Gene/Protein
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Symptom
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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten patients without metabolic disease undergoing elective cholecystectomy were studied before surgery and on days 3, 10, 20 and 30 after operation. Percutaneous muscle biopsies were taken and protein synthesis was determined from the total concentration and size distribution of ribosomes. The subjective feeling of fatigue was estimated using a visual analogue scale. The
nitrogen
balance was calculated at 20 days following surgery. The mean (s.e.m.) total concentration of ribosomes per milligram of DNA decreased by 27.5(6.6) per cent (P less than 0.01), 44.5(6.5) per cent (P less than 0.001), 48.3(8.9) per cent (P less than 0.001) and 45.0(8.2) per cent (P less than 0.01) on days 3, 10, 20 and 30, respectively. By 30 days after surgery no sign of restoration of normality was seen. The relative proportion of polyribosomes had decreased by 20.4(6.4) per cent (P less than 0.05) on the third postoperative day and by 20.4(3.9) per cent (P less than 0.01) on the tenth postoperative day and was restored to the preoperative level by day 20. The subjective fatigue score increased after operation and five of nine patients had not regained their preoperative scores 30 days after surgery. The daily
nitrogen
balance was negative for 5 days. The cumulated
nitrogen
losses were not restored until after 18 days following surgery. Elective abdominal surgery caused a sustained
depression
of protein synthesis for over 30 days, a longer period than previously presumed. These results show that long-term follow-up is required when the effect of different postoperative nutritional regimens are to be evaluated.
...
PMID:Elective abdominal surgery depresses muscle protein synthesis and increases subjective fatigue: effects lasting more than 30 days. 238 55
When Bacillus brevis ATCC 8185 was subjected to nutritional shiftdown from a rich medium to one completely devoid of a
nitrogen
source, sporulation could be stimulated by the addition of linear gramicidin. Gramicidin-induced sporulation occurred after a considerably longer lag period than the earlier described tyrocidine-induced process (Ristow and Paulus 1982) but involved similar associated biochemical changes, such as extracellular protease production, rapid incorporation of radioactive precursors into RNA, and dipicolinate synthesis. The increased incorporation of [3H]leucine into tyrocidine was a characteristic element in gramicidin-induced sporulation, not being observed when spore formation was accelerated by limited
nitrogen
supplementation.
Nitrogen
supplementation (0.02-0.01% nutrient broth) caused a slow and gradual increase in dipicolinate production, in contrast to the sudden, rapid rise of dipicolinate synthesis provoked by the addition of gramicidin or tyrocidine. The induction of sporulation by gramicidin occurred at very low peptide concentrations (0.03 microM), which also brought about an acute depletion of intracellular ATP. In sporulation accelerated by nutrient broth, no
depression
of ATP level was observed and nonionophoric analogues of gramicidin were unable to substitute for gramicidin in inducing sporulation.
...
PMID:Effect of linear gramicidin on sporulation and intracellular ATP pools of Bacillus brevis. 242 Mar 1
The harmful effect of iron excess was studied in an experiment using fifteen adult sheep. The animals were divided into three groups of 5 each. The sheep of the group I were kept as controls, those of the group II and III were supplemented with iron in doses of 80 and 40 mg/kg body weight (BW)/24 h respectively. The animals of group II died after a period of 3-7 weeks showing anorexia, loss of weight, diarrhoea,
depression
and symptoms of circulatory and respiratory failure. From the animals of group III one died after 13 weeks, with symptoms of pulmonary oedema, while the other 4 survived for 22 weeks, together with the animals of the control group. The iron-supplemented animals presented increased values of Serum Iron (SI), Total Iron Binding Capacity (TIBC), percent Transferring Saturation (% SAT), Alanino aminotransferase (ALT), serum Alkalin Phosphatase (SAP), Serum Urea
Nitrogen
(SUN) Creatinine, Phosphorus and decreased values of serum Copper concentration. These parameters were greater in group II. The iron concentration in the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys was also much higher than in the controls. The histological examination revealed degeneration of the liver, spleen, myocardium and kidneys in both groups, while cells overloaded with hemosiderin were seen in the third group only. In conclusion, it was shown that chronic intoxication may occur in sheep overdosed with iron. The toxic dose of iron ranged between 40 and 80 (mg/Kg body weight) per day and was close to 40 mg, when iron was administered in the soluble from FeCl3.6H2O.
...
PMID:Iron toxicity in sheep. 253 32
The oral contraceptive formulations in use today consist of three types. One type has a fixed dose of a combination of a synthetic estrogen and a synthetic progestin, the second has varying doses of each of these steroids, and the third consists of a fixed dose of a progestin without an estrogen. The estrogen in the older formulations contained mestranol, while all those developed since 1974 contain ethinyl estradiol. The estrogen is combined with varying dosages of nine different progestins to produce a wide variety of formulations. The major metabolic effects of the estrogen are an increase in hepatic production of globulins, some of which cause hypercoagulability, and an increase in blood pressure in certain users. By varying HDL-cholesterol, the estrogen has a beneficial effect upon lipids. Other estrogenic effects include fluid retention,
depression
, and breast tenderness. Most of the progestins have androgenic effects, being derived from 19-nortestosterone. These include peripheral insulin resistance, a lowering of HDL-cholesterol,
nitrogen
retention, and nervousness. Both the estrogen and progestins metabolic effects are dose-related and with the newer, low-dose formulations, the adverse metabolic and clinical effects are minimal. Thus the results of the epidemiologic studies performed 10 to 15 years ago, when women were using high-dose formulations, are not relevant to the oral contraceptive formulations in use today. Recent epidemiologic studies show that healthy, nonsmoking women using oral contraceptives do not have an increased risk of developing cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:The pharmacologic and metabolic effects of oral contraceptives. 257 52
The effects of a trickle challenge with the equivalent of 10,000 infective Ostertagia ostertagi larvae per day on appetite, digestibility, rate of passage of digesta and liveweight gain were investigated in 12 calves assigned to infected, pair-fed control and ad libitum-fed control groups. Digestibility of cellulose,
nitrogen
, organic matter and dry matter was determined using insoluble acid detergent fibre as a marker on two occasions during the study: (i) Between days 31 and 38, when abomasal dysfunction was greatest; and (ii) between days 52 and 58, beginning approximately one week after anthelmintic treatment (day 46). Rate of passage of digesta was measured using chromium mordanted hay, fed to each calf after each digestibility study period. Voluntary feed intake of the infected group was significantly reduced from day 37 with the greatest
depression
(77 per cent) occurring just before anthelmintic treatment. The drop in appetite was responsible for nearly 73 per cent of the difference in liveweight gain between the infected and ad libitum fed control groups. The apparent digestibility coefficient of
nitrogen
was significantly depressed (22 per cent) in the infected group though was restored to control levels by anthelmintic treatment. The rate of passage of digesta was significantly reduced in both pair-fed control (50 per cent) and infected (74 per cent) groups. Anthelmintic treatment increased the latter though only to pair-fed control group levels. It is suggested that the marked hypergastrinaemia seen in the infected calves may have been in part responsible for the decreased rate of passage of digesta and in turn for the drop in appetite.
...
PMID:Ostertagia ostertagi infection in the calf: effects of a trickle challenge on appetite, digestibility, rate of passage of digesta and liveweight gain. 259 86
Metabolic effects of a trickle challenge with the equivalent of 10,000 infective Ostertagia ostertagi larvae per day were investigated in 12 calves allocated to infected, pair-fed control or ad libitum-fed control groups. Changes in hormone levels reflecting abomasal, pituitary and pancreatic function were monitored using radioimmunoassay techniques previously validated for use in cattle. A range of metabolic profile parameters and blood metabolites was also measured. Feed intake of the infected calves began to decline as blood gastrin and pepsinogen levels reached a peak. The
depression
in appetite recorded in this group was responsible for significant increases in plasma urea and non-esterified fatty acid levels and associated with an increase in growth hormone/insulin ratio. No significant difference in glucagon levels was recorded between groups. A decline in blood albumin values was also shown in the infected group and associated with a drop in
nitrogen
digestibility. A significant
depression
in circulating calcium levels was related to either the hypoalbuminaemia or impaired mineral absorption in the intestine. A decrease in plasma cholesterol values in the infected group was associated with changes in digestive function.
...
PMID:Ostertagia ostertagi infection in the calf: effects of a trickle challenge on the hormonal control of digestive and metabolic function. 259 87
6-Bis-(2-chloroethyl)amino-6-deoxy-D-galactopyranose hydrochloride has been synthesized, characterized, and evaluated for antitumor activity and bone marrow toxicity in mice. The 1D- and 2D-NMR studies show the compound to exist as a beta-anomer chair conformation (23%), alpha-anomer chair conformation (22%), and several equilibrating boat conformations or furanose forms (55%). A single ip LD10 dose of 15.0 mg/kg produced antitumor activity against the murine P388 leukemia superior to that achieved with an equitoxic dose of
nitrogen
mustard. In normal mice, this 15.0-mg/kg dose produced minimal
depression
of peripheral white blood cells and no significant decrease in absolute neutrophil counts. A reduction in toxicity was also demonstrated for human bone marrow CFU-GM, as compared with
nitrogen
mustard and L-PAM. This and other sugar-containing mustard compounds may represent a class of antineoplastic alkylating agents with reduced bone marrow toxicity.
...
PMID:6-bis-(2-chloroethyl)amino-6-deoxy-D-galactopyranose hydrochloride: synthesis, chemical characterization, murine P388 antitumor activity, and bone marrow toxicity. 262 74
Strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae specifically make an abundant protein (Rhi) in free-living culture but not in bacteroids. Genes needed for Rhi synthesis are on a Sym plasmid and here we show that one of these genes, rhiA, is the structural gene that specifies this polypeptide. Transcription of rhiA requires a regulatory gene, rhiR, located close to rhiA and to nod genes involved in nodulation. Mutations in rhiA or rhiR do not appear to affect symbiotic
nitrogen
fixation. Transcription of rhiA is repressed in cells grown in the presence of the flavanone hesperetin or the flavone apigenin, both of which are potent inducers of transcription of nod genes. This was deduced from the use of rhiA-lacZ fusions; however, when the Rhi polypeptide was detected in SDS gels, there was no apparent difference in the intensity of its staining in extracts obtained from cells grown with or without these flavanoid nod gene inducer molecules. However, a mutation in a nodulation gene, nolR, also closely linked to the nod and rhi genes, caused a severe
depression
in the amount of Rhi (as seen on gels) that was made in cells grown in the presence of inducer flavanoids.
...
PMID:Transcription of rhiA, a gene on a Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae Sym plasmid, requires rhiR and is repressed by flavanoids that induce nod genes. 271 20
The use of fluorescent calcium indicator, Indo-1, was evaluated for measuring changes in intracellular free calcium during electrical stimulation and anoxia in hippocampal slices. Fluorescence was measured from slices illuminated with brief (3 ns) light pulses (337 nm wavelength) from a
nitrogen
laser. This method of illumination produced more intense fluorescence than illumination with light from filtered xenon or mercury arc lamps, and prevented loss of electrical excitability encountered following continuous UV illumination. Background fluorescence in control slices (without Indo-1) was considerable, often approaching 50% of that obtainable after dye loading. A more serious concern, however, was that a large fraction (approximately 10%) of the background fluorescence was labile to both electrical stimulation and anoxia. This fluorescence results from changes in the reduction/oxidation (redox) state of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), which fluoresces in its reduced (NADH) but not oxidized (NAD+) form. Qualitative changes in free calcium could be measured by first determining the ratio of change in NADH fluorescence at 405 and 485 nm (the wavelengths of light used to measure calcium with Indo-1) prior to dye loading. Any arbitrary baseline could be selected as long as the ratio for the baseline at 405 and 485 nm was identical to that determined for labile NADH. By application of this compensation procedure, it was determined that intracellular calcium rose abruptly during the onset of anoxia and again during the spreading
depression
-like loss of ion homeostasis which inevitably occurred during anoxia in these slices.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Indo-1 measurements of intracellular free calcium in the hippocampal slice: complications of labile NADH fluorescence. 272 10
Maleic acid (MA), a known nephrotoxicant in experimental animals, and its chlorinated derivative dichloromaleic acid (DCMA) are present in urban drinking water supplies as by-products of the chlorination process. This study was designed to characterize the effects of simultaneous exposure of subtoxic doses of DCMA and MA on renal function in both sexes of the Sprague-Dawley rat. Urine was collected at 24-h intervals from rats housed individually in stainless steel metabolism cages. Subcutaneous administration of MA at a dose of 150 mg/kg had no effect on several parameters of renal function in either sex at 24 h and only modest effects at 48 h. Renal slice studies showed that treatment of both male and female rats with DCMA (300 mg/kg) reduced p-aminohippurate (PAH) accumulation at 24 h with no effect on the uptake of tetraethylammonium ion (TEA). The combination of MA + DCMA caused a
depression
of TEA accumulation by slices from the female. Also, changes in urinary glucose excretion and blood urea
nitrogen
, although additive in the male following coexposure, appeared synergistic or potentiated in the female. These results suggest an enhanced susceptibility of the female rate to the nephrotoxic action of combined exposure to MA and DCMA.
...
PMID:Alterations in the renal function of male and female rats exposed to maleic acid, dichloromaleic acid, and both compounds. 273 4
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