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

The duration of the presumed metabolic depression of syngeneic vena cava to aorta transplants was determined in rats and the site and type of energy metabolism in the vein grafts assessed. The aerobic metabolic activity was measured from the histochemical reactivity of the enzymes, succinate dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase, and the anaerobic activity by staining with lactate dehydrogenase. The activity of the hexose-monophosphate shunt was assessed by the histochemical demonstration of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Sixteen hours after grafting a pronounced metabolic depression was noted. Recovery occurred 24 hours after transplantation. The most intense staining was from lactate dehydrogenase in the vein grafts and in the non-transplanted veins. At the end of the observation period of four months the grafts were definitely more strongly stained than the non-transplanted veins, with most of the activity in the thickened intima. This layer had a metabolic profile resembling that of the media of the adjacent aorta.
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PMID:Histochemical examination of energy metabolism in aortic vein grafts in rats. 302 37

Aldehyde dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and pyruvate kinase activities were determined in erythrocytes of various ages, separated by Percoll gradient centrifugation, in 13 alcoholic patients and eight control subjects. The total erythrocyte activities of all three enzymes were not affected by alcoholism, however, the youngest cells of alcoholics had a decreased aldehyde dehydrogenase activity, while both glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and pyruvate kinase activities were increased. The depression of aldehyde dehydrogenase activity not only persisted, but became more marked after 2 weeks of abstinence, while the enhanced activities of the two other enzymes returned to normal. These observations suggest that chronic alcohol ingestion suppresses aldehyde dehydrogenase in the bone marrow, while it enhances other erythrocytic enzymes.
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PMID:Changes in erythrocyte enzyme activities during erythrocyte aging in alcoholism. 304 74

A high incidence of natural osteoarthritis of the knee joint is found in male mice of the STR/ORT strain. The condition affects mainly the medial tibial cartilage and by the age of 27 weeks most male mice of this strain show some osteoarthritic change. Analysis of the oxidative metabolism of the chondrocytes during the development of the lesion has been facilitated by the techniques of quantitative cytochemistry. The activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) has been investigated as indicative of the NADPH-generating pentose-phosphate pathway; the activities of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3PD) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) have been studied as indicators of glycolytic activity. In young STR/ORT mice the G6PD activity of the lateral tibial cartilage was greater and more variable than in the control mice of the CBA/HT6 strain. The activity in the medial cartilage, relative to that in the lateral cartilage, decreased with age; this change was not reflected in the activities of the other enzymes. In the lateral cartilage, the expected relationship was found between the G6PD and the G3PD activities and between the LDH and the G3PD activities. In the medial cartilage, the G6PD activities were not related to the G3PD activities. The decreased proportionality of the G6PD activities in the medial cartilage as against that in the lateral cartilage was detected in mice as young as 9 weeks; by 27 weeks of age nine of the 13 mice showed marked depression of medial as against lateral G6PD activities. In contrast, only four of the 13 mice showed any overt histological charge until up to the age of 28 weeks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Changes in oxidative activities of chondrocytes during the early development of natural murine osteoarthritis. 321 87

We have used 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) as a selective and irreversible inhibitor of oxidized glutathione reductase (GSSG-R) to determine how human erythrocytes with various degrees of GSSG-R deficiency recover their reduced glutathione (GSH) after exposure to acetylphenylhydrazine or diamide. Pentose phosphate dehydrogenases and glutathione synthesis were not inhibited, de novo glutathione synthesis was negligible within the experimental time frame, and the reappearance of GSH was strictly under the control of GSSG-R. Results obtained with acetylphenylhydrazine or diamide were concordant. In red cells stressed by these reagents, GSSG-R deficiency began to impair the regeneration of GSH only after greater than 80% of the normal enzyme activity had been abolished. Thereafter GSH recovery deteriorated as drug-induced GSSG-R depression increased. Only erythrocytes that had been rendered almost totally GSSG-R deficient, that is, had lost greater than 90% of baseline activity, became functionally equivalent to GdA- glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-deficient cells. The reserve capacity of GSSG-R in human erythrocytes is extremely large. Of all types of isolated GSSG-R "deficiencies" reported so far, only two can be considered pathogenically significant: the homozygous genetic defect found in a single family, and much more commonly, the acute pharmacologic phenocopy induced by BCNU.
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PMID:Consequences of erythrocytic glutathione reductase deficiency. 357 7

Three exposure regimens were used to study the time course of indicators of lung damage and recovery response to single or repeated exposures to phosgene (COCl2). Rats were sacrificed immediately or throughout a 38-d recovery period after inhalation of 1 ppm COCl2 for 4 h, at intervals during a 7-h exposure to 1 ppm phosgene, or at several time points throughout a 17-d exposure to 0.125 and 0.25 ppm COCl2 (4 h/d, 5 d/wk) and during a 21-d recovery period. Regimen 1 revealed significantly elevated lung wet weight, lung nonprotein sulfhydryl (NPSH) content, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity that stayed elevated for up to 14 d. A significant decrease in body weight and food intake was observed 1 d after exposure. Regimen 2 caused a slight depression in NPSH content but did not affect G6PD activity. Regimen 3 animals showed sustained elevations in lung wet weight, NPSH content, and G6PD activity after 7 d of exposure. No significant changes in these endpoints were observed for the 0.125 ppm COCl2 group. No consistent elevation in hydroxyproline content was seen at either exposure concentration. Light microscopic examination of lung tissue exposed to 0.25 ppm COCl2 for 17 d revealed moderate multifocal accumulation of mononuclear cells in the centriacinar region. In summary, exposure to COCl2 caused changes similar in most ways to those observed for other lower-respiratory-tract irritants.
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PMID:Pulmonary biochemical effects of inhaled phosgene in rats. 377 87

Using histochemical techniques, the reactivities of selected enzymes and other metabolic components were examined in the myocardium, coronary arteries, and coronary arterioles of normal, two-week-sympathectomized, and sham-operated canine hearts. There were no differences in the histochemistry of coronary arteries in any of the hearts, but important differences were noted in the myocardium and especially in the arterioles. The reactivities of the enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and the nucleic acids were increased in arterioles of the sympathectomized heart, possibly indicating an increased protein synthesis. The reactivities of succinate dehydrogenase, NAD-isocitrate dehydrogenase, and cytochrome oxidase were reduced in myocardium and arterioles of sympathectomized hearts as well as in arterioles of sham-operated hearts; the changes were greater in the sympathectomized arterioles where there was also observed an increase in reactivity of lactate dehydrogenase. These findings suggest a depression in aerobic metabolic capacity and, in the case of the sympathectomized arteriole, imply a possible shift in adaptation from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism.
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PMID:The myocardium and its vasculature: a histochemical comparison of the normal and chronically sympathectomized dog heart. 615 74

An analysis of the glucose downshift mechanism in Bacillus subtilis has shown that the depression of catabolic enzymes characteristic of the 'glucose effect' includes isocitrate dehydrogenase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Additionally, phosphofructokinase undergoes what appears to be a reversible modification regulated by glucose transport.
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PMID:The glucose effect in Bacillus subtilis. 622 97

Ninety adult Indian typhoid and paratyphoid fever (enteric fever, EF) patients and 91 controls were tested for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency using the fluorescent spot test (FST) and the quantitative methaemoglobin reduction test ( QMRT ). There was a threefold higher incidence of G6PD deficiency in North Indian EF patients (10.6%) than in controls (3.6%) (P = 0.15) which may be attributable to the greater morbidity of the G6PD-deficient EF patients; six of nine had haemolytic anaemia. A transient depression of mean erythrocyte G6PD activity was observed in a subgroup of 49 non-deficient EF patients in whom the spectrophotometric G6PD assay was done. It did not appear to be related to reticulocyte count, chloramphenicol therapy, or differences in leucocyte contamination of the haemolysate used for the G6PD assay. If this depression of G6PD activity occurs in deficient patients as well, it may help to explain the haemolysis seen in them during EF. Of the three tests used, the QMRT and the spectrophotometric assay clearly identified G6PD deficiency in males during haemolysis, whereas the FST was unreliable in this situation.
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PMID:Depression of erythrocyte glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity in enteric fever. 643 56

Histoenzymological assay was used to investigate various structures of the ovaries of rats of two groups aged 3-4 and 12-14 months during estral cycle. The activity of 3 beta-, 17 beta- and 20 alpha-steroid dehydrogenases, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NAD and NADP-diaphorases, esterase, acid and alkaline phosphatases was studied. It has been shown that transport alterations in the microcirculation including the hematofollicular barrier play, the leading part in age-dependent depression of reproductive and endocrine functions. Ageing rats demonstrated no linkage between endothelial, thecal and granular cells, which points to the injury of the histophysiological mechanisms of the follicular system integration.
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PMID:[Age-related characteristics of structural support for ovarian function]. 654 43

The activity of NAD-linked alpha-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NAD-G3PDH; EC 1.1.1.8) was depressed by 35% when the thyroid hormone 3,3',5-triiodo-L-thyronine (20 micrograms/liter) was added to the serum-free, hormonally supplemented medium of cultured neonatal rat heart cells. The degree of depression was greater (65%) when the medium contained normal serum levels of hydrocortisone and insulin. There is a dramatic inverse dose-response relationship between triiodothyronine levels and NAD-G3PDH activity. The classic elevation by thyroid hormones of the FAD-linked alpha-glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (FAD-G3PD; EC 1.1.99.5) was observed concurrently. The medium-glucose depletion rate in triiodothyronine-free cells was depressed 32% through 11 days-in-culture, indicating reduced glycolytic activity. The activities of nine other metabolically important enzymes which were measured during this study, including hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, phosphofructokinase, pyruvate kinase, malate dehydrogenase, NAD-isocitrate dehydrogenase, NADH cytochrome c reductase, and succinic cytochrome c reductase, did not respond to varying triiodothyronine concentrations.
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PMID:Triiodothyronine depresses the NAD-linked glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity of cultured neonatal rat heart cells. 669 42


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