Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

AMP deaminase from normal and diabetic rat hearts was separated on cellulose phosphate and quantitated by HPLC. From soluble fractions three different AMP deaminase activities, according to KCl elution from cellulose phosphate and percent of total activity were: 170 mM (85%), 250 mM (8%) and 330 mM (7%) KCl. The AMP deaminase activity which eluted with 170 mM KCl was resolved to two distinct peaks by HPLC anionic exchange. After 4 weeks of diabetes the heart enzyme profile change to: 170 mM (10%), 250 mM (75%) and 330 mM (15%). Once purified the four activities were kinetically distinct: 170 mM KCl cytosolic, AMP Km = 1.78, stimulated by ATP, GTP, NADP and strongly inhibited by NAD; 170 mM KCl mitochondria AMP Km = 17.9, stimulated by ATP, ADP; 250 mM KCl isozyme, AMP Km = 0.66, stimulated by ADP; and 330 mM KCl isozyme, AMP Km = 0.97, inhibited by ATP, NAD(P).
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PMID:Changes in AMP deaminase activities in the hearts of diabetic rats. 202 37

To investigate the influence of diabetes mellitus on vascular relaxation response, acetylcholine (ACh)-induced relaxation and production of cyclic GMP and cyclic AMP in aortic rings with endothelium were compared between alloxan-induced diabetic and control rabbits. ACh-induced relaxation was significantly attenuated in the aortic rings of diabetic rabbits. Concentration-response curve for ACh-induced relaxation in the aortic rings of control rabbits was shifted to the right by the pretreatment with hemoglobin, and this concentration-response curve was almost identical to that in the aorta from diabetic rabbits. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP)-induced relaxation in the aortic rings without endothelium from diabetic rabbits was similar to that in the aortic rings without endothelium from control rabbits. Basal levels of cyclic GMP and ACh-induced production of cyclic GMP were markedly lower in diabetic rabbits than those in control rabbits. On the other hand, there were no differences in basal and ACh-induced production of cyclic AMP between diabetic and control aorta. These results suggest that impairment of endothelium but not guanylate cyclase activity may be occurred in the aorta of diabetic rabbits. This impairment leads to the decrease in production of cyclic GMP through the attenuation of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) release, and this may be responsible for the decreased endothelium-dependent relaxation of ACh.
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PMID:Decrease in endothelium-dependent relaxation and levels of cyclic nucleotides in aorta from rabbits with alloxan-induced diabetes. 216 Nov 18

The present work demonstrates that phenformin exerted an inducing effect on delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase (ALA-S) and ferrochelatase activities and on cytochrome P-450 content in isolated hepatocytes from rats with experimental diabetes. Similar results were obtained with respect to ALA-S activity and cytochrome P-450 content when chlorpropamide was used. The inducing effect exerted by allylisopropylacetamide (AIA) on ALA-S and ferrochelatase activities in diabetic hepatic cells was markedly greater than that observed in normal hepatocytes. This stimulatory response was not enhanced by adding dibutyryl cyclic AMP (cAMP). When phenformin was added to isolated rat hepatocytes of normal rats, induction of ALA-S and ferrochelatase activities and cytochrome P-450 content was observed only in the presence of added dibutyryl cAMP. Addition of chlorpropamide to this in vitro system did not exert an inducing effect on the same enzymes even in the presence of dibutyryl cAMP. The present results add more experimental evidence about the lability of the heme pathway of diabetic hepatocytes.
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PMID:Studies on induction of delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase, ferrochelatase, cytochrome P-450 and cyclic AMP by phenformin. Chlorpropamide, allylisopropylacetamide and lead in hepatocytes from normal and experimental diabetic rats. 216 5

Isolated muscle cells from adult rat heart were used to study the involvement of G-proteins in the regulation of the glucose transporter by insulin and isoprenaline. Efficient modification of G-protein functions was established by measuring isoprenaline-stimulated cyclic AMP production, viability and ATP content after treating the cells with cholera toxin and pertussis toxin for 2 h. Under these conditions cholera toxin decreased the stimulatory action of insulin on 3-O-methylglucose transport by 56%, but pertussis toxin had no effect. Basal transport was not affected by toxin treatment. Isoprenaline increased 3-O-methylglucose transport by 63%. This effect was not mimicked by dibutyryl cyclic AMP, but was completely blocked by cholera toxin. Streptozotocin-diabetes abolished isoprenaline action and decreased stimulation of transport by 64%. Concomitantly, cholera-toxin sensitivity of glucose transport was lost in cells from diabetic animals. This was paralleled by a large decrease (87 +/- 4%) in mRNA expression of the insulin-regulatable glucose transporter, as shown by Northern-blot analysis of RNA isolated from cardiomyocytes of diabetic rats. These data suggest a functional association between the insulin-responsive glucose transporter and a cholera-toxin-sensitive G-protein mediating stimulation by insulin and isoprenaline.
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PMID:G-protein-mediated regulation of the insulin-responsive glucose transporter in isolated cardiac myocytes. 217 73

An increased platelet-vessel wall interaction plays an important role in most forms of cardiovascular disease. In healthy arteries, the vascular endothelium prevents platelet adhesion and aggregation. As a mediator of this protective function, the endothelium produces prostacyclin, endothelium-derived nitric oxide and tissue plasminogen activator. Cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia and diabetes are associated with an increased platelet activation and with decreased antithrombotic properties of the blood vessel wall. The available inhibitors of platelet function interfere only with one of various mechanisms of platelet activation and of the platelet-vessel wall interaction. Prostaglandin inhibitors, such as aspirin and newer, more specific inhibitors, prevent the production and/or the effect of thromboxane A2 on platelets and the blood vessel wall. Other drugs interfere with the effect of adenosine diphosphate on platelets, or they increase intracellular concentration of cyclic GMP or AMP in platelets and vascular smooth muscle cells. The protective effects of platelet inhibitors in primary and particularly in secondary prevention of cardiovascular diseases have been documented in numerous studies. The successful clinical use of these substances, however, requires a selective prescription of the drugs in patients with cardiovascular disease.
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PMID:[Thrombocyte inhibitors in cardiovascular therapy]. 221 49

A case of a 29-year-old woman with idiopathic hypoparathyroidism was reported. There were neither endocrine nor neurological disorders among her family, except for her mother's hearing loss. She had been suffering from insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus since 21 years of age, and was noticed to be hard of hearing for several years, but never been examined. At the age of 27, choreic movement on her left upper limb and gait disturbance appeared. A year before admission, gait disturbance gradually developed and she could not walk any more. On admission, her height was 137.2 cm and her weight 36.5 kg. She had a round face, uneven teeth and borderline metacarpal sign on her right hand. On neurological examination, Parkinsonism, bucco-lingo-masticatory dyskinesia and bilateral extensor planter reflex were present, but tetany was not observed anywhere. Serum calcium was 3.9 mEq/l, and serum phosphorus 5.3 mEq/l. A CT scan of brain revealed calcifications in the bilateral basal ganglia and thalami, low density area in the left putamen, and atrophy of both caudate nuclei. Serum PTH was less than 100 pg/ml. Ellsworth-Howard's test showed hyperresponsiveness in the secretion of urinary phosphorus and cyclic-AMP. Other endocrinological studies showed no abnormality except for hyporesponsiveness in the secretion of insulin on glucose tolerance test. On the basis of these results, a diagnosis of idiopathic hypoparathyroidism with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus was made. Administration of alfacalcidol returned serum calcium and phosphorus to normal with considerable clinical benefit. Parkinsonism was gradually improved and she became to be able to walk with a cane after one year of treatment. But buco-lingo-masticatory dyskinesia were not reduced.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of idiopathic hypoparathyroidism with extrapyramidal signs and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus]. 222 58

A study of graded exercise tolerance (GET), indices of central hemodynamics and energy metabolism in 136 patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and 35 controls aged 16 to 40 has shown reduced GET in 86% of the patients. It was combined with a decrease in the CVS functional potentialities and disorder of energy formation. The lowest level of GET was noted in patients with a severe type of diabetes mellitus in marked decompensation, with disease of 10 yrs. of duration at advanced stages of diabetic microangiopathies. The use of inosine and AMP is accompanied by a rise of GET and the activity of energy producing systems.
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PMID:[The mechanisms of a decreased tolerance for graduated physical loading in young patients suffering from diabetes mellitus]. 233 Mar 55

The presence of an enzyme that hydrolyzes ATP to AMP and PPi was demonstrated in a 27,000 X g particulate and supernatant fraction of mouse pancreatic islets. The enzyme was stimulated by addition of Ca2+, Zn2+, and Co2+. Addition of calmodulin or trifluoperazine had no effect. In the presence of Ca2+ and Zn2+, the Michaelis constant (Km) for ATP was approximately 0.1 mM and the maximum velocity (Vmax) was close to 90 nmol X min-1 X mg protein-1. After preincubation of the islets for 30 min with 16.7 mM glucose or 5 mM glucose with 1 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX), a three- to fourfold increase in enzyme activity was seen. Direct addition of IBMX or cAMP to the enzyme assay also had a small stimulatory effect. Preincubation with the insulin secretagogues leucine and alpha-ketoisocaproic acid did not affect the enzyme activity. The possible function of the enzyme in pancreatic islets is discussed in relation to hypotheses given for the function of similar enzyme(s) in other tissues.
Diabetes 1986 Oct
PMID:Presence of ATP-pyrophosphohydrolase in mouse pancreatic islets. 242 87

Numerous platelet abnormalities, particularly hyperaggregation, have been described in diabetic patients, and it has been suggested that these may contribute towards the pathogenesis of microvascular complications. In the present study, the changes that occur in ADP-induced aggregation, sensitivity to a stable prostacyclin analogue (Iloprost), aggregation-induced thromboxane B2 production and platelet cyclic AMP levels were investigated in 9 young insulin-dependent diabetics, in which the glycaemic control significantly improved in one group (n = 5; HbA1 from 11.9-9.0%) over a 6 month period. With improvement of glycaemic control there was no significant change in the concentration of ADP required to produce 50 percent of the maximum aggregation wave response. However, there was a significant increase in the responsiveness of platelets to Iloprost and increased platelet thromboxane B2 production. There was no significant difference between the basal platelet cAMP levels before or after exposure to Iloprost. This study suggests that with improved short-term glycaemic control, although there are changes in platelet function, there may be no alteration in the homeostatic balance.
Diabetes Res 1987 Jun
PMID:Changes in some aspects of platelet function with improvement of glycaemic control over 6 months. 244 96

Measurements have been made of the tissue content of phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate (PPRibP) and of a range of metabolic intermediates involved in the energy charge of the cell, the glycolytic and pentose phosphate pathways, and of the activity of the enzymes of the pentose phosphate pathway and of PPRibP synthetase (EC 2.7.6.1) in the livers of normal, diabetic, insulin-treated diabetic and starved rats and in livers of rats previously starved and then re-fed with high-fat or high-carbohydrate diets. Diabetes, starvation and high-fat diet all caused a fall in the hepatic PPRibP content, whereas insulin treatment and high-carbohydrate diet raised the tissue content. A positive correlation was shown between the PPRibP content and ATP, energy charge and the cytosolic [NAD+]/[NADH] quotient. A positive association between the PPRibP content and the flux of glucose through the pentose phosphate pathway and the synthesis of ribose 5-phosphate via the oxidative enzymes of that pathway, including ribose-5-phosphate isomerase (EC 5.3.1.6), was also observed. A negative correlation was found between the ADP, AMP and Pi contents, and no correlation existed between PPRibP content and the enzymes of the non-oxidative branch of the pentose phosphate pathway. There was no correlation between hepatic PPRibP content and the activity of PPRibP synthetase measured in vitro. These results are considered in relation to the control of PPRibP synthetase in the liver in vivo.
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PMID:Hepatic phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate concentration. Regulation by the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway and cellular energy status. 244 9


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