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: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
CSF HCO3- increases more than plasma HCO3- in
hypercapnia
, and there are at least two sources for the CSF HCO3- increase--one derived from the simultaneous increase in plasma HCO3-, and the other, HCO3-formed from hydration of CO2 in the choroid plexus and glia and susceptible to inhibition by acetazolamide (J. Appl. Physiol. 38: 504-512, 1975). It was proposed that the H+ formed in the CNS in CO2 hydration is actively exchanged for plasma Na+ utilizing the Na-K
ATPase
pump. H+ transport from the CNS was therefore studied in four groups of dogs breathing 5% CO2 at constant VA for 4 h with repeated injections of saline, acetazolamide 5 mg/ml, ouabain 0.1 mg/ml, and acetazolamide and ouabain together into lateral cerebral ventricles. Arterial HCO3-increased 2.5 meq/l at 4 h of
hypercapnia
in all groups. CSF HCO3-increased 5.8 meq/l in the saline-injected animals, but it increased only about 2 meq/l and equaled plasma HCO3- rise in the other three groups. Therefore CNS HCO3- formation in
hypercapnia
can be blocked by inhibiting the CO2 hydration reaction with acetazolamide or by blocking H+ removal by inhibiting Na-K
ATPase
with ouabain. The data support the thesis of active H+ removal from the CNS in exchange for plasma Na+ in
hypercapnia
.
...
PMID:H+ transport from CNS in hypercapnia and regulation of CSF [HCO3-]. 1 62
In the proximal tubules, fractional reabsorption remains essentially unchanged during variations in glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Glomerulotubular balance (GTB), defined as the linear relationship between proximal tubular reabsorption and GFR, is quantitatively the most important regulator of tubular reabsorption, which may be stopped by inhibiting Na, K-
ATPase
activity completely. However, ouabain in doses inhibiting 80% of the Na, K-ATPases, exerts no effect on proximal reabsorption of water, NaCl and NaHCO3. At constant plasma pH, the same relationship between filtered and reabsorbed bicarbonate is obtained whether bicarbonate reabsorption is altered by varying GFR or plasma concentration of bicarbonate. In contrast, a selective rise in plasma NaCl concentration at constant plasma pH (hypernatremia) reduces NaHCO3 reabsorption and fails to stimulate NaCl reabsorption. Other characteristics of proximal tubular reabsorption are that nonreabsorbable solutes, such as mannitol, inhibit water and NaCl reabsorption with little or no change in NaHCO3 reabsorption and renal oxygen consumption. Mannitol reduces the slope of the GTB curve for NaCl but not for NaHCO3. Hypertonic NaHCO3 exerts an osmotic effect on proximal water and NaCl reabsorption comparable to that of mannitol, whereas hypertonic NaCl is without osmotic effect. By reducing plasma pH (
hypercapnia
at high plasma bicarbonate concentration), the slope of the GTB curves for NaCl and NaHCO3 can be greatly increased. By raising plasma pH either by hypocapnia or bicarbonate loading, proximal reabsorption of NaHCO3 and NaCl is greatly depressed and remains almost unaltered during variations of GFR (abolished GTB). Similarly, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, such as acetazolamide, reduce the reabsorption of NaCl and NaHCO3 in the same proportion as a rise in plasma pH, and abolish GTB. Examinations of proximal tubular oxygen consumption indicate that the energy requirement for NaHCO3 reabsorption is as expected for transcellular transport by Na, K-ATPases, whereas proximal NaCl reabsorption requires no additional energy. These data indicate that transcellular energy-requiring NaHCO3 reabsorption provides the main osmotic force across the tight junction for paracellular reabsorption of proximal tubular fluid containing NaCl and other solutes of low reflection coefficient. The main factors influencing GTB are the filtered load of bicarbonate, plasma pH and nonreabsorbable solutes in the proximal tubular fluid.
...
PMID:Essentials of glomerulotubular balance. 267 97
Distal urinary acidification is thought to be mediated by an H+-
ATPase
sensitive to N-ethylmaleimide and dicyclohexyl-carbodiimide. We have studied the effect of chronic metabolic acidosis (NH4Cl for 3 days) or respiratory acidosis (inhalation of 10% CO2 for 2 days) on the H+-
ATPase
of plasma membranes prepared from the medulla. The enzymatic assay for the H+-
ATPase
was performed in the presence of ouabain and oligomycin and in the absence of Ca. H+-transport activity was assessed by the quenching of acridine orange in the presence of ATP. The 15-25% sucrose gradient fraction was enriched 40-fold in enzymatic activity over the homogenate, and 8-fold in enzymatic activity and 4-fold in H+-transport activity over the fluffy fraction (38,000 X g). Metabolic acidosis (pH less than 7.31) or chronic
hypercapnia
(PCO2 greater than 66 mmHg; 1 mmHg = 133.3 Pa) was induced for 2-3 days. Both groups showed the same enrichment factor in enzymatic and H+-transport assays as the control rabbits. Enzymatic and H+-transport activities, however, were not different between animals with respiratory acidosis and controls. Kinetic studies failed to disclose an increase in Vmax (673 vs. 702 mumol/(mg protein.min] or a decrease in Km (0.43 vs. 0.48 mM) in chronic
hypercapnia
as compared with controls. Metabolic acidosis also failed to increase H+-
ATPase
activity. These data demonstrate that the H+-
ATPase
of renal medulla does not display the expected increase in activity during acidosis. The role of this H+-
ATPase
in the adaptation to acidosis remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Effect of metabolic or respiratory acidosis on rabbit renal medullary proton-ATPase. 289 4
The relationships between pHi (intracellular pH) and phosphate compounds were evaluated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) in normo-, hypo-, and
hypercapnia
, obtained by changing fractional inspired concentration of CO2 in dogs anesthetized with 0.75% isoflurane and 66% N2O. Phosphocreatine (PCr) fell by 2.02 mM and Pi (inorganic phosphate) rose by 1.92 mM due to pHi shift from 7.10 to 6.83 during
hypercapnia
. The stoichiometric coefficient was 1.05 (r2 = 0.78) on log PCr/Cr against pHi, showing minimum change of ADP/ATP and equilibrium of creatine kinase in the pH range of 6.7 to 7.25. [ADP] varied from 21.6 +/- 4.1 microM in control (pHi = 7.10) to 26.8 +/- 6.3 microM in
hypercapnia
(pHi = 6.83) and 24.0 +/- 6.8 microM in hypocapnia (pHi = 7.17). ATP/ADP X Pi decreased from 66.4 +/- 17.1 mM-1 during normocapnia to 25.8 +/- 6.3 mM-1 in
hypercapnia
. The ADP values are near the in vitro Km; thus ADP is the main controller. The velocity of oxidative metabolism (V) in relation to its maximum (Vmax) as calculated by a steady-state Michaelis-Menten formulation is approximately 50% in normocapnia. In acidosis (pH 6.7) and alkalosis (pH 7.25), V/Vmax is 10% higher than the normocapnic brain. This increase of V/Vmax is required to maintain cellular homeostasis of energy metabolism in the face of either inhibition at extremes of pH or higher
ATPase
activity.
...
PMID:Relationship between intracellular pH and energy metabolism in dog brain as measured by 31P-NMR. 359 78
To examine the possible contribution of active H+ secretion mediated by brush border enzymes to proximal tubule HCO-3 absorption, paired reperfusions of surface proximal convoluted tubules were performed with the inhibitor dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). In control studies using a solution devoid of HCO-3 but containing 5.5 mM glucose, 1 mM DCCD had no effect on glucose or fluid (Na+) absorption, suggesting that this inhibitor did not interfere with sodium entry at the brush border or mitochondrial energy production (ATP synthesis). In experiments using a perfusion solution containing 18-25 mM HCO-3, DCCD caused a fall in absolute CO2 absorption of approximately 15% under eucapneic conditions and 30% during acute
hypercapnia
. One millimole per liter amiloride (an inhibitor of the passive Na+-H+ exchanger) caused a 15% inhibition of CO2 absorption during acute
hypercapnia
and a disproportionately large reduction in fluid (Na+) absorption. The latter was not due to cell poisoning, since 1 mM amiloride had no inhibitory effect on fluid or glucose absorption when a HCO-3-free perfusion solution was used. Addition of 1 mM DCCD to a perfusion solution containing either 10(-3) M amiloride or 10(-4) M acetazolamide caused a significant inhibition of CO2 absorption compared with amiloride or acetazolamide alone. The observations are consistent with the view that in addition to passive Na+-H+ exchange, active transport mediated by either a H+-
ATPase
or a redox-driven H+ pump in the brush border contributes significantly to HCO-3 absorption in the proximal tubule.
...
PMID:Evidence for a DCCD-sensitive component of proximal bicarbonate reabsorption. 406 52
The effect of
hypercapnia
on brain cell membrane structure and function was studied in anesthetized newborn piglets. Lipid peroxidation products (conjugated dienes and fluorescent compounds), Na+,K(+)-
ATPase
activity and enzyme affinity to ATP (substrate), K+ and Na+ ions (activators), and strophanthidin (inhibitor) were measured in three groups of animals: controls, those exposed to 90 minutes of PaCO2 > 80 mmHg (
hypercapnia
) and those exposed the same way, following restoration of normal PaCO2 (recovery). Enzyme activity was unchanged by
hypercapnia
, but enzyme affinity was altered as indicated by an increase in ATP affinity. Affinities to Na+, K+, and strophanthidin were unchanged. Restoration of normal PaCO2 resulted in an increase in conjugated dienes. The data demonstrate that
hypercapnia
followed by restoration of normal PaCO2 in healthy term newborn piglets is associated with mild modification of brain cell membrane Na+,K(+)-
ATPase
, possibly due to lipid peroxidation.
...
PMID:Brain cell membrane modification following hypercapnia and recovery in newborn piglets. 797 Sep 23
A 42-year-old female complained of exertional dyspnea and sleep disturbance. Her face was elongated longitudinally and the hard palate was narrow and high-arched. She has slender musculature and kyphoscoliosis. She was dysphonic and could not walk on her heels. Muscles in the face, upper arm, pelvic girdle and thigh were atrophic. Muscle weakness was detected in the neck, tibialis anterior, ilipsoas and other hip muscles, and ranged between 3- and 4 by the manual muscle testing. Electromyography showed definite myogenic abnormalities in all the muscle examined. No abnormality was found on the routine examination of blood, as was the motor and sensory nerve conduction velocity. Her vital capacity was 0.91 L, i.e., 35% of the expected value, suggesting a severe restrictive respiration. The arterial blood gas analysis revealed hypoxia,
hypercapnia
and desaturation. The blood gas data worsened when she was asleep, because of increased hypoventilation. Muscle biopsy of the biceps brachii showed a marked variation in the muscle fiber size. The type 1 muscle fiber was predominant. Many fibers contained nemaline rods and/or core-like structures. Some fibers contained both nemaline and core-like structures. This core-like structures were not stained with NADH-TR and
ATPase
reactions, and about 40-100 microns in the longitudinal extension. In this context, typical central cores have not been observed in the present case. No association of nemaline rods and core-like structures in the same muscle fiber has been reported, although a close relationship of the two structures has been suggested.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[An adult case of congenital myopathy--coexistence of nemaline rods and core-like structures]. 815 9
Studies of skinned fibers suggest that the rate of ATP turnover in skeletal muscle is depressed by acidosis. To examine whether this occurs in intact muscles, the ATP cost of isometric contractions was measured in ex vivo, arterially perfused cat biceps (predominantly fast-twitch) and soleus (slow-twitch) muscles under normocapnic (5% CO2) and hypercapnic (70% CO2) conditions.
Hypercapnia
decreased extracellular pH from 7.4 to 6.7 and intracellular pH from 7.1 to 6.5 (soleus) or 6.6 (biceps) but had no significant effect on the phosphocreatine (PCr)-to-ATP ratio in muscles at rest. The ATP cost of contraction was estimated from PCr changes, measured by gating the acquisition of 31P-nuclear magnetic resonance spectra to times before and after brief tetani (1 s at 100 Hz and 2 s at 25 Hz for biceps and soleus, respectively) or 10-s trains of twitches (2 and 1 Hz, respectively). Peak isometric force and the ATP cost of tetanic contraction (PCr/force x time integral) were not significantly different under hypercapnic compared with normocapnic conditions in either muscle (mean: 7.97 and 2.44 micromol x kg(-1) x s(-1) for biceps and soleus, respectively). Twitch force and the ATP cost per twitch decreased by nearly 50% during hypercapnic perfusion in both muscle types. The results indicate that hypercapnic acidosis has no significant effect on the
ATPase
rate per active myosin head in intact mammalian skeletal muscle.
...
PMID:Acidosis has no effect on the ATP cost of contraction in cat fast- and slow-twitch skeletal muscles. 912 91
The localization of proton pumps (H+-
ATPase
) in gill epithelia of rainbow trout [Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum)] was elucidated by immunofluorescence microscopy, using rabbit polyclonal antibodies against the 70 kDa subunit of H+-
ATPase
purified from clathrin-coated vesicles of bovine brain. In the gill epithelia of freshwater trout, the immunostaining was uniformly distributed along the lamellae and generally concentrated in apical regions. It is concluded, therefore, that H+-
ATPase
is located in the apex of both chloride cells and epithelial cells of freshwater fish.
Hypercapnic
treatment resulted in a non-polarized and restrictive distribution of H+-
ATPase
in the chloride cell. No fluorescent staining was observed in the gill epithelium of seawater-adapted rainbow trout, except in some unidentified anucleate surface material. The presence of the 70 kDa subunit in fish gill epithelia was confirmed by Western blot. These results support the proposed role of a proton pump in sodium uptake in freshwater fish and demonstrate that the H+-
ATPase
in fish gills is of the vacuolar type, antigenically similar to the H+-
ATPase
in mammalian brain and kidney.
...
PMID:IMMUNOLOCALIZATION OF H+-ATPase IN THE GILL EPITHELIA OF RAINBOW TROUT 931 71
The expression of the V-type proton
ATPase
(H+-
ATPase
) was examined in the gill of the freshwater rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) using immunocytochemistry in concert with laser scanning confocal or electron microscopy. A synthetic peptide consisting of the carboxy-terminal region of the 31 kDa subunit of the bovine renal H+-
ATPase
was used to generate an antiserum in rabbits, and its suitability for use in trout gill was confirmed by western blotting. Gill epithelial cells demonstrated specific immunoreactivity, the intensity of which was increased markedly after 18 h of exposure to
hypercapnia
(1 % CO2 in air). The increased intensity of H+-
ATPase
immunoreactivity was associated with elevated branchial net acid excretion. In the hypercapnic fish, the specific immunoreactivity was associated with both the apical membrane and cytoplasm. Electron microscopy revealed that specific immunoreactivity was localized to the pavement cells and was particularly associated with the apical membrane and subapical cytoplasmic vesicles. The increased H+-
ATPase
immunoreactivity in the epithelial cells of hypercapnic fish and the increased intensity of the immunoreactive bands in western blots from hypercapnic fish demonstrate an 'up-regulation' of this protein in response to respiratory acidosis. The results are discussed with reference to current models of acid­base and ion regulation in the gill of freshwater fish.
...
PMID:Immunolocalization of proton pumps (H+-ATPase) in pavement cells of rainbow trout gill 932 May 57
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>