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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)
Aldose reductase
was visualized by light and electron microscopy using a goat anti-rat antibody with immunoperoxidase and immunogold, respectively. Ouabain-sensitive, K(+)-dependent, p-nitro-phenylphosphatase, a component of (Na+, K+)-
ATPase
, was localized at the electron microscopic level by enzyme histochemistry using p-nitro-phenylphosphate as substrate. In peripheral nerve, spinal ganglia and roots, the Schwann cell of myelinated fibers was the principal site of aldose reductase localization. Immunostaining was intense in the paranodal region and the Schmidt-Lanterman clefts as well as in cytoplasm of the terminal expansions of paranodal myelin lamellae and the nodal microvilli. Schwann cell cytoplasm of unmyelinated fibers were faintly labelled. Endoneurial vessel endothelia, pericytes and perineurium failed to bind appreciable amounts of aldose reductase antibody. However, mast cell granules bound antibody strongly. In contrast, p-nitro-phenylphosphatase reaction product was detected in the nodal axolemma, terminal loops of Schwann cell cytoplasm and the innermost layer of perineurial cells. In endothelial cells, reaction product was localized on either the luminal or abluminal, or on both luminal and abluminal plasmalemma. Endothelial vesicular profiles were often loaded with reaction product. Occasional staining of myelin and axonal organelles was noted. Mast cells lacked reaction product.
...
PMID:Fine-structural localization of aldose reductase and ouabain-sensitive, K(+)-dependent p-nitro-phenylphosphatase in rat peripheral nerve. 165 Jan 13
Aldose reductase
(EC 1.1.1.21) is implicated in the pathophysiology of diabetic complications. In this paper we determined the activities of aldose reductase and ATPases of the erythrocytes in 17 patients with Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). In the aldose reductase assay we used fluorometric method to avoid the disturbance of hemoglobin. With dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), we verified it was aldose reductase but not aldehyde reductase II that was activated in the erythrocytes of the patients with NIDDM. The aldose reductase activity of the erythrocytes in the patients was significantly higher (P less than 0.01) than that in the controls. The activity of Na+/K(+)-
ATPase
of the patients was significantly lower (P less than 0.01) than that of the controls. The activities of Ca(2+)-
ATPase
and Mg(2+)-ATPase on the erythrocyte membranes of the patients were similar to those of the controls. At the same time we measured the seven nucleotide concentrations in the erythrocytes of the patients. In this experiment we used ultrafiltration method, instead of acid precipitation to make it possible to determine dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) and NADH. The concentrations of ATP, ADP and AMP were similar to those of the controls. The concentrations of NADPH, NAD+ and NADH in the erythrocytes of the patients were significantly lower (P less than 0.01, 0.05 and 0.05 respectively) than those of controls. The concentration of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+) in the patients was significantly higher (P less than 0.01) than that of controls.
...
PMID:Activities of aldose reductase, ATPases, and nucleotide concentrations of erythrocytes in patients with type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus. 166 Dec 22
Nerve conduction slowing, a hallmark of both experimental and human diabetic neuropathy, is improved or corrected by aldose reductase inhibitors such as sorbinil. Recent animal experiments attribute acutely reversible nerve conduction slowing in diabetes to a myo-inositol (MI)-related defect in the nerve Na-K-
ATPase
(which generates the transmembrane sodium and potassium potentials necessary for nerve impulse conduction and the sodium gradient necessary for sodium-dependent uptake of substrates). This MI-related abnormality in Na-K-
ATPase
function is currently viewed as a cyclic, metabolic defect involving sequential alteration of Na-dependent MI uptake, MI content, MI incorporation into membrane phospholipids, and phospholipid-dependent Na-K-
ATPase
function in peripheral nerve.
Aldose reductase
inhibitors have been shown to normalize both nerve MI content and nerve Na-K-
ATPase
activity. These observations suggest that the acute effects of aldose reductase inhibitors on nerve conduction in both diabetic animals and patients may be mediated by correction of an underlying MI-related nerve Na-K-
ATPase
defect. Furthermore, this sorbinil-corrected Na-K-
ATPase
defect in diabetic nerve may contribute to other biochemical, functional, and structural abnormalities present in patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
...
PMID:A sodium-pump defect in diabetic peripheral nerve corrected by sorbinil administration: relationship to myo-inositol metabolism and nerve conduction slowing. 242 Nov 35
The progression of diabetic nephropathy can be arrested by an improvement in diabetic control. High glucose concentrations increase the flux through the aldose reductase pathway, and it has been proposed that this may contribute to renal damage.
Aldose reductase
is present in both the glomerulus and the renal tubule. Biochemical changes associated with increased sorbitol production have been demonstrated in animal models, including myo-inositol depletion, reduced Na+-K+
ATPase
activity, and activation of the pentose phosphate and glucuronate-xylose pathways. Selective inhibition of aldose reductase reverses these biochemical changes and prevents some of the structural and functional abnormalities in diabetic rats. The potential beneficial effects of aldose reductase inhibitors on diabetic kidney disease in man are at present being investigated.
...
PMID:Aldose reductase in the etiology of diabetic complications: 2. Nephropathy. 252 43
The chronic complications of diabetes are thought to be caused by an interaction between hyperglycemia, or other metabolic consequences of insulin deficiency, and independent genetic or environmental factors that are poorly defined. Several potentially relevant biochemical sequelae to hyperglycemia have been identified in tissue susceptible to diabetic complications. Among these, a rise in tissue sorbitol secondary to concentration-dependent activation of polyol pathway activity by glucose, and an accompanying fall in tissue myo-inositol and Na-K-
ATPase
activity have recently been linked to a self-reinforcing cyclic metabolic defect that accounts for rapidly reversible slowing of conduction in peripheral nerve in diabetes. Impaired Na-K-
ATPase
activity also appears to be responsible for intracellular Na+ accumulation and resultant localized axonal paranodal swelling that characterizes diabetic neuropathy in both humans and laboratory animals. These swellings are thought to be responsible for the subsequent disruption of the nodal apparatus (axo-glial disjunction) and some component of the loss of large and small myelinated fibers. Recent studies have suggested that microvascular insufficiency may also contribute to diabetic neuropathy, especially in non-insulin-dependent diabetes.
Aldose reductase
activity is concentrated in endoneurial vessels, and similar biochemical mechanisms (ie, sorbitol accumulation, myo-inositol deficiency, and impaired Na-K-
ATPase
activity) are thought to be operative in the endoneurial microvessels in diabetes. Administration of an aldose reductase inhibitor to patients with diabetic neuropathy is associated with repair of damaged nerve fibers and the appearance of newly generated fibers, presumably secondary to metabolic correction within the nerve fibers themselves or their supporting microvasculature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The pathogenesis and prevention of diabetic neuropathy and nephropathy. 282 23
Nerve conduction slowing, a hallmark of both experimental and human diabetic neuropathy, is improved or corrected by administration of aldose reductase inhibitors such as sorbinil. Recent experiments in animals attribute acutely reversible nerve conduction slowing in diabetes to a myo-inositol-related defect in nerve sodium-potassium
adenosinetriphosphatase
, which generates the transmembrane sodium and potassium potentials necessary for nerve impulse conduction and the sodium gradient necessary for sodium-dependent uptake of substrates. This myo-inositol-related abnormality in sodium-potassium
adenosinetriphosphatase
function is currently viewed as a cyclic metabolic defect involving sequential alteration of sodium-dependent myo-inositol uptake, myo-inositol content, myo-inositol incorporation into membrane phospholipids, and phospholipid-dependent sodium-potassium
adenosinetriphosphatase
function in peripheral nerve.
Aldose reductase
inhibitors have been shown to normalize both nerve myo-inositol content and nerve sodium-potassium
adenosinetriphosphatase
activity. These observations suggest that the acute effects of aldose reductase inhibitors on nerve conduction in both animals and humans with diabetes may be mediated by correction of an underlying myo-inositol-related nerve sodium-potassium
adenosinetriphosphatase
defect. Furthermore, this sorbinil-corrected sodium-potassium
adenosinetriphosphatase
defect in diabetic nerve may contribute to other biochemical, functional, and structural abnormalities present in diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
...
PMID:Recent advances in the therapy of diabetic peripheral neuropathy by means of an aldose reductase inhibitor. 300 Jan 75
Decreased sciatic nerve myo-inositol content and Na+-K+-
ATPase
activity have been associated with slowing of motor nerve conduction in the acutely diabetic rat and have been invoked as possible pathogenic factors in diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
Aldose reductase
inhibitors prevent these abnormalities in peripheral nerves of the streptozocin (STZ)-diabetic rat. Whether an analogous biochemical abnormality occurs in the autonomic nervous system and plays a role in the development of diabetic autonomic dysfunction is unknown. Therefore we examined the effect of 8 wk of untreated STZ diabetes and administration of 20 mg X kg-1 X day-1 of the aldose reductase inhibitor sorbinil on myo-inositol level and Na+-K+-
ATPase
activity in rat superior cervical ganglia. Both myo-inositol concentration and Na+-K+-
ATPase
activity were reduced in ganglia from untreated STZ-diabetic rats, and sorbinil administration prevented these abnormalities. Thus, a sorbinil-responsive metabolic defect involving myotional abnormalities in the somatic and autonomic nervous systems in diabetes.
...
PMID:Decreased myo-inositol content and Na+-K+-ATPase activity in superior cervical ganglion of STZ-diabetic rat and prevention by aldose reductase inhibition. 301 4
Slowing of nerve conduction, a hallmark of both experimental and human diabetic neuropathy, is improved or corrected by aldose reductase inhibitors such as sorbinil. Animal experiments suggest that a myo-inositol-related defect in nerve sodium-potassium
adenosine triphosphatase
(
ATPase
) is responsible for the acute reversible slowing of nerve conduction in diabetes mellitus. This myo-inositol-related defect is at present viewed as a cyclic metabolic defect.
Aldose reductase
inhibitors have been shown to restore to normal both the myo-inositol content and the sodium-potassium ATPase activity of nerve. This suggests that the acute effects of aldose-reductase inhibitors on nerve conduction in both diabetic animals and human patients may be modified by the correction of an underlying myo-inositol-related defect of nerve sodium-potassium ATPase. Furthermore, this myo-inositol-related defect may contribute to other biochemical, functional and structural abnormalities of diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
...
PMID:Sorbitol, myo-inositol and sodium-potassium ATPase in diabetic peripheral nerve. 302 50
During the past decade, our appreciation of the original experiments with myo-inositol supplementation in diabetic rats has greatly expanded. The effects of myo-inositol on nerve conduction are now explained by concepts that were largely unappreciated in 1976, including the fundamental role of phosphoinositide metabolism in cell regulation and the importance of the activity of sodium-potassium-
ATPase
in nerve conduction.
Aldose reductase
inhibitors firmly link defects in myo-inositol metabolism to activation of the polyol pathway in diabetes; the resulting "sorbitol-myo-inositol hypothesis" has been extended from its application to the lenses and peripheral nerves to most of the tissues involved with diabetic complications. These biochemical mechanisms provide a new framework within which to explore the complex interactions between hyperglycemia and the vascular, genetic, and environmental variables in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications. It is anticipated that these endeavors will result in the appearance of new classes of therapeutic agents, the first of which--the aldose reductase inhibitors--has emerged from the laboratory and is now undergoing extensive clinical testing. These efforts are very likely to result in the appearance of new treatment methods that may dramatically lighten the burden of chronic complications in patients with diabetes.
...
PMID:Sorbitol, phosphoinositides, and sodium-potassium-ATPase in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications. 302 58
Peripheral neuropathy in diabetes begins as a physiologic aberration related to hyperglycemia and its subsequent effects of endoneurial hypoxia, elevated sorbitol levels, and decreased myoinositol levels. Resultant decreases in sodium-potassium-
adenosine triphosphatase
levels ultimately lead to structural alterations at the nodes of Ranvier.
Aldose reductase
inhibitors and dietary myoinositol supplementation are being used in long-term clinical studies to monitor the possibility that they may prevent or reverse these abnormalities. In the meantime, symptomatic treatment remains the mainstay of management.
...
PMID:Management of peripheral neuropathy in diabetes mellitus. Recent research findings and their therapeutic implications. 330 36
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