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)

The effects of hyperglycemia on brain pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) and metabolites (ATP, PCr, and lactate) were investigated at 20 min ischemia, 0, 20, and 60 min, and 4 h reperfusion. During reperfusion, PDH activities were suppressed corresponding to the poor recovery of ATP and PCr concentrations and the increase in lactate concentration in the hyperglycemic group, suggesting that preischemic hyperglycemia may impair metabolism by suppressing PDH activity.
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PMID:Effect of hyperglycemia on pyruvate dehydrogenase activity and energy metabolites during ischemia and reperfusion in gerbil brain. 955 66

The objective of this study was to determine whether the duration of an ischemic insult effects the activity of the mitochondrial enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) in relation to the recovery of metabolites and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) immediately after ischemia and during reperfusion in gerbil cortex. Cerebral ischemia was induced, using the bilateral carotid artery occlusion method, for 20 or 60 min, followed by reperfusion up to 120 min. Immediately after ischemia PDH activity increased threefold regardless of ischemic duration. In the 60-min ischemic group, PDH remained activated, the recovery of high energy phosphates and the clearance of lactate were poor, and the rCBF was 48% of controls after 20-min reperfusion, decreasing gradually to 26% at 120-min reperfusion. In the 20-min ischemic group, PDH activity normalized quickly, the restoration of energy phosphates was good, there was a quick reduction in lactate within the first 60 min of reperfusion, and the rCBF was 65% of control at 20-min reperfusion, and remained over 48% of control throughout reperfusion. Recovery of metabolism after reperfusion did not parallel the changes in rCBF in either group, most noticeably in the 60-min ischemic group. The slow normalization of PDH activity reflected the poor recovery of metabolites in the 60-min ischemic group, indicating that PDH activity is important in the resynthesis of energy metabolites during reperfusion. In conclusion, prolonging the ischemic insult effected PDH activity during reperfusion, impaired recovery of energy metabolites, and worsened the recovery of rCBF.
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PMID:The effect of duration of cerebral ischemia on brain pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, energy metabolites, and blood flow during reperfusion in gerbil brain. 959 22

Clinical studies have demonstrated improved myocardial recovery after severe ischemia in response to acute triiodothyronine (T3) treatment. We determined whether T3 improves the recovery of ischemic hearts by improving energy substrate metabolism. Isolated working rat hearts were perfused with 5.5 mM glucose and 1.2 mM palmitate and were subjected to 30 min of no-flow ischemia. Glycolysis, glucose oxidation, and palmitate oxidation were measured during aerobic reperfusion by adding [5-3H]glucose, [U-14C]glucose, or [9,10-3H]palmitate to the perfusate, respectively. During reperfusion, cardiac work in untreated hearts recovered to a lesser extent than myocardial O2 consumption (MVO2), resulting in a decreased recovery of cardiac efficiency, which recovered to only 25% of preischemic values. Treatment of hearts with T3 (10 nM) before ischemia increased glucose oxidation during reperfusion, which was associated with a significant increase in pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity, the rate-limiting enzyme for glucose oxidation. In contrast, T3 had no effect on MVO2, glycolysis, or palmitate oxidation. This resulted in a significant decrease in H+ production from glycolysis uncoupled from glucose oxidation (2.7 +/- 0.3 and 1.9 +/- 0.3 micromol . g dry wt-1 . min-1 in control and T3-treated hearts, respectively, P < 0.05), as well as a 3.2-fold improvement in cardiac work and a 2.3-fold increase in cardiac efficiency compared with untreated postischemic hearts (P < 0.05). These data suggest that T3 can exert acute effects that improve the coupling of glycolysis to glucose oxidation, thereby decreasing H+ production and increasing cardiac efficiency as well as contractile function during reperfusion of the postischemic heart.
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PMID:Acute effects of triiodothyronine on glucose and fatty acid metabolism during reperfusion of ischemic rat hearts. 972 4

Aberrations in cell Ca2+ homeostasis have been known to parallel both changes in membrane lipid composition and aging. Previous work has shown that the lowered efficiency of work performance, which occurs in isolated hearts from rats fed a diet rich in n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), relative to those fed n-3 PUFA, could be raised by mitochondrial (Mito) Ca2+ transport inhibition. We tested whether, after Ca2+-dependent stress, the Ca2+-dependent activation of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDHA/PDHTotal) and Mito Ca2+ cycling could be manipulated by varying the ratio of n-3 to n-6 PUFA in Mito membranes in young (6 mo) and aged (24 mo) isolated rat hearts treated to n-3 or n-6 PUFA-rich diet. Inotropic stimulation by 1 microM norepinephrine (NE) of 24-mo n-6 PUFA-rich hearts elevated total Mito Ca2+ content 38% more than in 6-mo hearts (P < 0. 05). However, both the NE-induced rise in Mito Ca2+ and the difference in response between 6- and 24-mo hearts were partially abolished by n-3 PUFA treatment. NE increased the fractional activation of PDH by 44% above control levels in the 6-mo group compared with 49% in the 24-mo group after n-6 PUFA diet. However, NE stimulation of PDHA was attenuated by n-3 PUFA diet, attaining values only 29 and 23% above control levels in 6- and 24-mo mitochondria, respectively (P < 0.05). Global ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) in n-6 PUFA hearts gave rise to higher levels of total Mito Ca2+ concentration (P < 0.0001) and PDHA (P < 0.0001) compared with n-3 PUFA. Ruthenium red (3.4 microM) abolished the effects of I/R in all groups. With aging, heart Mito membrane phosphatidylcholine was increased after n-6 PUFA-rich diet (by approximately 15%, P < 0.05), whereas cardiolipin and n-3 PUFA content were diminished by 31% (P < 0.05) and 73% (P < 0.05), respectively. These effects were prevented by n-3 PUFA-rich diet. The present study, by directly manipulating the cardiac Mito membrane n-3-to-n-6 PUFA ratio, shows that the activation of Ca2+-dependent PDH can be augmented when the n-3-to-n-6 PUFA ratio is low (n-6 PUFA-rich diet; 24-mo hearts) or attenuated when this ratio is relatively high (n-3 PUFA-rich diet). We propose that one of the consequences of dietary-induced manipulation of membrane phospholipids and PUFAs may be the altered flux of Ca2+ across the Mito membrane and thus altered intramitochondrial Ca2+-dependent processes.
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PMID:PUFA and aging modulate cardiac mitochondrial membrane lipid composition and Ca2+ activation of PDH. 988 28

The effects of ischemia and postischemic reperfusion on the functions of the heart and its mitochondria were studied with special attention to the effect of nitric oxide (NO) by treatment of rat hearts with the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) or its noninhibitory isomer N(G)-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester (D-NAME). NO generated during reperfusion caused increase in coronary flow (CF), but had no effect on the left ventricular pressure (LVP) or heart rate (HR). The ATP level of the heart decreased during ischemia and was not completely restored by introduction of oxygen during reperfusion due to damage of complexes I and II of the respiratory chain of mitochondria by NO. Inhibition of the respiratory chain resulted in generation of hydrogen peroxide, and NO and NO-derived species generated after production of NO caused further damage of various proteins in mitochondria, such as complexes I and II of the respiratory chain and pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH). These results suggested that NO generated on reperfusion was the primary cause of mitochondrial dysfunction by damage of complexes I and II of the respiratory chain, with consequent increase of CF in the heart.
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PMID:Effect of endogenous nitric oxide on energy metabolism of rat heart mitochondria during ischemia and reperfusion. 989 30

Augmented pyruvate oxidation via pharmacological stimulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) during reperfusion has been related to improved recovery of postischemic hearts independent of glycolytic activity. This study examined recovery of postischemic rabbit hearts during activation of PDH with dichloroacetate (DCA) in the presence of lactate, as a source of pyruvate, to determine the response to substrate-dependent changes in cytosolic redox state. After 10 min of ischemia, isolated hearts were reperfused with either 2.5 mM or 0. 5 mM pyruvate (Pyr) or 2.5 mM lactate (Lac), with or without 5 mM DCA. (13)C-enriched substrates allowed NMR assessment of metabolic perturbations. During normal perfusion, Pyr and Lac supported similar mechanical work. Increasing Pyr oxidation restored postischemic rate-pressure product to 82 +/- 4 and 88 +/- 6% of preischemic values during reperfusion with 2.5 and 0.5 mM Pyr, respectively, vs. 61 +/- 6 and 45 +/- 14% for untreated 2.5 and 0.5 mM Pyr, respectively (P < 0.05). In contrast, increasing Lac oxidation did not benefit recovery of RPP in untreated (44 +/- 7%) vs. DCA-treated 36 +/- 4% hearts. Thus the benefit of PDH activation for contractile recovery of postischemic hearts is mediated by the source of pyruvate, which also influences cytosolic redox state.
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PMID:Cytosolic redox state mediates postischemic response to pyruvate dehydrogenase stimulation. 1044 88

Alterations in brain metabolism after ischemia and reperfusion are described herein. Several roles played by carnitine and acetylcarnitine can be of particular relevance in counteracting these brain metabolism alterations. The effects of acetylcarnitine in several experimental models of brain ischemia in rats are described. The data obtained show that acetylcarnitine can have significant clinical neuroprotective effects when administered shortly after the onset of focal or global cerebral ischemia. In the canine cardiac arrest model, acetylcarnitine improved the postischemic neurological outcome and tissue levels of lactate and pyruvate were normalized. A trend toward reversal of pyruvate dehydrogenase inhibition in acetylcarnitine-treated dogs was also observed. The immediate postischemic administration of acetylcarnitine prevents free radical-mediated protein oxidation in the frontal cortex of dogs submitted to cardiac arrest and resuscitation. The transfer of the acetyl group to coenzyme A (CoA) to form acetyl-CoA as the primary source of energy is a plausible mechanism of action of acetylcarnitine.
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PMID:Attenuation by acetyl-L-carnitine of neurological damage and biochemical derangement following brain ischemia and reperfusion. 1046 34

The purpose of this report was to describe mRNA abundance for the glycolytic enzymes glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), pyruvate kinase, and pyruvate dehydrogenase in ischemic and adjacent aerobic myocardium. Mechanical, metabolic, and mRNA data were acquired in a pig model of regulated coronary flow using extracorporeal perfusion. Trials of coronary hypoperfusion included sustained and intermittent exposures of acute ischemia with or without reperfusion. These were compared with a chronic 4-day model of partial coronary stenosis. In ischemic tissues, levels of mRNA, normalized by mRNA for beta-actin, were increased over control values for GAPDH (range 2.7- to 4.6-fold), pyruvate kinase (2.9-fold), and pyruvate dehydrogenase (2.1-fold). It is of interest that increases in mRNA levels over control values were also observed in adjacent aerobic heart muscle from intervention hearts, including 3.6- to 4.5-fold elevations in message for GAPDH and a 2.1-fold increase in signal for pyruvate dehydrogenase. Augmentation in mRNA abundance occurred in as short a time as 40 min of ischemia and was maintained for as long as 4 days in partial coronary stenosis. Whether the former time was of an interval sufficient to affect protein production is problematic, but the latter time was ample to influence enzyme concentration, which may in turn have regulated glycolysis in this condition.
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PMID:Alteration of gene expression for glycolytic enzymes in aerobic and ischemic myocardium. 1051 79

Chronic impairment of aerobic energy metabolism accompanies global cerebral ischemia and reperfusion and likely contributes to delayed neuronal cell death. Reperfusion-dependent inhibition of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHC) enzyme activity has been described and proposed to be at least partially responsible for this metabolic abnormality. This study tested the hypothesis that global cerebral ischemia and reperfusion results in the loss of pyruvate dehydrogenase immunoreactivity and that such loss is associated with selective neuronal vulnerability to transient ischemia. Following 10 min canine cardiac arrest, resuscitation, and 2 or 24 h of restoration of spontaneous circulation, brains were either perfusion fixed for immunohistochemical analyses or biopsy samples were removed for Western immunoblot analyses of PDHC immunoreactivity. A significant decrease in immunoreactivity was observed in frontal cortex homogenates from both 2 and 24 h reperfused animals compared to samples from nonischemic control animals. These results were supported by confocal microscopic immunohistochemical determinations of pyruvate dehydrogenase immunoreactivity in the neuronal cell bodies located within different layers of the frontal cortex. Loss of immunoreactivity was greatest for pyramidal neurons located in layer V compared to neurons in layers IIIc/IV, which correlates with a greater vulnerability of layer V neurons to delayed death caused by transient global cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Neuronal subclass-selective loss of pyruvate dehydrogenase immunoreactivity following canine cardiac arrest and resuscitation. 1068 78

Trimetazidine is a clinically effective antianginal agent that has no negative inotropic or vasodilator properties. Although it is thought to have direct cytoprotective actions on the myocardium, the mechanism(s) by which this occurs is as yet undefined. In this study, we determined what effects trimetazidine has on both fatty acid and glucose metabolism in isolated working rat hearts and on the activities of various enzymes involved in fatty acid oxidation. Hearts were perfused with Krebs-Henseleit solution containing 100 microU/mL insulin, 3% albumin, 5 mmol/L glucose, and fatty acids of different chain lengths. Both glucose and fatty acids were appropriately radiolabeled with either (3)H or (14)C for measurement of glycolysis, glucose oxidation, and fatty acid oxidation. Trimetazidine had no effect on myocardial oxygen consumption or cardiac work under any aerobic perfusion condition used. In hearts perfused with 5 mmol/L glucose and 0.4 mmol/L palmitate, trimetazidine decreased the rate of palmitate oxidation from 488+/-24 to 408+/-15 nmol x g dry weight(-1) x minute(-1) (P<0.05), whereas it increased rates of glucose oxidation from 1889+/-119 to 2378+/-166 nmol x g dry weight(-1) x minute(-1) (P<0.05). In hearts subjected to low-flow ischemia, trimetazidine resulted in a 210% increase in glucose oxidation rates. In both aerobic and ischemic hearts, glycolytic rates were unaltered by trimetazidine. The effects of trimetazidine on glucose oxidation were accompanied by a 37% increase in the active form of pyruvate dehydrogenase, the rate-limiting enzyme for glucose oxidation. No effect of trimetazidine was observed on glycolysis, glucose oxidation, fatty acid oxidation, or active pyruvate dehydrogenase when palmitate was substituted with 0.8 mmol/L octanoate or 1.6 mmol/L butyrate, suggesting that trimetazidine directly inhibits long-chain fatty acid oxidation. This reduction in fatty acid oxidation was accompanied by a significant decrease in the activity of the long-chain isoform of the last enzyme involved in fatty acid beta-oxidation, 3-ketoacyl coenzyme A (CoA) thiolase activity (IC(50) of 75 nmol/L). In contrast, concentrations of trimetazidine in excess of 10 and 100 micromol/L were needed to inhibit the medium- and short-chain forms of 3-ketoacyl CoA thiolase, respectively. Previous studies have shown that inhibition of fatty acid oxidation and stimulation of glucose oxidation can protect the ischemic heart. Therefore, our data suggest that the antianginal effects of trimetazidine may occur because of an inhibition of long-chain 3-ketoacyl CoA thiolase activity, which results in a reduction in fatty acid oxidation and a stimulation of glucose oxidation.
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PMID:The antianginal drug trimetazidine shifts cardiac energy metabolism from fatty acid oxidation to glucose oxidation by inhibiting mitochondrial long-chain 3-ketoacyl coenzyme A thiolase. 1072 Apr 6


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