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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)

Aldosterone-dependent changes in citrate synthase (CS) activity have been used as an index of mineralocorticoid target sites. However, adrenalectomy (ADX) resulted in a fall in activity of CS and several other enzymes in rabbit heart, a tissue with glucocorticoid-but not mineralocorticoid-specific receptors. The enzymes included CS (2.03-1.36 U/mg protein, normal----ADX, P less than 0.001), isocitrate dehydrogenase-NADP+ (1.10-0.80 U/mg, P less than 0.002), isocitrate dehydrogenase-NAD+ (0.034-0.020 U/mg, P less than 0.01), and hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA lyase (0.072 to 0.035 U/mg, P less than 0.001); in contrast, mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase levels were not significantly reduced by adrenal loss. There was also a decrease after surgery in sarcolemmal Na-K-(17.30-12.31 mumol Pi . mg protein-1 . h-1, P less than 0.002) and Mg-ATPase activities (14.16-12.11 mumol Pi . mg protein-1 . h-1, P less than 0.05). However, ADX did not result in a significant change in heart weight per kilogram body weight or recovery of mitochondrial protein per gram heart. CS was also assayed in hearts from ADX animals following acute (90 min) and chronic (3 day) steroid replacement. Although neither acute intravenous aldosterone (10 micrograms/kg) nor dexamethasone (100 micrograms/kg) increased activity, exposure to multiple subcutaneous injections of either steroid over a 3-day period significantly elevated CS above ADX values. The coordinate changes in the levels of several myocardial enzymes associated with energy metabolism is discussed in terms of an adaptation to chronic alterations in energy demands as opposed to specific mineralocorticoid or glucocorticoid receptor-mediated processes.
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PMID:Influence of adrenalectomy and steroid replacement on heart citrate synthase levels. 614 77

A mathematical model was used to study the role of various allosteric regulatory mechanisms in the oxidation of glucose and fatty acids by muscle energy metabolism. A large number of such mechanisms were shown to be involved in simultaneous oxidation of both substrates: glycolysis is regulated by the ATP/ADP ratio at the phosphofructokinase (PFK) step; the control over pyruvate dehydrogenase is exercised by the NADHm/NADm+ and CoAsAc/CoAsH ratios as well as by the level of pyruvate; the Krebs cycle is regulated by oxaloacetate and citrate concentrations in the citrate synthase reaction and by the ATP/ADP and NADHm/NADm+ ratios in the isocitrate dehydrogenase reaction. The inhibition of PFK and pyruvate dehydrogenase by excess of CoAsAcyl as well as the inhibition of PFK by citrate are additional equivalent regulatory mechanisms. When glucose alone is oxidized, the levels of citrate, CoAsAcyl, NADHm and CoAsAc decrease drastically within the whole range of physiological ATPase loads; the only regulating factors that remain efficient are the ATP/ADP ratio in glycolysis, the level of pyruvate at the pyruvate dehydrogenase step, the ATP/ADP ratio and the levels of CoAsAc, oxaloacetate and isocitrate in the Krebs cycle.
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PMID:[Mechanisms of the regulation of muscle energy metabolism on oxidation of glucose and fatty acids. A mathematical model]. 621 68

The interaction of a novel fluorinated analogue of citrate, 3-fluoro-3-deoxycitrate (3-fluorocitrate), with the four known citrate-processing enzymes is described in this report. Three of the citrate-processing enzymes, citrate synthase, ATP citrate lyase, and citrate lyase, catalyze reversible aldol-type condensations. The fate of 3-fluorocitrate with each enzyme is uniquely related to their mechanisms of action. For citrate synthase, 3-fluorocitrate is a competitive inhibitor. 3-Fluorocitrate is a substrate for the carboxylate activation half-reaction catalyzed by ATP citrate lyase and induces a net ATPase action during conversion to 3-fluorocitryl-S-coenzyme A. Because of the unusual mechanism of citrate cleavage catalyzed by bacterial citrate lyase, 3-fluorocitrate is a mechanism-based inhibitor, acting at two points during turnover of the acetyl enzyme. The fourth citrate-processing enzyme, aconitase, does turn over 3-fluorocitrate catalytically. This enzyme, catalyzing a dehydration and rehydration of citrate, also catalyzes the elimination of HF from 3-fluorocitrate, yielding cis-aconitate and fluoride.
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PMID:3-fluoro-3-deoxycitrate: a probe for mechanistic study of citrate-utilizing enzymes. 621 36

The behavior of several enzymes was studied during rat heart development (4 days before birth to adult stage). Hexokinase has its highest activity during the fetal period; it decreases at birth and remains with low activity in the adult. The alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and alpha-glycerophosphate oxidase profiles are similar up to the 15th day of development. From there onwards, both profiles diverge, the cytoplasmic activity increasing 3-fold, while the mitochondrial activity remains unchanged. The developmental profiles of the malate dehydrogenases are almost parallel. The development of citrate synthase and succinate dehydrogenase results in a 2- to 4-fold increase in their activities. However, ATPase increases dramatically (20-fold) over the same period. With respect to the enzymes of the adenine nucleotide metabolism, adenylate kinase is fully expressed throughout all ages examined, showing no variation during development. AMP deaminase and creatine kinase increase during development, the cytoplasmic creatine kinase reaching a high level at birth whereas the increases of the mitochondrial enzymes take place gradually during development.
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PMID:Development of enzymes of energy metabolism in rat heart. 623 Jan 12

This study was designed to test the hypothesis that rats trained with marked reductions in exercise heart rate respond with adaptations indicative of increased intrinsic myocardial performance. Therefore, we measured changes in maximum work capacity (VO2max), biochemical-functional indexes of cardiac contractile capacity, and skeletal muscle oxidative capacity in normal-trained (NT) rats and in rats trained while receiving the selective cardiac beta 1-blocking drug atenolol (AT). Training consisted of treadmill running at approximately 80% VO2max (untrained) for 1-h duration, 6 days/wk, for a total of 8 wk. Exercise heart rate of the AT group was markedly reduced and averaged 140 beats/min below the NT group for any given session. Compared with sedentary controls, VO2max was increased by 11%, and red vastus lateralis muscle citrate synthase activity was increased by 28% in both AT and NT groups (P less than 0.05). There were no differences between trained and nontrained groups with regard to Ca2+-regulated myofibril adenosinetriphosphatase. In situ derived left ventricular pressure and the maximum rate of left ventricular pressure development were not augmented relative to sedentary control values when the trained hearts were either stimulated inotropically or maximally afterloaded . These findings suggest that maximum exercise capacity can be enhanced in rodents conditioned with and without limited elevation in exercise heart rate; however, this reduction of exercise heart rate acceleration does not provide a stimulus to enhance the intrinsic functional capacity of the rodent heart.
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PMID:Adaptive responses of rats trained with reductions in exercise heart rate. 623 46

We studied the effects of running-training, heavy exercise and termination of training on the heart weight, the ratio heart to body weight and the cardiac muscle activities of actomyosin ATPase, citrate synthase, succinate dehydrogenase, cytochrome c oxidase, malate dehydrogenase, adenylate kinase and beta-glucuronidase with adult male NMRI-mice. Stable hypertrophy (6-7%), estimated by the ratio heart or ventricle weight to body weight, was achieved by 28 exercises and it was dependent on the running speed (20 vs. 25 m X min-1). The withdrawal of training for 5-61 days did not permanently decrease the heart weight or the heart to body weight ratio to the level of sedentary controls. The activity of enzymes of energy metabolism or actomyosin ATPase were not affected by training, heavy exercise or terminated training. beta-glucuronidase activity slightly (20-25%) increased in the trained animals and remained at a higher level during the period of terminated training. The results suggest that the capacity for aerobic metabolism of normal mice heart is sufficient to meet the enhanced demand for ATP imposed by running-training and that the heart enlargement occurs in equal proportions with the enzymatic potential of the cardiac tissue.
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PMID:Selected enzyme activities in mouse cardiac muscle during training and terminated training. 623 64

Enhanced cardiac contractile function during the early post-birth period is a mammalian characteristic; however, concurrent metabolic measurements have not been systematically carried out. To define heart postnatal development, left ventricular pressure and rate of left ventricular pressure development (dP/dt) were measured in rats at 3, 5, 7, and 9 weeks post birth. When functional measurements were completed, the heart was excised, weighed, and tissue samples were used for chemical and/or enzymatic analyses. Left ventricular weight increased approximately 5-fold over the period studied, but was outstripped by 8-fold increases in body weight. Left ventricular DNA content increased dramatically between 3 weeks and 7 weeks post birth, then stabilized between 7 and 9 weeks post birth. Minor fluctuations in phosphofructokinase and lactate dehydrogenase enzyme activities suggest that glycolytic and anaerobic metabolisms undergo relatively small alterations as normal growth and development transpire. In contrast, enzymatic indices of aerobic metabolism (citrate synthase and malate dehydrogenase) were augmented approximately 6-fold without significant change in specific enzyme activity in purified mitochondria. Thus, mitochondria accumulated more rapidly than left ventricular tissue during heart growth. Magnesium-stimulated, myofibrillar ATPase enzyme activity approximately doubled over the intervening time between 3 weeks and 9 weeks post birth. Heart contractile function is augmented during normal growth roughly in parallel with increases in cell numbers, mitochondrial mass, and myofibrillar ATPase activity.
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PMID:Metabolic and contractile function enhancement during rat heart postnatal development. 623 38

Female Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to a ten week training program to determine the influence of intense interval running on the fiber type composition of selected hindlimb muscles; soleus (S), plantaris (P), deep vastus lateralis (DVL), and superficial vastus lateralis (SVL). The muscles of one hindlimb were used for histochemical ATPase analysis to determine the distribution of fiber types and those of the contralateral hindlimb were assayed biochemically for citrate synthase activity (an aerobic marker). Training induced a significant increase in citrate synthase activity in each muscle section. The largest absolute increase occurred in the DVL and the largest relative increase occurred in the SVL. The distribution of fiber types within the S (85% slow-twitch) and SVL (100% fast-twitch) remained unchanged with training. However, significant increases in the percentage of type I (slow-twitch) fibers in both the P (2-fold) and DVL (3-fold) were observed with concomitant decreases in the type II (fast-twitch) population. In addition, training induced significant changes in the fast-twitch subtype populations of the DVL (IIB----IIA). These data suggest exercise-induced fiber type transformations occurring both within the fast-twitch population and between fast-twitch and slow-twitch fibers in certain hindlimb muscles of the rat following a high intensity interval training program.
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PMID:Fiber type changes in rat skeletal muscle after intense interval training. 623 80

Fibre characteristics and enzyme activities were determined for the gluteus, semitendinosus, vastus lateralis and triceps brachii muscles of 55 Standardbred trotters of different ages. Four fibre types (I, IIA, IIB, IIC) were demonstrated by histochemical staining of myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase after preincubation at different pH values. Type II fibres predominated in all the muscles and the type IIA/IIB ratio was higher in horses over 5 years than in younger horses, except in the vastus in which the IIA/IIB ratio did not change with age. The vastus had the highest proportion of type IIA fibres and the semitendinosus the highest proportion of type IIB fibres. Histochemical demonstration of NADH dehydrogenase disclosed that almost 100 per cent of the type IIA and many of the type I and IIB fibres were medium-stained; the remaining type I fibres were darkly stained and the type IIB fibres lightly stained. In older horses more fibres were stained for NADH dehydrogenase. The activity of triosephosphate dehydrogenase decreased that that of 3-hydroxy-acyl-coA dehydrogenase and citrate synthase increased in all the muscles except the vastus with increasing age. The greatest increase in oxidative capacity occurred in the gluteus and triceps. Training, rather than age, was regarded as the factor inducing these changes. The results emphasise that histochemical data are only semiquantitative, and there are apparent discrepancies in the intensities of histochemical staining and the biochemical evaluation of various enzymes.
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PMID:Histochemical properties of muscle fibres types and enzyme activities in skeletal muscles of Standardbred trotters of different ages. 644 65

Lizard skeletal muscle fiber types were investigated in the iliofibularis (IF) muscle of the desert iguana (Dipsosaurus dorsalis). Three fiber types were identified based on histochemical staining for myosin ATPase (mATPase), succinic dehydrogenase (SDH), and alphaglycerophosphate dehydrogenase (alphaGPDH) activity. The pale region of the IF contains exclusively fast-twitch-glycolytic (FG) fibers, which stain dark for mATPase and alphaGPDH, light SDH. The red region of the IF contains fast-twitch-oxidative-glycolytic (FOG) fibers, which stain dark for all three enzymes, and tonic fibers, which stain light for mATPase, dark for SDH, and moderate for alphaGPDH. Enzymatic activities of myofibrillar ATPase, citrate synthase, and alphaGPDH confirm these histochemical interpretations. Lizard FG and FOG fibers possess twitch contraction times and resistance to fatigue comparable to analogous fibers in mammals, but are one-half as oxidative and several times as glycolytic as analogous fibers in rats. Lizard tonic fibers demonstrate the acetylcholine sensitivity common to other vertebrate tonic fibers.
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PMID:Histochemical, enzymatic, and contractile properties of skeletal muscle fibers in the lizard Dipsosaurus dorsalis. 645 26


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