Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Microwave irradiation of 6 kw at 2450 MHz for 300 msec was sufficient to completely inactivate mouse brain cholinesterase and choline acetyltransferase. After this method of sacrifice, the acetylcholine contents of mouse brain regions, given in nanomoles per gram, were found to be: striatum, 81; medulla-pons, 44; diencephalon-midbrain, 34; hippocampus, 31; cerebral cortex, 26; and cerebellum, 17. Sodium pentobarbital caused a dose-dependent increase in whole brain acetylcholine. A maximal increase of 81% in whole brain was seen at 15 minutes with 80 mg/kg of sodium pentobarbital. The increase in acetylcholine after sodium pentobarbital treatment was not caused by anoxia from respiratory depression or by hypothermia. All brain regions except the cerebellum exhibited an increase in acetylcholine after pentobarbital treatment. Fifteen minutes after treatment, cerebellar acetylcholine was significantly decreased. However, at the time when half of the animals had regained the righting reflex, the unconscious mice showed an increase in cerebellar acetylcholine which was statistically significant as compared to control. The relative accumulation rate of acetylcholine calculated for cerebral cortex and hippocampus was higher than that for striatum although the absolute rate of accumulation of ACh was higher in the striatum. Thus, after sodium pentobarbital treatment, the cerebral cortex and hippocampus exhibit a greater cholinergic response than the striatum.
...
PMID:Use of 300-msec microwave irradiation for enzyme inactivation: a study of effects of sodium pentobarbital on acetylcholine concentration in mouse brain regions. 0 94

Experiments were conducted on rats; in depression of blood cholinesterase activity by 68.6 percent phthalafos proved to decrease the myocardial nicotinamide coenzymes content on account of reduction in the amount of the oxidized forms. In the liver phthalafos diminished the content of oxidized and reduced forms of nicotinamide coenzymes, decreased the level of adenylic nucleotides chiefly at the expense of ATP. Diproxim prevented the changes caused by phthalafos in blood cholinesterase reactivation to 47.5 percent. It is supposed that the capacity of diproxim to normalize the oxidative processes in the cell by acting upon the nicotinamide coenzymes and adenylic nucleotides underlies its antidote action.
...
PMID:[Effect of dipyroxime on the concentration of nicotinamide coenzymes and adenylate nucleotides in the myocardium and liver of rats poisoned with phthalophos]. 2 70

The effect of changing extracellular pH (pHe) on the spontaneous activity of neurons in brain slices taken from the ventral layer of the rat medulla oblongata was compared to the response of neurons in dorsal slices. In the ventral medulla, more than 50% of the neurons were excited by H+. These neurons were found just lateral to the pyramidal tract between the root of the hypoglossal nerve and the trapezoid body. In the dorsal medulla, low pHe caused an inhibition of activity in most neurons, although a few were excited. The fact that H+ elicted excitation predominantly in the ventral medullary substrate to respond to pHe changes. Depression of synaptic transmission within the neuronal network in the slice by reducing the [Ca2+]e and increasing the [Mg2+]e altered the nature of responses of neurons to H+: In the ventral medulla, the majority of neurons were inhibited by H+, whereas in the dorsal medulla more than 50% of neurons were excited. Therefore, "specificity" of the ventral medullary neurons seemed to be dependent upon intact synaptic connections. A possible role of acetylcholine-acetylcholinesterase system in the response of ventral medullary neurons to H+ is discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of H+ on spontaneous neuronal activity in the surface layer of the rat medulla oblongata in vitro. 2 40

1. In the posterior half of the pulvinar of cats anaesthetized with halothane and nitrous oxide, the majority of neurons were fired by ACh released with small electrophoretic currents. In the anterior part of that nucleus, ACh had more variable effects: excitation, depression or none. 2. In comparison with L-glutamate, DL-homocysteic acid and DL-aspartic acid, ACh appeared to be the most potent excitant. 3. ACh-induced discharges were easily and reversibly blocked by low doses of atropine. In most cases, ACh effects could not be blocked selectively by mecamylamine or dihydro-beta-erythroidine. 4. Nicotine failed to mimic ACh, whereas carbachol was a potent excitant and was readily blocked by low doses of atropine. 5. The histochemical reaction to acetylcholinesterase was moderate in the pulvinar. 6. These observations support the view that pulvinar cells differ from other thalamic cells.
...
PMID:Micro-electrophoretic studies in the cat pulvinar region: effect of acetylcholine. 2 59

Rats were injected i.p. with the organophosphate insecticide ABATE and tested over the next 16 days. Animals given 1000 mg/kg showed impaired performance of a previously conditioned avoidance response 6 days after injection but not 2, 8, 10, or 16 days after injection. No behavioral changes were observed in animals given 316 or 562 mg/kg. A subsequent experiment showed that the avoidance impairment in animals given 1000 mg/kg was accompanied by significant erythrocyte, plasma, and brain cholinesterase activity inhibition and decreased spontaneous motor activity. If administration of the same ABATE dose was distributed over 6 days (167 mg/kg/day), cholinesterase and motor activity depression was still evident but conditioned avoidance performance was unimpaired. The results were interpreted as differential behavioral adaption to repeated injections of ABATE.
...
PMID:Effects of single and repeated exposures to abate on rat behavior and cholinesterase activity. 9 20

Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica) were dusted with 5% carbaryl to determine if this topical treatment would alter plasma and brain cholinesterase activities. Within 6 hours after dusting, plasma cholinesterase activity was depressed compared with controls, the depression averaging 20% for females and 27% for males. By 24 hours the cholinesterase activity of females had returned to normal, but the cholinesterase activity of males remained depressed. Brain cholinesterase activity was not affected by the treatment, and there were no overt toxic signs.
...
PMID:Cholinesterase activity in Japanese quail dusted with carbaryl. 11 71

The understanding of the effects of cannabinoids in human subjects has been obscured by a lack of knowledge about how the various active principles from marijuana act at the cellular level in the brain. For this reason the present study was undertaken to determine the effects of cannabinoids on the enzymes associated with the synaptic membranes. Electron micrographic analysis was performed to determine the purity of synaptic membrane preparations from rat brain, and subsequently such preparations were subjected to additions of ethanol, Tween-80, 80% glycerol, and either delta-tetrahydrocannabinol, 11-hydroxy-delta-tetrahydrocannabinol, or cannabinol. Both sodium and potassium activated ATPase (Na, K-ATPase), and Mg-ATPase were measured as the micrometer orthophosphate (P) released per minute per microgram membrane protein and these specific activities of the enzymes expressed as absolute values and as the percentage depression brought about by the cannabinoids. The ATPase spcific activities are taken from the rate curve over a 30-min incubation time. Additionally, synaptic membrane acetylcholineesterase specific activity was measured by continuous rate enzyme assay. While as low as 10 M delta-tetrahydrocannabinol showed appreciable decrements in both the membrane-bound ATPases, the other cannabinoids did not show such a great depression in enzyme activity. The specific activity of acetylcholinesterase, which is weakly bound to the membrane, showed only slight or no changes in activity with the various cannabinoids. It was additionally shown that the cannabinoids, delta-tetrahydrocannabinol in particular, bound to the synaptic membranes almost irreversibly in the in vitro system, and that the vehicle for dissolving the cannabinoids, while used as background control values when calculating the percentage decrements in enzyme specific activity, did vary the effects on the ATPase enzymes in particular. These data are discussed in relation to psychotomimetic activity of the cannabinoids.
...
PMID:Effects of cannabinoids on synaptic membrane enzymes. I. In vitro studies on synaptic membranes isolated from rat brain. 14 40

1. Local conductance changes produced by various bath-applied agonists at frog end-plate membrane were measured using focal recording of extracellular potential in voltage-clamped muscle fibres. The potential difference between a focal micropipette placed on the nerve terminal and another micro-pipette placed on or near inactive membrane was taken as proportional to the agonist-induced current through a small patch of an end-plate membrane. 2. The current-voltage (I--V) relation of active membrane was obtained directly by increasing the membrane potential in a ramp fashion. The change in membrane potential was slow enough for post-synaptic gating processes to reach equilibrium during the ramp. 3. During application of sufficiently low concentrations of full agonists (carbachol, (ACh) and partial agonists (choline and decamethonium) the I--V relation of end-plate membrane showed strong curvature in the range of -60 to -130 mV. The slope of I--V relations increased exponentially with membrane hyperpolarization, an e-fold change in conductance occurring for about 50 mV potential shift. 4. The curvature of the I--V relation of end-plate-membrane activated by the partial agonists choline and decamethonium became less as the agonist concentration was increased, and with high concentrations (choline 15 mM; decamethonium 250 micrometer) the I--V relation became almost straight. 5. When end-plate currents produced by high concentrations of partial agonists were matched by application of equi-active concentrations of carbachol, the carbachol-activated membrane still showed as much curvature in its I--V relation as when low concentrations of carbachol were used. 6. Choline and decamethonium concentrations for which the I--V relation was straight produced much greater depression of miniature end-plate currents than did carbachol concentrations which produced the same membrane current at the holding potential. 7. I--V relations for full agonists at high concentrations were obtained after alpha-bungarotoxin pre-treatment. During application of carbachol (400--500 micrometer) and ACh (30--40 micrometer; after complete inhibition of acetylcholinesterase activity) the I--V relation of end-plate membrane is much less curved than during application of low concentrations. 8. It is concluded that either the voltage sensitivity of agonist-induced end-plate conductance reflects voltage sensitivity of agonist binding, or the partial agonists used can exert a voltage-dependent 'local anaesthetic' action in addition to their agonist activity.
...
PMID:A comparison of current-voltage relations for full and partial agonists. 30 43

Plasma and red blood cell cholinesterase levels of professional agricultural workers engaged in packing sweet corn and thinning peaches were monitored. Workers with extensive contact with mechanically harvested sweet corn (the corn had been treated one or two days before harvest with a combination of ethyl and methyl parathion) exhibited significant depression of cholinesterase. Gloves, worn by 40% of the workers, provided some protection from absorption of pesticide residues. No significant cholinesterase depression was found in workers thinning peaches which had been previously treated with parathion.
...
PMID:Exposure of field workers to organophosphorus insecticides: sweet corn and peaches. 53 31

Serum cholinesterase levels were determined in 180 patients with carcinoma and in 146 normal subjects. Serum cholinesterase activity was significantly lower in patients suffering from cancer than in normal controls, though still within the normal range. The degree of depression of serum cholinesterase activity was influenced by the extent to which the malignancy had spread and by the site of the primary lesion.
...
PMID:Serum cholinesterase levels in patients with cancer. 57 Dec 50


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>