Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It has been observed that basal and/or TRH-stimulated serum TSH levels occasionally conflict with the actual values of circulating thyroid hormones in patients with anorexia nervosa. In the present study sixteen female patients with anorexia nervosa during self-induced starvation displayed clinical findings suggesting hypothyroidism, e.g., cold intolerance, constipation, bradycardia, hypothermia and hypercholesterolemia in association with decreased serum total T3 (62.8 +/- 5.2 ng/dl) and T4 (6.6 +/- 0.3 micrograms/dl). Markedly decreased T3 correlated positively with average heart rate (r = 0.5655, P less than 0.025) and negatively with total cholesterol (r = -0.7413, P less than 0.005). This result may suggest that peripheral metabolic state of the underweight anorexics depends considerably upon the serum T3 concentration. Despite decreased total thyroid hormones, free T4 assayed by radioimmunoassay was normal in all five cases examined (1.4 +/- 0.2 ng/dl) and the free T4 index in fifteen cases was normal except in one case. Basal TSH was not increased and TSH response to exogenous TRH was not exaggerated in any. These results may be compatible with a theory that free T4 has a dominant influence on pituitary TSH secretion. Furthermore, glucocorticoids may also have some influence on depressed TSH response, because an inverse correlation between increased plasma cortisol and the sum of net TSH increase after TRH was observed in twelve cases examined. In conclusion, it is suggested that normal sensitivity of peripheral tissues and pituitary thyrotroph to different circulating thyroid hormones is maintained in anorexia nervosa patients even during severe self-induced starvation, and that the metabolic state in these patients is considerably under the influence of circulating T3.
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PMID:Assessment of the relationship between serum thyroid hormone levels and peripheral metabolism in patients with anorexia nervosa. 319 56

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene YPT1 encodes a protein that exhibits significant homology to the mammalian ras proteins. Using gene disruption techniques, we have shown that the intact YPT1 gene is required for spore viability. Lethality caused by loss of YPT1 function, unlike that caused by loss of the yeast ras homologs RAS1 and RAS2 function, is not suppressed by the bcy1 mutation, suggesting that YPT1 does not act through the adenylate cyclase regulatory system. A cold-sensitive allele, ypt1-1, was constructed. At the nonpermissive temperature, mutants died, exhibiting aberrant nuclear morphology, as well as abnormal distribution of actin and tubulin. The mutant cells died without exhibiting classical cell-cycle-specific arrest; nevertheless, examination of cellular DNA content suggests that the YPT1 function is required, particularly after S phase. Cells carrying the ypt1-1 mutation died upon nitrogen starvation even at a temperature permissive for growth; diploid cells homozygous for ypt1-1 did not sporulate. The YPT1 gene is thus involved in nutritional regulation of the cell cycle as well as in normal progression through the mitotic cell cycle.
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PMID:The ras-like yeast YPT1 gene is itself essential for growth, sporulation, and starvation response. 330 75

As whole organisms, most mammals have a poor tolerance for hypothermia. But their cells may have a capacity for a far wider cold tolerance, which may be expressed in peripheral tissues, sporadically in core tissue and in cultured cells. Against this background the cold resistance of cells of deep hibernators may be seen as the extreme of a continuum and is complicated by the consideration that the voluntary hypothermia of hibernation is probably in most cases a metabolic adaptation to forestall starvation. Similarly, cold resistance of peripheral tissues may in diving animals be confounded by the need to be adapted to hypoxia as well. Hence, attempts to analyse cold resistance by comparisons of absolute rates of arbitrarily chosen reactions may be misleading. A more useful approach is analysis of maintenance of balance: balance between ATP synthesis and utilization, balance between macromolecule synthesis and degradation and balance between pumps and leaks. Cation pumps and leaks constitute a major component of energy utilization and are central to other cell functions, even during minimal metabolism. Hence, the maintenance of ion gradients is a central issue in understanding adaptation not only to hypothermia but also to starvation and hypothermia. Of the three hypometabolic states, hypothermia has been best studied in this regard. In most cases, passive permeability is more reduced at low temperature in cold-tolerant cells than in cold-sensitive ones. In some cases there is also a difference in Na-K pump activity and perhaps in ATP dependent Ca-pump activity. Pump activities and probably the maintenance of minimal leak require ongoing metabolism. The question of whether, in cold-sensitive cells, energy supplies are adequate at low temperature was once the focus of this field, but has been ignored for a decade without having been fully resolved. There are many instances of less temperature sensitivity of specific metabolic activities (mitochondrial respiration, etc.) in hibernators than in non-hibernators, without any verification of whether this is essential for survival at low body temperature. Certainly, robust pumping has been found in some failing cold-sensitive cells at low temperature, suggesting no shortage of ATP in these cases, but in other cases the issue may be a more complex one than just that of ATP availability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Cold tolerance in mammalian cells. 333 88

Tri-iodothyronine (T3)production by interscapular brown fat was studied by measurements of arterio-venous differences and blood flow across the tissue in rats exposed to the following situations: controls, acute cold, chronic cold and starvation. Results demonstrate that brown adipose tissue is a source of systemic T3 in the rat and that the T3 release is modulated according to the physiological situation of the animal: increased in cold exposure and inhibited in starvation.
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PMID:Direct assessment of brown adipose tissue as a site of systemic tri-iodothyronine production in the rat. 360 77

In general, the activities of enzymes in brown adipose tissue (BAT) are more similar to those in white adipose tissue than those in liver. Thus the activities of the glycolytic enzymes hexokinase and 6-phosphofructokinase are high but those of glucose 6-phosphatase and fructose bisphosphatase are non-detectable in the two adipose tissues. The activity of HMG-CoA synthase was non-detectable in BAT indicating that this tissue, unlike liver, cannot produce ketone bodies from fatty acid oxidation but, since the tissue possesses a high activity of HMG-CoA lyase, it might produce ketone bodies from leucine catabolism. The findings suggest that 'metabolically' brown adipose tissue can be classified better as an adipose tissue than as a peripheral liver. A high activity of 3-oxoacid CoA transferase but a non-detectable activity of 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase suggests that BAT can utilise acetoacetate but not 3-hydroxybutyrate for heat generation during cold exposure plus starvation.
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PMID:Activities of some key enzymes of carbohydrate, ketone body, adenosine and glutamine metabolism in liver, and brown and white adipose tissues of the rat. 374 27

Stress caused by 3-hour cold exposure of the animals (2-4 degrees C) or 7-day starvation is accompanied by the increase of protein autolysis in liver by 21%. At that the intensity of the autolysis in brain leaves unchanged. In spite of the same changes of the autolysis intensity in brain and in liver in cold-exposed and starved animals, the level of pholinpositive compounds in liver and brain of these two groups of animals changes in different ways in comparison with the control one. The level of pholinpositive compounds in liver of cold-exposed aminals lowers by 51%, in liver of starved animals does not change; in brain of cold-exposed animals decreases by 27% and in brain of starved ones increases by 69%. The data obtained show the autonomy of nerve tissue in the metabolic reaction of organism under any stress.
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PMID:[Effect of extreme exposure on the intensity of autolysis in the brain and liver of rats]. 380 53

The conditions under which frogs are kept prior to experimentation were found to have a measurable effect on peripheral nerve structure. Frogs kept for 12 weeks at 4 degree C had markedly shrunken sciatic nerve fibers compared with frogs kept at 19 degrees C. Intermediate fiber shrinkage was found for frogs kept at 19 degrees C without feeding. Counts of neurofilaments and microtubules showed that fiber shrinkage was from a preferential loss of filaments, indicating cold- or starvation-induced atrophy of the axon's cyto-skeleton. This effect, however, was superimposed with additional osmotic axonal shrinkage, causing filament densities to increase per area. There were no changes in myelin sheath thickness due to cold adaptation or fasting.
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PMID:Effects of cold adaptation and starvation on sciatic nerve fibers in the frog. 387 48

The amount of soluble tubulin in a temperature-sensitive (ts) size mutant of the ciliate Tetrahymena was measured in a variety of physiological conditions. For this purpose a competitive ELISA assay for tubulin was set up. The assay is based on an antiserum against Tetrahymena axonemal tubulin. Characterization of the antiserum shows its mono-specificity towards tubulin as well as its potential to recognize tubulin from a wide variety of cellular sources and organisms. After fractionation of the cells into soluble material, cold-labile and cold-resistant structures, we found very little tubulin soluble (less than 20% of the total), while most of the tubulin is polymerized, especially into cortical structures. Prolonged starvation does not alter the tubulin content. During the culture growth cycle the percentage of the soluble tubulin increases. Growing the ts mutant at high temperature to a large cell size will also increase the pool of soluble tubulin to a large extent. Only under this condition is the amount of soluble tubulin about equal to that fixed in cilia. The tubulins in the three different compartments are polymorphic and have a different metabolism. This is indicated by the much higher specific activity of soluble tubulin compared with the structurally bound material. In agreement, the half-life of the soluble tubulin is shorter than that of the cortical tubulin.
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PMID:An estimation of the soluble tubulin content in Tetrahymena cells of normal and of size-altered phenotype. 394 Feb 32

In a starvation buffer containing 10(-3) M divalent cations, phiX174 undergoes viral eclipse above 20 C when attached to intact host cells. An in vitro structural transition that is similar to that observed in this in vivo eclipse reaction occurs over the same temperature range in 0.1 M CaCl(2) (pH 7.2). Since both reactions result in a loss of infectivity, their kinetics have been compared in this report. Both exhibit a biphasic first-order loss in PFU that is a result of two competing first-order processes. However, a single type of heterogeneity in the population of virions is not the basis for both competing slower reactions. The Arrhenius plots of the faster components show that the in vitro eclipse reaction has the same activation energy of 35 kcal/mol (ca. 1.47 x 10(5) J/mol) as the in vivo reaction but a 10-fold lower Arrhenius preexponential factor. This is further evidence that certain features of the in vivo mechanism are retained in the in vitro reaction. In the case of the slower components, the in vitro reaction has an activation energy of 37 kcal/mol (1.55 x 10(5) J/mol), whereas that of the in vivo reaction is only 5 kcal/mol (2.1 x 10(4) J/mol). A similar analysis has been performed on a cold-sensitive eclipse mutant of phiX174. In vivo, the mutation is expressed by a two- to three-fold lower Arrhenius preexponential factor for both components of the eclipse reaction when compared to wt virus. The activation energies for both components are the same as wt virus. These results suggest that the mechanism of the eclipse reaction can be operationally divided into two aspects, each subject to mutational alteration.
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PMID:Mechanism of adsorption and eclipse of bacteriophage phi chi 174. 3. Comparison of the activation parameters for the in vitro and in vivo eclipse reactions with mutant and wild-type virus. 460 33

1. Aggressive behaviour was elicited in rats that had been deprived of food for 20 h daily (starved), by chronic administration of Cannabis sativa extract or (-)-Delta(9)-trans-tetrahydrocannabinol.2. The influence of intraperitoneal (i.p.) or oral glucose administration, cold environment, acidosis, and corn, and protein-free diets on this aggressiveness was studied.3. Intraperitoneal injections of glucose (100-1,600 mg/kg) did not alter the aggressiveness induced by marihuana in starved rats; glucose given orally, however, blocked this behaviour.4. Low temperature (14 degrees C) strongly potentiated the aggressive behaviour induced by marihuana in the starved rats.5. Lactic acid in doses capable of potentiating thiopental anaesthesia, failed to alter the marihuana-aggressiveness of starved rats or to facilitate this effect of marihuana in rats fed ad libitum. The same negative results were obtained with ammonium chloride.6. In rats fed ad libitum with protein-free or corn diets, marihuana administered chronically did not elicit aggressive behaviour. However, aggressiveness appeared when rats were fed for only 2 h daily on those diets.7. The results suggest that the stress of hunger (and not hypoglycaemia, acidosis or lack of specific nutrients due to starvation) is the factor that facilitates the development of aggressive behaviour by chronic administration of marihuana.
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PMID:Factors influencing the aggressiveness elicited by marihuana in food-deprived rats. 506 30


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