow was restored to areas of myocardium rendered acutely ischemia for 1 or more hours, ischemic zones demonstrated progressively diminished ability to bind ouabain. To determine whether ischemia-induced alteration in myocardial (Na+ + K+)-ATPase might underlie these changes, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity and [3H]ouabain binding were measured in microsomal fractions from ischemic myocardium after 1, 2, and 6 h of coronary occlusion. In animals occluded for 6 h, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity was significantly reduced by 40% in epicardial and by 35% in endocardial layers compared with nonischemic myocardium. Comparable reductions in in vitro [3H]ouabain binding were also demonstrated. Reperfusion for 45 min after occlusion for 6 h resulted in no significant restoration of enzyme activity when compared to the nonreperfused animals. In six animals occluded for 2 h, a time at which myocardial creatine phosphokinase activity remains unchanged, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity was reduced by 25% compared with nonischemic enzyme activity. In five dogs occluded for 1 h, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity in ischemic myocardium was unchanged from control levels. We conclude that reduced regional myocardial blood flow, local alterations in cellular milieu, and altered glycoside-binding properties of (Na+ + K+)-ATPase all participate in the reduction of cardiac glycoside binding observed after reperfusion of ischemic myocardium. In addition, after 2 or more hours of severe ischemia, myocardial (Na+ + K+)-ATPase catalytic activity is significantly reduced despite incubation in the presence of optimal substrate concentrations.
...
PMID:Ischemia-induced alterations in myocardial (Na+ + K+)-ATPase and cardiac glycoside binding. 13 Mar 83

Fifty-seven isolated, blood perfused, continuously weighed canine hearts have been utilized to study the development of abnormal myocardial fluid retention during early myocardial ischemic injury. Inflatable balloon catheters were positioned around the left anterior descending coronary arteries (LAD) of 54 hearts or the proximal left circumflex coronary arteries of three hearts for study of the following intervals of coronary occlusion: a) 10 minutes followed by 20 minutes of reflow, b) 40 minutes followed by either no reflow or by 20 minutes of reflow, and c) 60 minutes without reflow. After 60 minutes of fixed coronary occlusion, histologic and ultrastructural examination revealed mild swelling of many ischemic cardiac muscle cells in the absence of interstitial edema, cardiac weight gain, and obvious structural defects in cell membrane integrity. After 40 minutes of coronary occlusion and 20 minutes of reflow, significant cardiac weight gain occurred in association with characteristic alterations in the ischemic region, including widespread interstitial edema and focal vascular congestion and hemorrhage and swelling of cardiac muscle cells. Focal structural defects in cell membrane integrity were also noted. The development of abnormal myocardial fluid retention after 40 minutes of LAD occlusion occurred in association with a significant reduction in sodium-potassium-ATPase activity in the ischemic area, but with no significant alteration in either creatine phosphokinase or citrate synthase activity in the same region. Despite the abnormal myocardial fluid retention in these hearts, it was possible pharmacologically to vasodilate coronary vessels with adenosine and nitroglycerin infusion to maintain a consistently high coronary flow following release of the coronary occlusion after 40 minutes and to even exceed initial hyperemic flow values following release of the occlusion when adenosine and nitroglycerin infusion was delayed until 15 minutes after reflow. Thus, the data indicate that impaired cell volume regulation and interstitial fluid accumulation and focal structural defects in cell membrane integrity are early manifestations of ischemic injury followed by reflow, but fail to establish a major role for the abnormal fluid retention in altering coronary blood flow prior to the development of extensive myocardial necrosis. In contrast, fixed coronary occlusion for 60 minutes results in mild intracellular swelling but no significant interstitial edema and no obvious structural defects in cell membrane integrity.
...
PMID:Abnormal myocardial fluid retention as an early manifestation of ischemic injury. 13 29

1. Morphologic as well as biochemical alterations in chronic ischemic myocardial tissue without infarction were studied in dogs utilizing the Ameroid constrictor. 2. Serum creatine kinase activity elevated at around three weeks after placing the Ameroid constrictor around the circumflex branch of the left coronary artery suggestive of myocardial tissue injury followed by the initial activation caused by surgery. 3. Subendocardial proliferation of connective tissue was observed in about 60% of the experiments, but the middle and the subepicardial muscles were morphologically intact. 4. The marked increase in glycogen particles was observed in the subendocardial muscle cells in most of the experiments, and mild features of myocardial cellular necrosis were found in approximately 60% of the experiments. 5. ATPase activities of the structural proteins as well as sarcoplasmic reticulum in the ischemic myocardium shoed relatively higher values than those in the non-ischemic myocardium. However, no substructural changes were observed in SDS gel electrophoresis in both the fractions. 6. The alterations in the chronic myocardial ischemia are supposed to be essentially the same as those in myocardial necrosis followed by acute coronary occlusion.
...
PMID:Morphologic and biochemical studies on the experimental chronic ischemic myocardium with the Ameroid constrictor. 14 55

1. Influence of ischemia on the biochemical properties of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) was studied in the experimental myocardial infarction in the dog. 2. Ca2+ -uptake rate of SR decreased at around 90 minutes after coronary occlusion. This reduction was roughly in parallel with the reduction in the Ca+ -Mg2+ -stimulated ATPase activity. However, Ca2+ -binding rate of SR was kept within the range of that of the non-infarcted tissue through the time course of myocardial infarction. 3. Ca2+ -Mg2+ -stimulated ATPase activity decreased at around 3 hours after coronary occlusion to about 50% of that of the non-infarcted portion. 4. In SDS gel electrophoresis, the protein band with the largest molecular weight among three major components decreased at 3 hours after coronary occlusion, which is suggestive of ATPase. At 48 hours after coronary occlusion, the protein with the smallest molecular weight in the major proteins also decreased. 5. Ca2+ -uptake rate, Ca2+ -Mg2+ -stimulated ATPase activity and the substructural changes return to the normal level and pattern at around 28 days after coronary occlusion.
...
PMID:Studies of the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum in myocardial infarction. 15 53

Intravenous infusion of acetylstrophanthidin to 6 dogs, after a 60 min left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion, was associated with a 43.0 +/- 10.5% decrease in the dose of digitalis needed to produce ventricular arrhythmias as compared to the pre-ischemic dose (97.5 +/- 8.0 microgram/kg). Reperfusion of the ischemic region for 2 h after a 90 min occlusion resulted in a 54.4 +/- 6.7% decrease in the arrhythmogenic dose. Direct intracoronary infusions of digitalis into the ischemic region, after a 90 min coronary occlusion followed by 2 h of reperfusion, was associated with a 47.7 +/- 6.4% decrease in the dose of digitalis needed to produce arrhythmias. The pre-ischemic (control) arrhythmogenic dose of digitalis via the intracoronary infusion method was 1.5 +/- 0.3 microgram/kg (mean +/- S.E.M. of 7 dogs). Sodium pump activity, estimated from the ouabain-sensitive 86Rb uptake in sodium-loaded ventricular slices, was significantly higher in slices obtained from the ischemic regions (6.84 +/- 0.30 nmoles 86Rb/mg dry wt. (mean +/- S.E.M.), than from the non-ischemic regions (3.43 +/- 0.64 nmoles 86Rb/mg dry wt.). Sensitivity of the sodium pump activity to the inhibitory effect of ouabain also was increased in the ischemic regions as indicated by a shift in the log dose--response curve to the left. Thus, it appears that there is an increase in myocardial sensitivity to the toxic effect of digitalis after temporary ischemia and it appears to be related to an increase in the sensitivity of the Na+,K+-ATPase or sodium pump to the inhibitory effect of digitalis.
...
PMID:Ischemic-induced alterations in cardiac sensitivity to digitalis. 48 58

The effect of coronary reperfusion on the uptake of cardiac glycosides by ischemic myocardium was studied in 17 open chested dogs undergoing anterior wall infarction produced by snaring confluent branches of the left coronary system. Epicardial electrograms delineated ischemic zones of S-T elevation, border, and nonischemic zones. Animals were reperfused by snare release 1, 2, and 6 hr after occlusion. After 15 min of reperfusion, 1.0 mg of [3H] digoxin was given intravenously, and 2 hr later the hearts were excised and endocardial (endo) and epicardial (epi) samples from each zone were analyzed for [3H] digoxin concentration. In five dogs occluded for 1 hr and reperfused, [3H] digoxin uptake was comparable in endo and epi layers of all three zones. In six dogs reperfused after 2 hr of occlusion, mean (+/-S.E.) [3H] digoxin concentrations (nanograms per gm) were significantly reduced by 54 percent in endo (111 +/-18) and 35 percent in epi (151 +/- 23) layers of the ischemic zone as compared with the mean nonischemic concentration (endo249 +/- 34; epi 239 +/- 34). Border zone endo and epi [3H] digoxin uptake was reduced by 21 and 17 percent, respectively. In six dogs reperfused after 6 hr of occlusion, [3H] digoxin uptake in the ischemic zone was markedly reduced by 85 percent in endo (34 +/- 4) and 60 percent in epi (86 +/- 12) layers as compared with the nonischemic concentration (endo 232 +/- 19; epi 217 +/- 15). Border zone uptake was decreased by 54 percent in endo and 38 percent in epi regions. We conclude that coronary reperfusion between 2 and 6 hr of coronary occlusion is associated with markedly reduced myocardial digoxin uptake, more pronounced in subendocardial regions of ischemic tissue. This alteration in digoxin binding by reperfused ischemic myocardium is consistent with ischemia-induced structural or functional alterations in the putative digitalis receptor, (Na++K+)-ATPase.
...
PMID:Effects of ischemia and reperfusion on myocardial uptake of tritiated digoxin. 125 85

Because the Na+ pump is considered to modulate the contractile force development by the cardiac muscle and depressed cardiac pump function is the hallmark of congestive heart failure, we characterized the sarcolemmal Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity in failing rat hearts after myocardial infarction. For this purpose, the left ventricular coronary artery was ligated, and hearts were examined 4, 8, and 16 wk later; sham-operated animals served as controls. Hemodynamic assessment revealed the presence of abnormal cardiac function at 4, 8, and 16 wk. Although accumulation of ascites in the abdominal cavity was present in experimental animals at 4 wk, other clinical signs of congestive heart failure in experimental rats including lung congestion and cardiac dilatation were evident 8 and 16 wk after induction of myocardial infarction. The depression in Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity in purified sarcolemmal membrane from the uninfarcted experimental left ventricle at 8 wk was associated with depressed Vmax without any changes in the affinities for Mg-ATP, Na+, and K+ or the pH optimum for the enzyme. The Kd values of both the high- and low-affinity binding sites for [3H]ouabain, which is believed to interact with Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, were increased; however, no change in the density of either class of ouabain binding site was evident. The depression of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity in failing hearts at 16 wk of myocardial infarction was not different from that observed at 8 wk but the enzyme activity was not altered at 4 wk of coronary occlusion. These data support the view that depression of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity may serve as an adaptive mechanism during the development of congestive heart failure.
...
PMID:Sarcolemmal Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity in congestive heart failure due to myocardial infarction. 131 80

To examine the status of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) with respect to Ca2+ transport in congestive heart failure due to myocardial infarction, the left coronary artery in rats was ligated for 4, 8, and 16 wk. The left heart function was assessed with an intraventricular pressure transducer, and SR membrane fractions from the right ventricle and the viable left ventricle were isolated for measuring the ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake activities. In comparison to sham-operated controls, SR Ca2+ uptake activity was decreased in viable left ventricle of the experimental animals at 4, 8, and 16 wk. On the other hand, SR Ca2+ uptake activity in the right ventricle was increased at 4 and 8 wk, but no change was apparent at 16 wk of coronary occlusion. The decrease in SR Ca2+ uptake in left ventricle and increase in right ventricle were associated with corresponding changes in maximal velocity values without any alterations in the affinity for Ca2+. These opposite changes in the right and left ventricles were dependent on the scar size as well as time after inducing the myocardial infarction. The SR Ca(2+)-stimulated adenosinetriphosphatase activity was decreased in left ventricle and increased in the right ventricle from 4 wk experimental animals. The results suggest differential remodeling of the SR membranes with respect to Ca(2+)-pump mechanisms in left and right ventricles during the development of congestive heart failure.
...
PMID:Differential changes in left and right ventricular SR calcium transport in congestive heart failure. 131 49

In a recent overview on stunning, Bolli listed the three pillars on which theories on stunning rest: its causation by oxygen radicals, the amplification of damage by Ca2+ overload, and the resulting excitation contraction uncoupling. Our own experiments with SOD and catalase do not convince us that stunning is caused by free radicals, because we and others were unable to show improvement. An important pathway of radical generation, i.e., xanthine oxidase, does not exist in the hearts of several families of mammals, but stunning can of course be produced in these species. We agree with Bolli that stunning represents a disturbance of electromechanical coupling, but we acknowledge the controversy that exists with regard to the subcellular seat of the defect. Our results would support hypotheses that pinpoint the defect to the sarcoplasmic reticulum. However, the possibility of multiple defects should also be considered: Our finding of altered Ca2+ ATPase expression and Kusuoka's finding of altered myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity are not necessarily mutually exclusive but may be complementary, or may represent different stages of ischemic damage. Our finding of decreased myosin expression may help to explain the long persistence of the contractile defect. From the available evidence, the hypothetial possibility evolves that stunning is not just an injury, but rather the unmasking of a regulatory mechanism to protect the heart against premature or further damage. The observation that coronary occlusion causes both stunning and preconditioning by a parallel, and not by a sequential, mechanism and that a multitude of genes alter their expression in order to protect the myocyte argue for a regulatory change.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanisms in "stunned" myocardium. 175 39


1 2 Next >>