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 localization of alkaline phosphatases in dentinogenically active rat incisor odontoblasts was studied by means of subcellular fractionation and electron microscopical histochemistry. Subcellular fractionation revealed the predominant phosphatase activity to be present in the microsome fraction and to a lesser extent in the mitochondrial fraction. Adenosine triphosphate degrading enzyme activity was determined in the presence or absence of (+/-)-6(m-bromophenyl)-5, 6-dihydroimidazo(le) (2,1-b) thiazole oxalate (R 8231). Before the histochemical study, the effects on phosphatase activities by aldehyde fixation were studied by biochemical assay. A method of fixation for optimal preservation of phosphatase activity is presented. Phosphatase electron microscopic histochemistry was performed by using ATP as a substrate and with or without addition of the inhibitor R 82319 Precipitates were seen in the membranes of vesicles present in the odontoblast process and the Golgi region. When there were signs of insufficient fixation, precipitates were also seen in the outer membranes of mitochondria. No phosphatase activity was seen in the cell membrane. ATP degrading enzyme activities mediated by nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (APase) and Ca2+ -adenosine triphosphatase thus have the same morphological localization. This close association is consistent with earlier biochemical studies.
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PMID:Ultrastructural localization of alkaline phosphatases in rat incisor odontoblasts. 2 17

The effects of fixation with various concentrations of glutaraldehyde or formaldehyde, acetone or ethanol, and freeze-drying on 5 phosphatases of Eimeria tenella and chick kidney cell cultures were demonstrated in situ. Gultaraldehyde inactivated the phosphatases more than did the formaldehyde, but the effect of the combination of the 2 (Karnovsky's fixative) was greater than that of either glutaraldehyde or formaldehyde alone. The higher the concentration of aldehyde and the longer the duration of exposure, the greater the inactivation. The order of sensitivity to aldehyde fixation of the enzymes tested was glucose-6-phosphatase greater than thiamine pyrophosphatase greater than 5'-nucleotidase greater than adenosine triphosphatase greater than acid phosphatase. Cytologic detail was preserved more efficiently with glutaraldehyde than with formaldehyde. Optimal preservation of enzyme activity for cytochemistry was with 2% glutaraldehyde for 30 min or 2% formaldehyde for 1 hr for G-6-Pase, TPPase, and 5'-nucleotidase, and with 2% glutaraldehyde or 2% formaldehyde for 2 hr with ATPase and AcPase. Quenching with subsequent fixation in cold acetone or ethanol resulted in complete inactivation of G-6-Pase, TPPase, and 5'-nucleotidase; although cells fixed in this manner yielded large amounts of reaction product for ATPase and AcPase, the distribution was diffuse, and some of it appeared to be artifactual. Quenching with subsequent freeze-drying was unsatisfactory because nearly all of the cell layers rolled off the cover glasses.
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PMID:Effect of fixation on demonstration of phosphatases of Eimeria tenella grown in chick kidney cell cultures. 6 Dec 71

Immobilization of myosin, actin, actomyosin and subfragment S1 on kapron fibre was achieved with the help of glutaric aldehyde. The ATPase activity of myosin and its ability to interact with actin is preserved; while the ATPase activity of S1 subfragment decreases considerably. The immobilization on kapron fibre changes the pH-dependance of ATPase activity of myosin and that of subfragment S1, shifting the maximum to low pH zone (pH 5.5), and increases the thermostability of the enzyme. The ions of Ca++ in all cases act as an activating agent on ATPase while the ions of Mg++ either do not affect myosin and subfragment S1 at all, or increase the activity in the case of the immobilized of actomyosin but to a lesser degree than the ions of Ca++. The immobilized actin preserves its ability to form actomyosin complex.
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PMID:[Chemical suturing of myosin and actin to capron fiber]. 13 56

A 17beta-unsaturated aldehyde analogue [3beta,14beta-dihydroxy-5beta-pregn-17beta-trans-20-en-22-al (7)] of the cardenolides was synthesized and studied. In earlier studies by Rappoport, unsaturated aldehydes were found to be highly active electrophiles, more active, for example, than unsaturated nitriles or methyl esters. The synthesis followed in part a scheme previously reported by Thomas for the syntheses of the 17beta-unsaturated nitrile 9 and the 17beta-unsaturated methyl and ethyl esters 8 and 10. Both 9 and 8 are more Na+,K+-ATPase inhibiting and slightly less inotropic than digitoxigenin (1b). However, the unsaturated aldehyde 7 was less Na+,K+-ATPase inhibiting (I50 - 9.9 +/- 0.7 X 10(-7) M) and less inotropic (100% increase in contractile force at 8.5 +/- 1.0 X 10(-6) M) than 1b (I50 - 4.6 +/- 1.6 X 10(-7) M; 100% increase at 3.0 +/- 1.0 X 10(-7) M).
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PMID:Cardenolide analogues. 1. A 17beta-unsaturated aldehyde. 13 17

The effect of acetaldehyde, the hepatic metabolite of alcohol, on the functioning of cardiac muscle was investigated at the subcellular level. Concentrations of acetaldehyde that occur in plasma failed to alter either the microsomal Ca2+-accumulating and ATPase activity or the Ca2+-accumulating activity of the mitochondria. These same concentrations of acetaldehyde inhibited the Ca2+-dependent myofibrillar ATPase.
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PMID:Effect of acetaldehyde on functioning of cardiac muscle at the ultrastructural level. 14 33

Changes in cardiac metabolism in myocardial failure and after alcohol ingestion are discussed. The main effect of alcohol ingestion is loss of cardiac contractility. Since heart muscle does not contain alcohol dehydrogenase, its toxicity is probably the result of a direct toxic effect of ethanol and acetaldehyde on the myocardial cell, possibly involving various membrane systems. Alcohol inhibits mitochondrial respiration and the activity of enzymes in the tricarboxylic acid cycle, and its interferes with both mitochondrial calcium uptake and binding. Ethanol profoundly affects myocardial lipid metabolism. Acetaldehyde diminishes myocardial protein synthesis and inhibits Ca++-activated myofibrillar ATPase. In myocardial failure, a series of possibilities may be responsible for the loss of contractility. Excitation-contraction coupling could be disturbed at the level of the sarcolemma, at the sarcoplasmic reticulum, at the mitochondria, and between calcium and the regulatory proteins. Deficiencies in Ca++ delivery systems of excitation-contraction coupling on the myosin ATPase activity could be responsible for the dimunition in cardiac contractility. Mitochondrial function may also be involved, since mitochondria from failing human hearts are defective with respect to respiratory control and calcium accumulation. Under certain conditions, the relationship of mitochondria to calcium sequestration is very important in influencing contractility. The involvement of contractile and regulatory proteins in myocardial failure cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Cardiac metabolsim: its contributions to alcoholic heart disease and myocardial failure. 15 68

The activities of various enzymes in some subcellular organelle fractions were examined after fixation in glutaraldehyde of various concentrations. A high speed centrifuge was used to shorten the fixation time. At the lowest concentration (0.01%) glutaraldehyde stabilized instable configurational states of mitochondria as revealed by electron microscopy. In addition, at this concentration, at least 70% of the original monoamine oxidase, ATPase and cytochrome oxidase activities were preserved. The activity of acid phosphatase, on the other hand, was enhanced in a lysosomal fraction when fixed with the aldehyde at higher concentrations, e.g. 0.1% and 1.0%. It is possible that the aldehyde at higher concentrations has the same effects on the lysosomal membrane as freeze-thawing. Glucose-6-phosphatase activity was well-preserved in a microsomal fraction fixed with 0.01% glutaraldehyde but was decreased drastically when the concentration of the aldehyde was greater than 0.05%.
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PMID:Stabilization of configurational states and enzyme activities in subcellular fractions after fixation with extremely low concentrations of glutaraldehyde. 17 35

Plasma membranes (PM) were isolated from island-forming types of rat ascites hepatoma (AH 130, AH 602, and AH 7974) and from their free-cell sublines (AH 130FN and AH 7974F), and were characterized in terms of electron-microscopic morphology, marker enzyme activities, and lipid contents. The results were compared with those of the PM isolated in a similar way from newborn, regenerating, and adult livers. The marker enzyme activities, such as Na+, K+-insensitive Mg2+-ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] (Mg2+-ATPase) and 5'-nucleotidase [EC 3.1.3.5], as well as the phospholipid composition of the PM isolated from hepatomas by Wallach's nitrogen gas cavitation method were similar to those obtained with the PM isolated by a modification of Emmelot's method, although the former method gave a much lower yield in terms of protein than the latter. Based on the modified Emmelot method, sufficiently pure PM preparations could be obtained from the hepatomas in the form of large membrane sheets without any contamination by other identifiable components, as determined with an electron microscope, and with high specific activities of the marker enzymes, such as Na+, K+-sensitive ATPase [EC 3.6.1.3] (Na+, K+ -ATPase), Mg2+ -ATPase, and 5'-nucleotidase. As for the characteristics of the hepatoma PM, lower specific activity of 5'-nucleotidase and higher fatty aldehyde molar percentages in total phospholipids were noted in all the PM from the hepatomas in comparison with normal liver PM of various origins. The PM from the hepatomas showed an increased amount of cholesterol (mumole per mg protein), whereas actively growing newborn and regenerating livers gave rather lower amounts in comparison with that of normal adult liver.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the plasma membranes from rat ascites hepatomas and from normal rat livers, including newborn, regenerating, and adult livers. 17 89

The purpose of this study was to try to differentiate histochemically between the various enzymes which may catalyze the hydrolysis of ATP in developing rat dental tissues. Freeze cut and freeze dried sections of molar and incisor teeth were incubated in lead capture-based media at pH 5.0, 7.2 or 9.4 with one of the following substrates: beta-glycerophosphate, AMP, ADP, ATP, AMP-PNP and tetrasodium pyrophosphate. To establish the enzymatic nature of the hydrolysis parallel sections were incubated after prior fixation in either formaldehyde or glutaraldehyde. By comparing the enzymatic stainings obtained with the various substrates and at the different pH:s, it was concluded that ATP can be visibly hydrolyzed in rat dental tissues by alkaline phosphatase (stratum intermedium, apical part of maturation ameloblasts, basal part of all ameloblasts, odontoblasts and subodontoblastic layer), specific ATPase (apical and basal parts of secretory ameloblasts) and ATP pyrophosphatase and/or adenylate cyclase (stratum intermedium, odontoblasts). Acid phosphatase, specific ADPase, 5'-nucleotidase, inorganic pyrophosphatase, 3':5'-cyclic-AMP-phosphodiesterase and adenylate kinase on the other hand, seem not to be engaged in the ATP hydrolysis to such a degree as to complicate the interpretation of the histochemical staining. The alkaline phosphatase part of the ATP hydrolysis appeared to be rather insensitive to aldehyde fixation, while the hydrolysis effected by specific ATPase and ATP pyrophosphatase and/or adenylate cyclase was extinguished after fixation with formaldehyde for 4 h or glutaraldehyde for 10 min.
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PMID:Adenosine triphosphate hydrolysis in rat dental tissues. A histochemical study to differentiate the enzymes involved. 18 60

Specific binding of radiolabeled inhibitor was employed to localize the Na-pump sites (Na,K-ATPase) in rectal gland epithelium, a NaCl-secreting osmoregulatory tissue which is particularly rich in pump sites. Slices of gland tissue from spiny dogfish were incubated in suitable [3H]ouabain-containing media and then prepared for Na,K-ATPase assay, measurement of radiolabel binding, or quantitative freeze-dry autoradiography at the light microscope level. Gross freezing or drying artifacts were excluded by comparison with additional aldehyde-fixed slices. Characterization experiments demonstrated high-affinity binding which correlated with Na,K-ATPase inhibition and half-saturated at approximately 5 microM [3H]ouabain. At this concentration, the normal half-loading time was approximately 1 h and low-affinity binding to nonspecific sites was negligible. Autoradiographs from both 1- and 4-h incubated slices showed approximately 85% of the bound [3H]ouabain to be localized within a 1-micrometer wide boundary region where the highly infolded basal-lateral cell membrane are closest to the mitochondria. These results establish that most of the enormous Na,K-ATPase activity associated with rectal gland epithelium is in the basal-lateral cell membrane facing interstitial fluid and not in the luminal membrane facing secreted fluid. Moreover, distribution along the basal-lateral membrane appears to be nonuniform with a higher density of enzyme sites close to mitochondria.
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PMID:Elasmobranch rectal gland cell: autoradiographic localization of [3H]ouabain-sensitive Na, K-ATPase in rectal gland of dogfish, Squalus acanthias. 22 10


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