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 slow anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscles of newly hatched chickens were transposed and cross0innervated by the mixed, predominantly fast superior brachialis nerve, and investigated 2 to 15 months after the operation. Two months after the operation, myosin ATPase activity of the cross-innervated ALD muscles was still as low as in the control ALD, although the ultrastructure and the histochemical ATPase activity already showed a mixed fibre-type pattern with a predominance of fast -type fibres around the site of nerve implantation. The change of myosin properties of thw whole cross-innervated ALD did not occur until the third month after the operation. At that time, the myosin ATPase activity increased about 2.5 times and light chains of myosin of the fast type appeared in the electrophoretic pattern. The myosin ATPase activity attained 62% of the activity found in the control fast posterior latissimus dorsi muscles at three months; subsequently it remained at about this level reaching 68% 18 months after the operation. The results indicate that approximately two thirds of the cross-innervated ALD muscle fibres became changed towards the fast type under neural influence, whereas about one third remained slow, being re-innervated by the slow-type motor fibres of the implanted nerve.
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PMID:The onset and progress of transformation of avian slow into fast muscles under neural influence. 12 64

The ATPase activity of chicken gizzard myosin was studied by varying the KCl concentration in the reaction medium. The following was thus found: (a) A sharp depression of the activity occurred when the KCl concentration was reduced to less than 0.3 M, showing the minimum activity around 0.15 M KCl. (b) The activity depression was removed by addition of urea or bay papain-digestion, but not by addition of p-chloromercuribenzoate. (c) In the KCl concentration where the activity depression occurred, the ATPase reaction proceeded in two distinct phases; the activity was relatively high in the early phase of the reaction and declined into the later phase where the steady state reaction took place. (d) In the KCl concentrations higher than that particular concentration or in the presence of urea, the ATPase reaction proceeded in one phase. (e) The temperature dependence of the ATPase activity in the early phase was of an ordinary magnitude being approximately equal to that of the ATPase activity in 0.6 M KCl. In contrast, the temperature dependence of the activity in the later phase was unusually small. Gizzard myosin in various concentrations of KCl was also examined by measuring the turbidity and the light-scattering intensity, and by observation under an electron microscope. The following was thus found: (a) In the KCl concentration where the activity depression occurred, there was a stagnation in the turbidity decrease as the KCl concentration was gradually increased and also the formation of "thick filaments," each of which was approximately 0.6-0.9 micron in length and 20-30 nm in diameter with no central "bare zone." (b) Addition of ATP induced dissociation of the thick filaments, and the dissociation occurred during the early phase of the ATPaseeaction. (c) Moreover, the temperature dependence of the ATP-induced dissociation rate was approximately equal to that of the ATPase activity in the early phase. On the basis of the findings mentioned above, it is concluded that the activity depression results from the ATP-induced dissociation of myosin filaments. Moreover, since high concentrations of KCl or urea also caused dissociation of myosin filaments and yet did not produce the activity depression, it was strongly suggested that gizzard myosin in the ATP-dissociated form must be different from that in the urea- or KCl-dissociated form, probably in the physical state of some myosin aggregates which were not detectable by the physical methods we used. As a side-observation, gizzard myosin filaments formed in the presence of ADP were found to be unusually long (longer than 2 micron), and they looked very similar to the particular filaments of skeletal myosin that were reported, by Moos, to be formed in the absence of the C protein.
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PMID:Adenosine triphosphatase activity and "thick filament" formation of chicken gizzard myosin in low salt media. 14 68

1. One week after denervation several biochemical characteristics of the fast extensor digitorum longus and slow soleus muscles from adult rats were investigated and compared with the characteristics of the corresponding unoperated contralateral muscles. 2. After these short periods of denervation-induced atrophy, the isolated myosins showed unchanged ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) activities, but there was the expected difference between fast and slow muscle. 3. The specific activities of several soluble enzymes and their characteristic patterns were found to be only slightly modified in both the extensor and soleus muscles after denervation, as were most of the activities measured in the isolated mitochondria. 4. The most significant modifications were in the isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum, and appeared to be specific to either slow or fast muscle. 5. Denervation of slow muscle led to a marked increase of Ca(2+)-transport rates, and of the specific activity of the Mg(2+)-activated K(+)-modulated Ca(2+)-stimulated ATPase, together with changes in the polyacrylamide-electrophoretic profiles of the microsomal membrane protein. Transformation of these several properties of slow muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum to those of fast muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum was further substantiated by electron-microscopic analysis after negative staining. Control experiments with tenotomized soleus muscle gave negative results. 6. The isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum from fast muscle showed a slight diminution of ATPase-linked Ca(2+)-transport activity and a selective increase of rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity, in addition to a greater emphasis on slow-type electrophoretic components of the structural membrane protein. 7. The significance of these results in relation to specific differentiating influences from motor nerves is discussed.
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PMID:Early biochemical consequences of denervation in fast and slow skeletal muscles and their relationship to neural control over muscle differentiation. 426 59

The binding of extra C protein to rabbit skeletal muscle myofibrils has been investigated by fluorescence microscopy with fluorescein-labeled C protein or unmodified C protein plus fluorescein-labeled anti-C protein. Added C protein binds strongly to the I bands, which is consistent with its binding to F actin in solution (Moos, C., C. M. Mason, J. M. Besterman, I. M. Feng, and J. H. Dubin. 1978. J. Mol. Biol. 124:571-586). Of particular interest, the binding to the I band is calcium regulated: it requires a free calcium ion concentration comparable to that which activates the myofibrillar ATPase. This increases the likelihood that C protein-actin interaction might be physiologically significant. When I band binding is suppressed, binding in the A band becomes evident. It appears to occur particularly near the M line, and possibly at the edges of the A band as well, suggesting that those parts of the thick filaments that lack C protein in vivo may nevertheless be capable of binding added C protein.
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PMID:Fluorescence microscope study of the binding of added C protein to skeletal muscle myofibrils. 678 82

Adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) or beta-adrenergic stimulation has been shown to increase actomyosin adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase) activity in cardiac muscle. Because the major catecholamine transmitters have both alpha- and beta-adrenergic activity, the possibility of a role for alpha-adrenergic stimulation in the regulation of ATPase activity has been investigated. Histochemical measurement of actomyosin ATPase activity in quickly frozen rat hearts has been used as the assay of enzymatic function of the contractile proteins. The dose-response curve of ATPase activity to cAMP shows an increase in ATPase activity at a threshold concentration of 0.01 microM, a peak effect at 0.5-1.0 microM, and a decline beyond 1.5 microM to a level below control at 10 microM cAMP. Kinetic studies varying ATP concentration from 0.5 to 10 mM indicated the existence of multiple forms of actomyosin ATPase activity in the absence of cAMP and only one form with a higher maximum velocity in the presence of 1 microM cAMP. Apparently cAMP raises the enzymatic activity of the individual actomyosin molecule rather than increasing the number of active molecules. The addition of an alpha-adrenergic blocker had no significant effect in the absence of added cAMP, but in the presence of the cyclic nucleotide, 1 microM prazosin always produced a negative effect on ATPase activity. Over the entire range of 0.01-10 microM, cAMP lowered ATPase activity when the alpha-adrenergic antagonist was present. The integrity of the cAMP regulatory system was sensitive to the tissue oxygen tension at the time the heart was quickly frozen. At certain oxygen tension, the stimulatory component of the cAMP regulation was observed without any inhibitory component, suggesting that there are two relatively independent parts of the regulatory mechanism, an inhibitory and a stimulatory. In the presence of gamma-labeled [32P]ATP, 32P was incorporated into several proteins, including the inhibitory subunit of troponin (TNI), C protein, and the regulatory light chain of myosin. cAMP (1 microM) caused an increase in 32P labeling of TNI and C protein. The addition of prazosin with cAMP caused a decrease in the overall level of phosphorylation with specific dephosphorylation of C protein and TNI, the former to a degree similar to the decrease in actomyosin ATPase activity, the latter to a greater degree. These results indicate that alpha-adrenergic activity modulates the balance between kinase and phosphatase activity in the presence of cAMP, probably by inhibiting phosphatase activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:cAMP can raise or lower cardiac actomyosin ATPase activity depending on alpha-adrenergic activity. 791 82

A predominant form of the inherited syndrome xeroderma pigmentosum is genetic complementation group C (XP-C). XP-C cells are defective in DNA nucleotide excision repair in the bulk of the genome but can repair transcribed strands of active genes. An activity that can complement the repair deficiency of extracts from XP-C cells has been purified approximately 2,000-fold from HeLa cells. The factor also increases the unscheduled DNA synthesis of XP-C fibroblasts in vivo after microinjection. Hydrodynamic measurements show that the XP-C complementing factor has a native molecular mass of approximately 160 kDa. The factor binds tightly to single-stranded DNA cellulose, eluting in approximately 1.3 M NaCl. No incision or ATPase activity of the protein alone was detected. XP-C protein is involved in an early stage of repair since its presence was required before the start of gap-filling repair synthesis. In vitro complementation was achieved with naked DNA substrates, and so a primary role in processing chromatin to allow access for repair enzymes seems unlikely. Surprisingly, however, extracts from an XP-C cell line introduced some incisions in UV-irradiated DNA; these were unstable in cell extracts and did not lead to complete repair. The data can be explained by a model in which XP-C factor participates in forming one of the repair incisions flanking DNA damage but not the other. In transcribed DNA, its role is subsumed by RNA polymerase and/or transcription coupling factors.
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PMID:DNA repair defect in xeroderma pigmentosum group C and complementing factor from HeLa cells. 807 26

Thyroid hormone increased the percentage of fibers expressing fast-type sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase in the slow rat soleus muscle from 17% in the hypothyroid to 100% in the hyperthyroid state. This was accompanied by a 12-fold increase in the fast-type Ca(2+)-ATPase protein content of soleus muscle homogenates, suggesting that also the amount of this protein per muscle fiber was increased. In contrast to the fast-type isoform, a decrease in the percentage of fibers expressing slow-type Ca(2+)-ATPase from 100% to 70% was observed in the transition from the hypothyroid to the hyperthyroid state. Slow-type Ca(2+)-ATPase protein levels in muscle homogenates however did not decrease on the same trajectory, but were even elevated in the euthyroid state. In the fast extensor digitorum longus muscle qualitatively similar changes in Ca(2+)-ATPase isoform expression were observed. The results suggest a dual action of thyroid hormone: 1. increasing slow-type Ca(2+)-ATPase expression in individual fibers 2. decreasing the fraction of slow-type Ca(2+)-ATPase expressing fibers.
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PMID:Differential effects of thyroid hormone on the expression of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase isoforms in rat skeletal muscle fibers. 809 21

The aim of this study was to examine the mechanism(s) underlying the reduced isoproterenol-induced positive inotropic and lusitropic effects in hypertrophied hearts. Chronic beta-adrenergic stimulation (2.4 mg isoproterenol.kg-1. day-1 for 4 days) induced cardiac hypertrophy by 33 +/- 2% in rats. A parallel downregulation of phospholamban (PLB) and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2(+)-ATPase (SERCA2) protein expression by 49 and 40%, respectively, was observed, whereas troponin I (TNI) and C protein remained unchanged. In papillary muscles from chronically beta-adrenergically stimulated rats, the isoproterenol-induced positive inotropic and lusitropic effects, as well as adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) accumulation, were attenuated compared with those in control animals. Acute exposure to isoproterenol induced phosphate incorporation into PLB, TNI, and C protein of 48 +/- 4.6, 55 +/- 5.0, and 27 +/- 4.9 pmol/mg homogenate protein, respectively, in control animals. In the hypertrophied hearts, phosphate incorporation into PLB was reduced by 76%, whereas phosphate incorporation into TNI or C protein remained unchanged. In conclusion, chronic beta-adrenergic stimulation reduced the isoproterenol-stimulated positive inotropic and lusitropic effects in papillary muscles, which were accompanied by 1) diminished cAMP formation, 2) attenuation of cAMP-mediated PLB phosphorylation, and 3) downregulation of PLB and SERCA2 protein.
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PMID:Relation between contractile function and regulatory cardiac proteins in hypertrophied hearts. 876 53

We studied the effect of thyroid hormone (3,5,3'-triiodo-L-thyronine, T3) on the expression of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) fast- and slow-type Ca(2+)-ATPase isoforms, SERCA1 and SERCA2a, respectively, and total SR Ca(2+)-ATPase activity in rat skeletal muscle. Cross sections and homogenates of soleus and extensor digitorum longus muscles from hypo-, eu-, and hyperthyroid rats were examined, and expression of Ca(2+)-ATPase isoforms in individual fibers was compared with expression of fast (MHC II) and slow (MHC I) myosin heavy chain isoforms. In both muscles, T3 induced a coordinated and full conversion to a fast-twitch phenotype in one-half of the fibers that were slow twitch in the absence of T3. The conversion was partial in the other one-half of the fibers, giving rise to a mixed phenotype. The stimulation by T3 of total SERCA expression in all fibers was reflected by increased SR Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. The time course of the T3-induced changes of SERCA isoform expression was examined 1-14 days after the start of daily T3 treatment of euthyroid rats. SERCA1 expression was stimulated by T3 at a pretranslational level in all fibers. SERCA2a mRNA expression was transiently stimulated and disappeared in a subset of fibers. In these fibers SR Ca(2+)-ATPase activity was high because of high SERCA1 protein levels. These data suggest that the ultimate downregulation of SERCA2a expression, which is always associated with high SR Ca(2+)-ATPase activities, occurs at a pretranslational level.
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PMID:Fiber-specific regulation of Ca(2+)-ATPase isoform expression by thyroid hormone in rat skeletal muscle. 899 92

The distribution of myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms was analyzed at the protein and mRNA levels in human skeletal muscle biopsies from young normal adult subjects. Using ATPase histochemical reactions, antibodies to fast- and slow-type MHCs, and in situ hybridization with probes specific for MHC-beta/slow, MHC-2A, and MHC-2X, we confirmed our previous results showing that most fibers contain either a single mRNA and isoprotein or a mixed 1/2A or 2A/2X phenotype with coexistence of two mRNAs and isoproteins. However, we also found a minor proportion of fibers showing a mismatch in the relative proportion of mRNA and protein, e.g., fibers containing MHC-2A mRNA but not the corresponding protein or fibers containing MHC-2A protein but not the corresponding transcript. These fibers were more frequent in biopsies obtained after a training or detraining period than before the training period. We propose that these fibers represent transitional fibers and that the relative content of each mRNA and isoprotein gives a clue as to the direction of change in MHC gene expression.
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PMID:Mismatch between myosin heavy chain mRNA and protein distribution in human skeletal muscle fibers. 922 17


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