Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We evaluated the anti-ischemic effect of drugs by using the inhibition of glycolytic flux at the level of the phosphofructokinase (PFK) reaction, caused by ischemia, as an indicator of the oxygen supply/demand ratio in the ischemic myocardium. Ischemia was induced by ligating the left anterior descending coronary artery in the open-chest dog. After 3 min of coronary ligation, the ischemic myocardium was removed. The endocardial portion of the myocardial sample was used to determine the levels of glucose-6-phosphate (G6P), fructose-6-phosphate (F6P) and fructose-1,6-diphosphate (FDP), and the ratio of [( G6P] + [F6P])/[FDP] was calculated in order to assess the rate of glycolytic flux at the PFK stage. Either saline or drug (propranolol, 1 mg/kg; carteolol, 100 micrograms/kg; nadolol, 1 mg/kg; nifedipine, 10 micrograms/kg; diltiazem, 100 micrograms/kg; verapamil, 100 micrograms/kg; and flunarizine, 1 mg/kg) was injected intravenously 5 min before coronary ligation. In the saline-treated heart, ischemia increased the levels of G6P and F6P, whereas it decreased the level of FDP. The ratio of ([G6P] + [F6P])/[FDP] was increased by ischemia from 2.2 to 23.6, suggesting the inhibition of glycolytic flux at the level of the PFK reaction. In the drug-treated heart, ischemia increased the levels of G6P and F6P, but the increases were smaller than those in the saline-treated heart. Pretreatment with propranolol, nadolol, diltiazem, verapamil, flunarizine attenuated the increase in the ratio of ([G6P] + [F6P])/[FDP] caused by ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cardiac metabolism as an indicator of oxygen supply/demand ratio. 336 68

Effects of regional ischemia on myocardial glycolysis were studied by measuring the levels of glycolytic intermediates in the endo- and epicardial layers of the left ventricle in dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital. Regional ischemia was induced by ligating a small branch of the left anterior descending coronary artery. The myocardial tissue samples were removed before and 1.5, 3, 7, or 30 min after coronary artery ligation. Based on a crossover plot study of the glycolytic intermediates, it is suggested that the activity of glycogen phosphorylase was accelerated, while that of phosphofructokinase was inhibited in ischemic myocardium samples removed 1.5, 3, 7, and 30 min after ligation. When the frozen myocardium was allowed to stand at room temperature for 10 min, the crossover plot study revealed acceleration of phosphofructokinase activity. The metabolic response to regional ischemia of the endocardial layers was more marked than that of the epicardial. During ischemia the levels of adenine nucleotides did not change significantly, but those of citrate and hydrogen ions increased significantly. It appears that inhibition of myocardial phosphofructokinase activity during ischemia is partly due to an increase in the levels of citrate and hydrogen ions in the ischemic tissue.
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PMID:Crossover plot study of glycolytic intermediates in the ischemic canine heart. 621 59

Dosaged restriction of coronary blood flow (by 30, 50, 70 and 90%) was reproduced for 30 minutes in dogs with a closed chest. In all degrees of coronary blood flow restriction the loss of glycogen, accumulation of lactic acid and cAMP (in reduction of blood flow by 50 and 70%) and activation of glycogenolysis, phosphorylase and phosphofructokinase were recorded in the zone of ischemia. The changes advanced with the deepening of ischemia. Similar, though less pronounced changes were found outside the ischemic zone. Marked metabolic shifts were disclosed in the right ventricle. The mechanisms of anaerobic oxidation activation in ischemia are discussed.
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PMID:[Myocardial carbohydrate metabolism in limited coronary blood flow]. 626 47

The level of oxidative phosphorylation, activity of phosphofructokinase, fructose-1,6-diphosphate aldolase, ketose-1-phosphate aldolase, glucose-6-phosphatase and lactate dehydrogenase are determined in subcellular fractions in the kidney cortex layer of rabbits which have suffered from acute ischemia (for 15, 30, 60, 120 min). Ischemia inhibits the oxidative processes in mitochondria which is proportional to the duration of the effect. An increase in the activity of glycolytic chain enzymes in microsomes and soluble fraction for 15-30 min of ischemia evidences for a compensation of the energy losses at the expense of glycolysis with short periods of ischemia. Glycolysis is inhibited with a more prolonged effect. It is established that the anti-ischemic protection of the organ viability is to be conducted not only with allo- but also with auto-transplantation of the kidney in case of short acute ischemia.
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PMID:[Energy metabolism in subcellular fractions of normal and acute ischemic kidneys]. 629 Dec 11

The maximal rate of some cerebral enzymatic activities related to energy transduction (hexokinase; phosphofructokinase; lactate dehydrogenase; citrate synthase; malate dehydrogenase; total NADH-cytochrome c reductase; cytochrome oxidase), amino acid metabolism (glutamate decarboxylase; glutamate dehydrogenase) and cholinergic metabolism (acetylcholine esterase) were tested in the cerebral cortex and in sub-cortical area of rats. The evaluations were performed both in the homogenate in toto and in the crude mitochondrial fraction, before and after a postdecapitative normothermic ischemia of 5, 10, 20, and 40 min duration. The results are discussed also with respect to the pharmacological pretreatment with two biological substances which may modulate amino acid (L-alanine) and phospholipid metabolism (CDP-choline). The analysis of the present data suggests the occurrence in brain tissue of a variety of interrelated factors implicated in the ischemia-induced changes of the maximal rate of the enzymatic activities related to the energy transduction. These include: (a) rearrangement of the enzymatic activities because of the changed metabolic and chemico-physical condition; (b) decrease in the activity of enzymes related to the electron transfer chain and glycolysis; (c) changes in enzymes related to mitochondrial membranes. The effects of in vivo administration of alanine or CDP-choline, even if significant, are not consistent throughout the time period studied.
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PMID:Changes induced by ischemia on some cerebral enzymatic activities related to energy transduction and amino acid metabolism. 685 30

Construction and fit to experimental data of a computer model of glycolysis, the tricarboxylic acid cycle, and related metabolism in the perfused rat heart involving 63 enzyme submodels is described. The experimental preparation simulated is a rat heart perfused with Krebs bicarbonate solution containing glucose and insulin whose pH was lowered to 6.6 by equilibration with 35% CO2-65% O2. The glycolytic rate falls sharply and ischemia results, becoming apparent after 3.5 min. The model initially ascribes the fall in glycolysis largely to inhibition of hexokinase by accumulated glucose 6-phosphate and inactivation of phosphofructokinase by the low pH and subsequently to cytoplasmic glucose depletion owing to limitation of glucose uptake by the external acidosis. At the same time there is insufficiently deep hypoxia to trigger substantial mobilization of endogenous fuels (e.g., glycogenolysis or fatty acid mobilization, so that these hearts become ischemic primarily owing to a shortage of metabolic fuel.
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PMID:Computer simulation of energy metabolism in acidotic cardiac ischemia. 708 79

Diltiazem, a calcium antagonist, was found to lessen the effect of ischemia resulting from coronary occlusion in dogs. For example, this agent preserves the high energy phosphate reservoir and decreases the inhibition of glycolytic flux at the phosphofructokinase level caused by myocardial ischemia. Diltiazem produced a marked reduction in ischemia-induced damage to the contractile elements. Increased tissue levels of lactate and free fatty acids attributable to ischemia were lowered by diltiazem. Although diltiazem increased contractility of isolated ischemia heart muscle fibers, it did not lessen the effect of ischemia on mitochondrial respiration or mitochondrial calcium binding. On the other hand, diltiazem was found to counteract the effects of ischemia followed by reperfusion on mitochondrial oxygen consumption and calcium binding.
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PMID:Action of anti-anginal drugs on cardiac metabolism. 742 59

Previously we have shown that hypercarbia produces a larger decrease in agonal glycolytic rate in 1-month-old swine than in newborns. In an effort to understand the mechanism responsible for this difference, we tested the hypothesis that hypercarbia produces age-related changes in the concentration of one or more effectors of phosphofructokinase activity. Specifically, in vivo 31P and 1H NMR spectroscopy was used to compare changes in lactate levels, intracellular pH, free magnesium concentration, and content of phosphorylated metabolites for these two age groups at three intervals during the first 1.5 min of complete ischemia in the presence or absence of hypercarbia (PaCO2 = 102-106 mm Hg). Hypercarbia produced the same drop in intracellular brain pH for both age groups, but the decrease in phosphocreatine level and increase in inorganic phosphate content were greater in 1-month-olds compared with newborns. During ischemia there was no difference between the magnitude of change in intracellular pH and levels of phosphocreatine and inorganic phosphate in hypercarbic 1-month-olds versus newborns. Under control conditions, i.e., normocarbia and normoxia, the free Mg2+ concentration was lower and the fraction of magnesium-free ATP was higher for newborns than 1-month-olds. However, there was no change in these variables for either age group during hypercarbia and early during ischemia. Thus, age-related differences in the relative decrease in agonal glycolytic rate during hypercarbia could not be explained by differences in intracellular pH, inorganic phosphate content, or free magnesium concentration. The [ADP]free at control was higher in newborns compared with 1-month-olds, and there was no age-related difference in [AMP]free. These variables did not change for newborns when exposed to hypercarbia, but for 1-month-olds [ADP]free and [AMP]free increased during hypercarbia relative to control values. High-energy phosphate utilization during ischemia for hypercarbic 1-month-olds was reduced by 74% compared with normocarbic 1-month-olds during ischemia, whereas the reduction in energy utilization (14%) was not significant for hypercarbic versus normocarbic newborns during ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Evaluation of potential effectors of agonal glycolytic rate in developing brain measured in vivo by 31P and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. 779 28

The current study was undertaken so that the effects of both ischemia and ischemia + hypothermia could be examined in mammalian liver. Particular reference was made to the function of glycolysis, which is the only mechanism for energy production under these conditions. The response of adenylate pools reflected the energy imbalance created during warm ischemia within minutes of organ isolation. ATP levels and energy charge values for control (freshly isolated) livers were 1.20 +/- 0.07 and 0.49 +/- 0.02 mumol/g. Within 5 min of warm ischemia, ATP levels had dropped well below control values and by 30 min warm ischemia, ATP, AMP, and E.C. values were 0.21, 2.01, and 0.17 mumol/g, respectively. Cold ischemic livers (flushed with Marshall's citrate solution and stored on ice) exhibited similar, but more protracted, patterns of adenylate depletion (ATP and ADP) and accumulation (AMP). In both warm and cold ischemic livers, levels of fructose-6-phosphate (F6P) and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (F1,6P2) indicated a marked activation of glycolysis at the phosphofructokinase (PFK) locus after a certain time of ischemia. Although the activations occurred at different times (30 min and 10 h for warm and cold ischemic livers, respectively), the patterns of change in levels of glycolytic metabolites associated with the PFK-catalyzed reaction were similar; levels of F6P dropped and F1,6P2 increased. Changes in metabolite levels (phosphoenol pyruvate and pyruvate) associated with another key suspect regulatory enzyme, pyruvate kinase, indicated no role in regulatory control of glycolysis during warm or cold ischemia. The activation of PFK at 30 min and 10 h of warm and cold ischemia, respectively, may reflect the accumulating effects of loss of intracellular homeostasis, which leads to impending irreversible damage.
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PMID:Glycolysis and energy metabolism in rat liver during warm and cold ischemia: evidence of an activation of the regulatory enzyme phosphofructokinase. 798 53

Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) may incite cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury. We evaluate herein the influence of H2O2-induced oxidative stress on heart muscle hexose metabolism in cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes, which have a substrate preference for carbohydrate. Cardiomyocyte exposure to 50 microM-1.0 mM bolus H2O2 transiently activated the pentose phosphate cycle and thereafter inhibited cellular glucose oxidation and glycolysis. These metabolic derangements were nonperoxidative in nature (as assessed in alpha-tocopherol-loaded cells) and occurred without acute change in cardiomyocyte hexose transport or glucose/glycogen reserves. Glycolytic inhibition was supported by the rapid, specific inactivation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH). The degree of GAPDH inhibition correlated directly with the magnitude of the oxidative insult and was independent of both metal-catalyzed H2O2 reduction to free radicals and lipid peroxidation. Severe GAPDH inhibition was required for a rate-limiting effect on glycolytic flux. Cardiomyocyte pyruvate dehydrogenase was also inhibited by H2O2 overload, but to a lesser degree than GAPDH such that entry of hexose-derived acetyl units into the tricarboxylic acid cycle was not as restrictive as GAPDH inactivation to glycolytic ATP production. An increase in phosphofructokinase activity accompanied GAPDH inactivation, leading to the production and accumulation of glycolytic sugar phosphates at the expense of ATP equivalents. Cardiomyocyte treatment with iodoacetate or 2-deoxyglucose indicated that GAPDH inactivation/glycolytic blockade could account for approximately 50% of the maximal ATP loss following H2O2 overload. Partial restoration of GAPDH activity after a brief H2O2 "pulse" afforded some ATP recovery. These data establish that specific aspects of heart muscle hexose catabolism are H2O2-sensitive injury targets. The biochemical pathology of H2O2 overload on cardiomyocyte carbohydrate metabolism has implications for post-ischemic cardiac bioenergetics and function.
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PMID:Hydroperoxide-induced oxidative stress impairs heart muscle cell carbohydrate metabolism. 830 15


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