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 livers of rats given either the peroxisome proliferating hepatocarcinogen di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) following initiation by 2-acetylaminofluorene (AAF) or the neoplasm promoter phenobarbital (PB) were studied for changes in 8 histochemical properties. Male F344 rats were fed 200 ppm AAF for 7 weeks to induce hepatocellular altered foci, and were then fed diets containing either no chemical, 12,000 ppm DEHP or 500 ppm PB for 24 weeks. In hepatocytes, DEHP increased alkaline phosphatase activity throughout the lobule, but reduced gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) activity in periportal hepatocytes. PB, in contrast, increased GGT activity in periportal hepatocytes. In foci that were induced by AAF, DEHP reduced the histochemical activity of GGT and did not increase the number, mean volume or volume % of foci detected by deficiencies in iron storage, glucose-6-phosphatase, adenosine triphosphatase or fibronectin. PB enhanced the expression of all 8 phenotypic abnormalities in foci such that either more profiles were detected or the area of foci was increased.
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PMID:Effects of the peroxisome proliferator di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate on enzymes in rat liver and on carcinogen-induced liver altered foci in comparison to the promoter phenobarbital. 197 53

The Na(+)-dependent hexose carrier, an endogenous apical marker, develops during differentiation of LLC-PK1, an established cell line with characteristics of the proximal tubule. This development was inhibited by the microtubule-disrupting drugs, colchicine and nocodazole, while it was insensitive to lumicolchicine. This strongly suggests that microtubules are involved in the plasma membrane expression of the Na(+)-dependent hexose carrier. We also analyzed the increase in activity of endogenous apical and basolateral membrane proteins during the polarization process. The development of three apical (Na(+)-dependent hexose carrier, gamma-glutamyltransferase and alkaline phosphatase) and one basolateral membrane protein (Na+/K(+)-ATPase) was studied during the reorganization of LLC-PK1 cells into a polarized epithelium. Colchicine inhibited the rapid, transient increase in the expression of the Na(+)-dependent hexose carrier during this polarization process. A similar result was observed for the development of the other apical proteins, while the development of Na+/K(+)-ATPase seemed to be largely insensitive to colchicine. Our results are in agreement with the model that the vesicles containing the apical membrane proteins use microtubules as tracks to reach the plasma membrane. The transport of vesicles containing basolateral membrane proteins clearly occurs by a different pathway which is independent on an intact microtubular network. Since the inhibition by the microtubule-disrupting drugs was complete, it can be concluded that after disruption of microtubules, the apical vesicles do not use the basolateral pathway by default.
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PMID:Development of the Na(+)-dependent hexose carrier in LLC-PK1 cells is dependent on microtubules. 197 53

The effect of di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) on diethylnitrosamine (DEN)-initiated preneoplastic liver lesions with expression of gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase (GGTase) and loss of adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) as well as alterations of hepatic carbohydrate metabolism in male and female Sprague-Dawley rats have been investigated. Two treatment schedules have been compared with respect to their sensitivity by the histochemical demonstration of preneoplastic islands and by the biochemical determination of alterations in enzyme activities of liver homogenates and of serum, the last indicating hepatotoxicity. For initiation, a single dose of DEN was given, followed by treatment with various doses of DEHP given three times weekly by gavage for 7 or 11 consecutive weeks. As histochemical enzyme markers, the expression of positive GGTase as well as the deficiency in ATPase were used for identification of liver foci. The weanling female rats (protocol A) were found to be more sensitive to the carcinogenic effect of DEN in view of foci incidence than the mature male rats which underwent partial hepatectomy prior to DEN application. The administration of 200 mg DEHP/kg body wt increased the incidence of ATPase-deficient foci in both male and female rats; however, concentrations of 1000 and 2000 mg DEHP/kg decreased the incidence of liver foci. The number of foci with expression of GGTase was only slightly increased in female rats following a DEHP concentration of 50 mg/kg, and 200 mg/kg body wt. DEHP alone did not induce preneoplastic lesions that could be identified by these two markers. Biochemical investigations indicate that DEHP alters the metabolic pattern in liver. An increase of the NADP-linked enzymes glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), malic enzyme, extra-mitochondrial ICDH as well as an enhancement of NAD-dependent alpha-G3PDH and lactate dehydrogenase were found following DEHP administration. On the other hand the glycolytic enzymes pyruvate kinase (PK) and enolase as well as the gluconeogenetic enzyme fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) were significantly reduced. In protocol B (male rats) the reactions of PK, FBPase and malic enzyme were more altered after DEHP exposure than in protocol A, while the activity of G6PDH was more increased in protocol A. Most enzymes being involved in the carbohydrate metabolism are influenced by DEHP in a dose-dependent manner. There was no increase in serum FBPase activity in both male and female rats after DEHP treatment but a reduction of glutamate-oxalate-transaminase and glutamate-pyruvate-transaminase activities was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate alters carbohydrate enzyme activities and foci incidence in rat liver. 197 36

Several alterations of the small-intestinal morphology and function have been documented after alcohol ingestion. There are morphologic changes macroscopically and microscopically after acute alcohol administration in the proximal part of the small intestine, which are quickly reversible. There are no macroscopic changes and, in most patients, very discrete light microscopic changes in the small intestine after chronic alcohol ingestion. The ultrastructural changes are, however, profound, as seen by both transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The permeability is probably increased, permitting entrance of possible noxious agents, which may explain some of the extraintestinal tissue damage observed in chronic alcoholism. The transit is increased, at least after acute alcohol administration, perhaps contributing to the diarrhea commonly seen after heavy drinking. Several of the enzymes located in the brush border are affected; lactase activity can be depressed and perhaps result in a transient milk intolerance in predisposed individuals. The activity of GGT is increased and may partly account for the GGT elevation in serum after heavy drinking. Other enzymes, such as Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, can be inhibited and result in a decreased absorption of substances that require active, energy-dependent transport mechanisms. The secretion of water and electrolytes may be increased (an effect on cAMP?). The absorption of several nutrients, vitamins, and other elements is disturbed. The bacterial flora is increased and changed, which may give rise to symptoms and also increase the production of acetaldehyde by bacterial metabolism of ethanol. Acetaldehyde is more toxic than ethanol, and an increased concentration of acetaldehyde can possibly accentuate the damage to the liver and other organs. The bacterial overgrowth can possibly cause endotoxinemia. Although studies on alcohol-related intestinal alterations have been relatively sparse, the acute and chronic effects of alcohol thus seem to be considerable. From available results it is, however, difficult to draw any definite conclusions about the clinical importance of many of the findings. Future research will need to study the relationship between, for example, the chronic morphologic changes, the absorptive dysfunction, and permeability alterations, on the one hand, and the gastrointestinal symptoms, the extraintestinal damage, and various deficiencies, on the other hand.
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PMID:Alcohol and the small intestine. 200 95

The purpose of this study was to determine if the dietary antioxidant selenium could inhibit hepatocarcinogenesis induced by peroxisome proliferators, which are hypothesized to induce tumors by increased production of hydrogen peroxide or other reactive oxygen species. Rats were fed diets containing the peroxisome proliferator ciprofibrate and one of three concentrations (0.04, 0.2, or 1.0 ppm) of selenium for 6 or 21 months. The incidence of hepatic tumors and the number and volume of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase-positive, ATPase-negative, glucose-6-phosphatase-negative, and glucose-6-phosphatase-positive foci at 21 months were lower in rats fed higher levels of selenium (no foci or tumors were seen at 6 mo). Indices of oxidative damage in the liver (thiobarbituric acid reactants, conjugated dienes, and lipid-soluble fluorescence products), however, were not decreased in rats fed the high-selenium diet. Therefore, selenium was protective against ciprofibrate-induced hepatocarcinogenesis, but not by reducing the degree of oxidative damage. The liver selenium and glutathione concentrations, and liver selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase activity, increased as dietary selenium increased. Therefore, inhibition of carcinogenesis by selenium was correlated with increased levels of glutathione and glutathione peroxidase, but these did not inhibit the indices of oxidative damage. Peroxisomal beta-oxidation also increased with the dietary selenium content; it therefore does not appear to be a factor in the inhibition of hepatocarcinogenesis in rats fed higher levels of selenium.
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PMID:Effect of dietary selenium on the induction of altered hepatic foci and hepatic tumors by the peroxisome proliferator ciprofibrate. 208 22

Loss of calcium regulation across the plasma membrane of hepatocytes is responsible for irreversible cell damage by CCl4. The mode of action of colchicine in CCl4 acute liver damage is not completely understood. We followed the time courses of the changes in lipoperoxidation, the activities of liver plasma membrane Ca2(+)-ATPase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and alkaline phosphatase, as well as the time courses of serum markers of liver damage in rats acutely intoxicated with CCl4. We assessed the effects of colchicine in this model and evaluated the effect of this drug on liver cytochrome P-450. Increased lipoperoxidation is the earliest and shortest lasting effect of CCl4 in the liver and is followed by a decrease in the activities of plasma membrane-bound enzymes. The alterations in serum enzymes showed a slower onset and were more protracted. Colchicine pretreatment produced a small decrease in cytochrome P-450 in the liver but completely prevented most of the changes produced by CCl4 in lipoperoxidation, liver plasma membrane enzyme activities and serum enzyme activities. We conclude that CCl4 metabolites trigger lipoperoxidation and then produce a longer lasting change in the plasma membrane, which thus allows calcium accumulation. Colchicine prevents the early mechanisms of CCl4 damage, and its effect on cytochrome P-450 perhaps plays only a contributory role.
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PMID:CCl4-induced lipoperoxidation triggers a lethal defect in the liver plasma membranes. 213 83

Bilirubin and phthalein dyes are taken up by the liver via a carrier-mediated mechanism operated at least in part by bilitranslocase (BTL). Because they also undergo renal transport, the presence and function of BTL was investigated in rat renal tubular plasma membrane vesicles. Transport of sulfobromophthalein (BSP) was enriched in basolateral domain of plasma membrane and followed the distribution pattern of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase but not of gamma-glutamyltransferase. BSP uptake was inhibited by addition of monospecific antibodies raised against hepatic BTL. As in liver vesicles, BSP transport was electrogenic, being greatly accelerated by addition of valinomycin in presence of an inwardly directed K+ gradient. Apparent Km of BSP transport was 17 +/- 2 microM (n = 3 expts), one order of magnitude higher than that measured in liver; however, Vmax was similar to that described in liver vesicles (429 +/- 18 nmol BSP.mg protein-1.min-1, n = 3 expts). Competitive inhibition was observed with both unconjugated bilirubin (Ki, 2.9 +/- 0.2 microM) and rifamycin SV (Ki, 76 +/- 10 microM), known competitors for hepatic BTL-mediated transport of BSP. Immunoblotting studies with anti-BTL monospecific antibodies revealed presence of a single positive band only in basolateral-enriched membrane fraction; its apparent molecular mass was 37 kDa, virtually identical to that of hepatic protein. Immunohistochemistry confined presence of BTL to renal proximal tubules (RPT) We conclude that BTL is present in basolateral plasma membrane of RPT cells. Lower affinity of renal, compared with hepatic protein, for substrates might explain the marginal role of kidney in plasma clearance of bilirubin and cholephilic dyes.
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PMID:Bilitranslocase localization and function in basolateral plasma membrane of renal proximal tubule in rat. 222 Oct 93

Freshly isolated rabbit proximal tubules (PT), confluent primary rabbit proximal tubule cultures (PTC) and LLC-PK1 cells were characterised. Brushborder enzyme activities were lower in PTC than in LLC-PK1: ratios were 0.026 for alkaline phosphatase (AP), 0.458 for alanine aminopeptidase (AAP) and 0.514 for gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT). PT/PTC ratios were 79.7 for AP, 7.96 for AAP and 3.45 for GGT. Specific activities of hexokinase (HK) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) were high in cultured cells as compared to PT: PT/PTC ratios were 0.063 and 0.033, while PTC/LLC-PK1 ratios were 0.406 and 1.19 for HK and LDH respectively. PTC/LLC-PK1 ratios were 2.21 for Na/K ATPase, 2.07 for succinate dehydrogenase, 1.12 for cathepsin B, 0.607 for N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase and 8.98 for glutathione-S-transferase. Adenylate cyclase response to parathormone (PTH), was similar in PTC and PT, but stimulated/basal ratios were higher in PT than in PTC. LLC-PK1 cells were stimulated by thyrocalcitonin (SCT), arginin-vasopressin (AVP) and PTH; stimulated/basal ratios ranked AVP greater than PTH greater than SCT. Differences between both types of cultures affect the choice of in vitro model for nephrotoxicity studies.
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PMID:Adenylate cyclase responses and biochemical characterization of primary rabbit proximal tubular cell cultures and LLC-PK1 cells. 228 70

The ability of methyl-deficient, amino-acid-defined diets to produce enzyme-altered foci was quantitatively determined in the livers of rats treated both with and without an initiating dose of diethylnitrosamine (DEN). Male weanling F-344 rats were fed a complete, amino-acid-defined diet for 1 week. They were then injected i.p. with a single dose of DEN (20 mg/kg body weight) and fed the complete diet for an additional week. Forty animals in each dose group were then maintained for 5-38 weeks on the complete diet (diet 1) or one of the three methyl-deficient diets customarily used in this laboratory: diet 2, devoid of methionine and choline; diet 3, devoid of methionine only; and diet 4, devoid of choline only. In diets 2 and 3, methionine was replaced by equimolar amounts of its metabolic precursor, DL-homocystine. Ten animals per group were killed 8, 12, 17, 24 and 41 weeks after DEN initiation. For 2 weeks prior to being killed, each group was maintained on the complete diet to minimize the histological abnormalities due to acute toxicity of the diets. Serial sections of the livers were obtained, stained sequentially for gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase, ATPase and glucose-6-phosphatase, and the quantitation of the focal lesions scored by these markers was carried out by quantitative stereology. The results indicated that, regardless of the enzyme marker(s) examined, there was a general correspondence between the volume and number of altered hepatic foci (AHF) formed and the previously described tumor-promoting activities of each diet. Thus, while all DEN-treated groups contained significant numbers of AHF 24 weeks after initiation, only the diet-2-fed animals displayed such foci at 8 weeks. Similarly, among the uninitiated rats, only those fed diet 2 exhibited the presence of AHF throughout the experimental period. Interestingly, the livers of uninitiated, choline-deficient rats showed a small number of AHF at 24 and 42 weeks; these foci were not observed at all in the corresponding DEN-untreated animals fed diet 3, deficient in methionine only. The results provide evidence that the carcinogenic effects of the methionine- and choline-deficient diet result more from its strongly promoting effect than from any initiating activity by the diet.
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PMID:The effect of choline and methionine deficiencies on the number and volume percentage of altered hepatic foci in the presence or absence of diethylnitrosamine initiation in rat liver. 230 54

The effect of methylglyoxal on protein -SH and -NH2 groups in cytosolic and membranous fractions of epithelial cells lining the gastrointestinal tract of rat was investigated, using isolated villus and crypt cells (enterocytes) and colonocytes. It was found that 11-12% cytosolic protein -SH and 14-17% membrane protein -SH groups were lost when villus and crypt cells were treated with 2 mM methylglyoxal. In colonocytes, the corresponding loss in protein -SH groups was 46 and 30% under the same treatment. Similarly, 27-37% protein -NH2 group in the cytosolic fraction and 18-19% protein -NH2 group in membranous fractions of the enterocytes were lost by 2 mM methylglyoxal treatment. In colonocytes, the loss of protein -NH2 group was 30 and 15% in cytosolic and membranous fractions, respectively, under the same treatment. Effect of methylglyoxal on activity of various brush border enzymes such as alkaline phosphatase, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, leucine aminopeptidase, Mg2(+)-ATPase, sucrase and lactase was also studied. Alkaline phosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activities were inhibited to the extent of 30 and 15% respectively. There was no significant change in the activities of other enzymes after treating the brush border vesicles with 2 mM methylglyoxal. These findings show that methylglyoxal can cause loss of protein thiol and amino groups and enzyme activity in mucosal cells of rat gastrointestinal tract and the effect is more pronounced in colonocytes, which are in constant contact with bacterial metabolites.
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PMID:Effect of methylglyoxal on protein thiol and amino groups in isolated rat enterocytes and colonocytes and activity of various brush border enzymes. 234 Nov 60


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