Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.6.4.1 (
myosin ATPase
)
1,140
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of verapamil on cardiac myofibrillar
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activity,
myosin ATPase
, and myosin isoenzyme profile as well as sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+ uptake and
ATPase
activities were examined in Sprague-Dawley rats made diabetic with a single injection of streptozotocin (65 mg/kg). Myofibrillar
ATPase
activity and myosin Ca2+
ATPase
activity as well as Ca2+ uptake and Ca2+-stimulated
ATPase
activities of the sarcoplasmic reticulum were significantly decreased in diabetic hearts in comparison to the control values. The myosin isoenzyme component V3 was prominent in diabetic hearts, whereas V1 isoenzyme was the major myosin component in control hearts. Chronic treatment of diabetic rats with verapamil (8 mg/kg daily for 4-8 wk) resulted in an improvement of the altered myofibrillar
ATPase
activity,
myosin ATPase
, myosin isoenzyme distribution, and sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+-pump activities in ventricular tissue. The ability of verapamil to normalize the observed defects in the subcellular organelles in diabetic cardiomyopathy may be related to its effects in controlling the entry of Ca2+ into the cardiac cell.
...
PMID:Influence of verapamil on some subcellular defects in diabetic cardiomyopathy. 252 96
Male spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and Wistar-Kyoto normotensive rats (WKY) were subjected to swimming training 6 times/wk, commencing at 4 wk of age, to determine whether this type of endurance exercise might alter contractile proteins and cardiac function in young adult SHR. The total duration of exercise was 190 h. Myofibrillar
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activity was assayed at various free [Ca2+] ranging from 10(-7) to 10(-5) M. Ca2+-stimulated
ATPase
activity of actomyosin and purified myosin was determined at various Ca2+ concentrations both in the low and high ionic strength buffers. Actin-activated
myosin ATPase
activity of purified myosin was assayed at several concentrations of actin purified from rabbit skeletal muscle. Under all these conditions the contractile protein
ATPase
activity was comparable between trained and untrained WKY and SHR. Analysis of myosin isoenzymes on pyrophosphate gels showed a single band corresponding to V1 isoenzyme, and there were no differences between swimming-trained and nontrained WKY and SHR. Ventricular performance was assessed by measuring cardiac output and stroke volume after rapid intravenous volume overloading. Both cardiac index and stroke index were comparable in nontrained WKY and SHR but were significantly increased in the trained groups compared with their respective nontrained controls. These results suggest that
myosin ATPase
activity and distribution of myosin isoenzymes are not altered in the moderately hypertrophied left ventricle whether the hypertrophy is due to genetic hypertension (SHR) or to exercise training (trained WKY). Moreover, the data indicate that SHR, despite the persistence of a pressure overload, undergo similar increases in left ventricular mass and peak cardiac index after training, as do normotensive WKY.
...
PMID:Effect of swimming training on cardiac function and myosin ATPase activity in SHR. 293 19
The effects of 28 days of hindlimb suspension (HS) and HS plus 10 daily forceful lengthening contractions on rat soleus muscle fibers were studied. Compared with age-matched controls (CON), soleus wet weights of suspended rats were significantly decreased (approximately 49%). In HS rats, the light
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) fibers (staining lightly for
myosin ATPase
, pH = 8.8) atrophied more than the dark
ATPase
fibers (staining darkly for
myosin ATPase
, pH = 8.8). Single-fiber alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (GPD) and succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activities and the proportion of dark
ATPase
fibers were higher in HS than CON rats. Daily forceful lengthening contractions did not prevent the suspension-induced changes. These results considered in conjunction with a collaborative study on the mechanical properties of HS rats (Roy et al., accompanying paper) suggest a shift in the contractile potential of the muscle following HS without a deficit in SDH, a metabolic property commonly associated with resistance to fatigue. The results support the view that soleus muscle fibers can change from a slow-twitch oxidative to a fast-twitch oxidative-glycolytic profile, but rarely to a fast-twitch glycolytic one, and that SDH and GPD activity per volume of tissue can be maintained or increased even when there are severe losses of contractile proteins.
...
PMID:Size and metabolic properties of single muscle fibers in rat soleus after hindlimb suspension. 295 34
Hindlimb suspension (HS) results in whole muscle atrophic and metabolic changes that vary in magnitude in different hindlimb muscles. The present study was designed to investigate these effects in single fibers. Fiber type and size and the activities of two metabolic marker enzymes were determined in a deep (close to the bone) and a superficial (away from the bone) region of the medial gastrocnemius (MG) and the tibialis anterior (TA) of control (CON) and 28-day HS adult female rats. Fibers were classified as dark or light
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) based on their qualitative staining reaction for
myosin ATPase
following alkaline preincubation. Fiber area and succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) and alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (GPD) activities were determined in tissue sections by use of an image analysis system. After 28 days of HS, the mean body weights of the CON and HS were similar. MG atrophied 28%, whereas TA weight was maintained in the HS. Both dark and light
ATPase
fibers in the deep region of the MG had smaller cross-sectional areas following HS, with the atrophic response being approximately twice as great in the light
ATPase
fibers. No significant changes in fiber type composition in either muscle or in fiber sizes in the superficial region of the MG or in either region of the TA were observed. Mean SDH activities of both fiber types were significantly lower in the MG and TA following HS. In contrast, mean GPD activities were either increased or maintained in light and dark
ATPase
fibers of both muscles in HS. Changes in SDH and GPD activity could not be directly linked to changes in fiber cross-sectional area. In summary, these data suggest an independence of the mechanisms determining muscle fiber size and metabolic adaptations associated with HS.
...
PMID:Size and metabolic properties of fibers in rat fast-twitch muscles after hindlimb suspension. 295 35
Previous studies in hearts of female rats have demonstrated that ventricular hypertrophy due to systolic overload, when combined with hypertrophy induced by a chronic swimming program, results in increased cardiac performance and enhanced contractile protein activity compared with the effects of hypertension alone. To explore how a chronic running program affects the function of hypertensive hearts, renal hypertension was created in female rats, and the animals were subjected to a program of chronic treadmill running. Running alone caused enhanced cardiac function, an increase in myosin
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activity, and an increase in the percent of the V1 myosin isoenzyme. Hypertension alone caused cardiac hypertrophy with a depression in
myosin ATPase
activity and a decrease in the percent of the V1 isoenzyme. Running improved cardiac function in hearts of normotensive rats but had no effect in hearts of hypertensive rats. Despite the diminished
myosin ATPase
activity in hearts of hypertensive runners and the decrease in percent of the V1 isoenzyme, cardiac function was well maintained. The results demonstrate that a chronic running program in hypertensive rats, in contrast to a chronic swimming program, had virtually no effect on cardiac performance or contractile proteins. The dissociation between myocardial performance and the contractile proteins implicates other biochemical mechanisms in the adaptations observed.
...
PMID:Combined effects of hypertension and chronic running program on rat heart. 295 51
The purpose of this study was to ascertain the time course of change during both compensatory growth (hypertrophy) and subsequent growth regression on myosin isoform expression in rodent fast-twitch plantaris muscle in response to functional overload (induced by removal of synergists). Peak hypertrophy of the plantaris muscle (92%) occurred after 9 wk of overload. After 7 wk of overload regression (induced by a model of hindlimb unweighting), muscle weight returned to within 30% of control values. Myofibril protein content (mg/g muscle) remained relatively constant throughout the overload period but became significantly depressed relative to control values after 7 wk of regression. However, when expressed on a per muscle basis (mg/muscle) no differences existed at this time point (t = 7 wk regression). The distribution of native myosin isoforms in the myofibril protein pool of the overloaded plantaris muscle reflected a progressive increase (23% at t = 9 wk; P less than 0.001) in the relative proportion of slow myosin (Sm). This change was also accompanied by increases in intermediate myosin (Im) as well as the repression of the fast myosin one (Fm1) isoform (P less than 0.001). These shifts in Sm and Fm1 isoform expression were gradually reversed during the regression period, whereas Im remained elevated relative to control values. These adaptive changes in myosin isoform expression during both hypertrophy and regression were further supported by concomitant shifts in both myosin
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activity (decreased during overload) and slow myosin light chain (SLC) expression. However, during regression the changes in myosin isoform expression and
myosin ATPase
were not as synchronous as they were during overload. Estimation of the mixed myosin heavy chain (MHC) half-life (t 1/2), using a linear model that assumes zero-order synthesis and first-order degradation kinetics, revealed t 1/2 values of approximately 19 and 10 days for the overload and regression periods, respectively. Collectively these data suggest that 1) skeletal muscle myosin isoforms and corresponding
ATPase
activity are in a dynamic state of change, although not completely synchronous, in response to altered muscle stress, and 2) the kinetics of change in the mixed MHC protein pool are slower during compensatory growth compared with regression of growth.
...
PMID:Time course adaptations in rat skeletal muscle isomyosins during compensatory growth and regression. 296 24
We have previously shown that swim conditioning corrects the depressed mechanical function and myosin
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activities associated with renovascular hypertension (HTN) in the rat. The present study was designed to assess the effects of swim conditioning on another form of systolic overload, subdiaphragmatic suprarenal aortic stenosis. Cardiac mechanics in an isolated working heart apparatus and myosin enzymology were studied in four groups of rats: controls (C), animals with chronic systolic overload secondary to aortic constriction (St), swim-conditioning animals (Sw), and animals exposed to a combined load (St-Sw). Heart weight was increased by 23% in St, 27% in Sw, and 36% in St-Sw. In contrast to HTN, cardiac pump and muscle function were not depressed in St. Sw was associated with improved cardiac output, stroke work, and velocity of circumferential fiber shortening. St-Sw showed improved mechanical cardiac performance relative to both C and St. The percent of ventricular myosin of the V1 type and Ca2+-activated
myosin ATPase
activity relative to C was unchanged in Sw but was depressed in St and St-Sw. These data demonstrate that the salutory mechanical effects of Sw can be superimposed on the systolic overload of St. However, the dissociation between mechanics and myosin enzymology suggests that factors in excitation-contraction coupling other than myosin isoenzyme shifts are responsible for this finding.
...
PMID:Effects of systolic overload and swim training on cardiac mechanics and biochemistry in rats. 296 13
We measured force, actin-activated myosin
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activity, and myosin light-chain (MLC) phosphorylation levels in Triton X-100 detergent-skinned media of swine carotid arteries. Pseudo-
ATPase
activity composed of MLC kinase and phosphatase activities contributed maximally 12% to steady-state tissue
ATPase
activity. An increase in the Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]) induced an increase in force, MLC phosphorylation, and actin-activated
myosin ATPase
activity; this protocol was defined as the force development phase of contraction. Force maintenance was defined as the state induced by decreasing the [Ca2+] after a maximal contraction. Lowering the [Ca2+] decreased MLC phosphorylation to levels similar to those measured during force development at each [Ca2+]. In contrast, force remained at elevated levels while actin-activated
myosin ATPase
activity fell to significantly lower levels than those measured during the development phase for each [Ca2+]. We suggest that the significantly lower actin-activated
myosin ATPase
activity observed during a state of elevated force, compared with the development phase of a contraction, is evidence of slowly cycling latch bridges.
...
PMID:Regulation of Ca(2+)-dependent ATPase activity in detergent-skinned vascular smooth muscle. 809 68
Polylysine (10-13 kDa) stimulates contraction in smooth muscle skinned fibers and activates actomyosin
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activity in the absence of myosin light chain phosphorylation [P. T. Szymanski and R. J. Paul. Adv. Exp. Med. 304: 363-368, 1991; P. T. Szymanski, J. D. Strauss, G. Doerman, J. DiSalvo, and R. J. Paul. Am J. Physiol. 262 (Cell Physiol. 31): C1445-C1455, 1992]. To provide further information on the mechanism of polylysine action on contractility in smooth muscle, we investigated its effect on
ATPase
activity and conformation of purified gizzard myosin. We report here that polylysine directly stimulates
myosin ATPase
activity in a concentration-dependent manner. This stimulation could be completely abolished with the addition of heparin, a negatively charged heteropolysaccharide. Polylysine (10 microM) increases
myosin ATPase
activity to a level similar to that of myosin phosphorylation. Addition of 10 microM polylysine to phosphorylated myosin [with myosin light chain kinase and adenosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (ATP gamma S), to approximately 1.9 mol P/mol myosin], however, did not further stimulate
ATPase
activity. At 0.2 M KCl (the salt concentration at which myosin exists primary in the 10S form), the addition of polylysine increases
myosin ATPase
activity to a level comparable to that of untreated myosin in 0.3 M KCl. These changes parallel the increase in solution viscosity elicited by polylysine. These results suggest that polylysine induces a transition in myosin conformation from the 10S to the 6S form, and this was confirmed by electron microscopy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Polylysine activates smooth muscle myosin ATPase activity via induction of a 10S to 6S transition. 836 68
In an attempt to elucidate the effects of two major risk factors of heart failure in humans, high blood pressure and coronary artery disease, renal hypertension and coronary artery constriction were induced singularly and in combination in rats, and the functional, structural, and biochemical alterations of the myocardium were examined 12-13 wk later. Renal hypertension (RH), coronary narrowing (CN), and their association (NH) resulted in left ventricular failure demonstrated by a significant increase in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, a decrease in +dP/dt and -dP/dt, and a reduction in stroke volume and cardiac output. Measurements of ventricular loading documented that RH was characterized by elevations in systolic and diastolic wall stress of 42 and 160%, respectively. Corresponding changes with NH were 80 and 315%. CN was accompanied by an augmentation of diastolic wall stress only (280%). The abnormalities in mural stress were coupled with reductions in systolic and diastolic wall thickness-to-chamber radius ratios of 39 and 29% after CN. These anatomic parameters were preserved with RH, whereas the systolic wall thickness-to-chamber radius ratio was reduced 31% with NH. Structurally, multiple foci of replacement fibrosis were found with each intervention. The sites of tissue injury and their volume percent in the myocardium were comparable with CN and RH but were significantly more numerous and occupied a larger fraction of the ventricular wall in the presence of NH. Biochemically, the calcium dose-response curve of myofibrillar Mg2+
adenosinetriphosphatase
(
ATPase
) activity did not vary with CN, RH, and NH. In contrast, a marked decrease in Ca2+
myosin ATPase
activity was found in NH rats in association with a shift in myosin isoenzymes from V1 to V3. In conclusion, multiple physiological, morphological, and biochemical factors may participate in the generation of the abnormalities in ventricular loading with hypertension and/or coronary artery stenosis.
...
PMID:Effects of hypertension and coronary constriction on cardiac function, morphology, and contractile proteins in rats. 836 72
<< Previous
1
2