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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a member of a metabolite-sensing protein kinase family that is found in all eukaryotes. AMPK activity is regulated by vigorous exercise, nutrient
starvation
and
ischemia
/hypoxia, and modulates many aspects of mammalian cell metabolism. The AMPK yeast homolog, Snf1p, plays a major role in adaption to glucose deprivation. In mammals, AMPK also has diverse roles that extend from energy metabolism through to transcriptional control.
...
PMID:Dealing with energy demand: the AMP-activated protein kinase. 1008 18
Nitric oxide (NO), an intercellular messenger and a normal metabolic product, takes an active part in the regulation of physiologically significant functions of the cardiovascular, immune, and nervous systems. At the same time when produced in excess amounts, NO as a free radical and an agent that gives rise to highly toxic oxidants (peroxynitrile, nitric dioxide, nitron ion), becomes a cause of neuronal damage and death in some brain lesions (parkinsonism, Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's chorea). Numerous experimental data show the ambiguous effects of NO on the development of cerebral infarct. NO as an active vasodilatory and antithrombogenic agent may reduce cerebral damage in early
ischemia
. There is evidence for the involvement of NO in the body's adaptation to oxygen
starvation
and ischemic tolerance formation. In the postischemic period, NO is a major factor of neuronal necrosis and apoptosis. The currently established ideas on the processes of cerebral NO production and on the pathogenetic mechanisms of this agent's cytotoxicity open up new vistas for selective blockers of various NO synthesis enzymes (neuronal, endothelial, glial cellular, and macrophagal and neutrophilic NO synthases) used in the treatment of acute vascular abnormalities of the central nervous system.
...
PMID:[The role of nitric oxide and other free radicals in ischemic brain pathology]. 1083 6
Contrary to common concepts, the brain in Alzheimer's disease (AD) does not follow a suicide but a rescue program. Widely shared features of metabolism in
starvation
, hibernation and various conditions of energy deprivation, e.g.
ischemia
, allow the definition of a deprivation syndrome which is a phylogenetically conserved adaptive response to energetic stress. It is characterized by hypometabolism, oxidative stress and adjustments of the glucose-fatty acid cycle. Cumulative evidence suggests that the brain in aging and AD actively adapts to the progressive fuel deprivation. The counterregulatory mechanisms aim to preserve glucose for anabolic needs and promote the oxidative utilization of ketone bodies. The agent mediating the metabolic switch is soluble Abeta which inhibits glucose utilization and stimulates ketone body utilization at various levels. These processes, which are initiated during normal aging, include inhibition of pro-glycolytic neurohormones, cholinergic transmission, and pyruvate dehydrogenase, the key transmitter and effector systems regulating glucose metabolism. Hormonal and effector systems which promote ketone body utilization, such as glucocorticosteroid and galanin activity, GABAergic transmission, nitric oxide, lipid transport, Ca2+ elevation, and ketone body metabolizing enzymes, are enhanced. A multitude of risk factors feed into this pathophysiological cascade at a variety of levels. Taking into account its pleiotropic regulatory actions in the deprivation response, a new name for Abeta is suggested: deprivin. On the other hand, cumulative evidence, taken together compelling, suggests that senile plaques are the dump rather than the driving force of AD. Moreover, the neurotoxic action of fibrillar Abeta is a likely in vitro artifact but does not contribute significantly to the in vivo pathophysiological events. This archaic program, conserved from bacteria to man, aims to ensure the survival of a deprived organism and controls such divergent processes as sporulation, hibernation, aging and aging-related diseases. In contrast to the immature brain, ketone body utilization of the aged brain is no longer sufficient to meet the energetic demands and is later supplemented by lactate, thus recapitulating in reverse order the sequential fuel utilization of the immature brain. The transduction pathways which operate to switch metabolism also convey the programming and balancing of the de-/redifferentiation/apoptosis cell cycle decisions. This encompasses the reiteration of developmental processes such as transcription factor activation, tau hyperphosphorylation, and establishment of growth factor independence by means of Ca2+ set point shift. Thus, the increasing energetic insufficiency results in the progressive centralization of metabolic activity to the neuronal soma, leading to pruning of the axonal/dendritic trees, loss of neuronal polarity, downregulation of neuronal plasticity and, eventually, depending on the Ca2+ -energy-redox homeostasis, degeneration of vulnerable neurons. Finally, it is outlined that genetic (e.g. Down's syndrome, APP and presenilin mutations and apoE4) and environmental risk factors represent progeroid factors which accelerate the aging process and precipitate the manifestation of AD as a progeroid systemic disease. Aging and AD are related to each other by threshold phenomena, corresponding to stage 2, the stage of resistance, and stage 3, exhaustion, of a metabolic stress response.
...
PMID:A unifying hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease. IV. Causation and sequence of events. 1106 71
Mitochondria undergo oxidative damage during reperfusion of ischemic liver. Although nutritional status affects
ischemia
-reperfusion injury in the liver, its effect on mitochondrial damage has not been evaluated. Thus, this study was designed to determine whether
starvation
influences the oxidative balance in mitochondria isolated from livers exposed to warm
ischemia
-reperfusion. Fed and 18- and 36-h food-deprived rats underwent partial hepatic
ischemia
followed by reperfusion. Mitochondria were isolated before and after
ischemia
and during reperfusion. Serum alanine transaminase was measured to assess liver injury. The mitochondrial concentrations of malondialdehyde, protein carbonyls and glutathione were determined as indicators of oxidative injury. Cell ultrastructure was assessed by transmission electron microscopy. Transaminase levels were greater in 18-h food-deprived than fed rats (after 120 min of reperfusion: 3872 +/- 400 vs. 1138 +/- 59 U/L, P < 0.01). Mitochondrial glutathione was lower in food-deprived than fed rats before and after
ischemia
, and during reperfusion. Food deprivation also was associated with significantly greater lipid and protein oxidative damage. Finally, more ultrastructural damage was observed during reperfusion in mitochondria from food-deprived rats. Prolonging the length of food deprivation to 36 h exacerbated significantly both the mitochondrial oxidative injury and the release of serum transaminases in rats (after 120 min of reperfusion: 5438 +/- 504 U/L, P < 0.01). Food deprivation was associated with greater mitochondrial oxidative injury in rat livers exposed to warm
ischemia
-reperfusion, and the extent of oxidative damage in mitochondria increased with the length of food deprivation.
...
PMID:Food deprivation exacerbates mitochondrial oxidative stress in rat liver exposed to ischemia-reperfusion injury. 1120 45
Although improving energy metabolism in ischemic brain has been accepted for the treatment of cerebrovascular diseases, administration of glucose, as an energy substrate, would aggravate ischemic brain damage via activating anaerobic glycolysis, which leads to lactate accumulation. Beta-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) is one of the ketone bodies that can be utilized as an energy source during
starvation
. The purpose of our study was to define the protective effects of BHB on brain damage induced by hypoxia, anoxia and
ischemia
. The isotonic solution of BHB administered 30 min before the induction of
ischemia
at doses over 50 mg x kg(-1) x h(-1) showed remarkable protective effects against hypoxia and anoxia. BHB administered immediately after a bilateral carotid artery ligation at a dose of 30 mg x kg(-1) x h(-1) significantly suppressed the elevation of cerebral water and sodium contents as well as maintaining high ATP and low lactate levels. In contrast, glycerin, a hypertonic agent, substantially reduced the water content but did not show any significant effect on other parameters. We demonstrated that BHB, unlike glycerin, when used as an energy substrate in ischemic brain, has protective effects on cerebral hypoxia, anoxia and
ischemia
-induced metabolic change.
...
PMID:Effect of beta-hydroxybutyrate, a cerebral function improving agent, on cerebral hypoxia, anoxia and ischemia in mice and rats. 1170 13
Acadesine, 5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide riboside (AICAR), has been claimed to protect the heart, lung, and small intestine against ischemic damage. The biochemical mechanisms of this effect of AICAR are not yet fully understood. To understand the mechanism, we examined the effect of AICAR on glucose
starvation
, since cellular responses to
ischemia
could be regarded as a protective response to an insufficient blood supply, cells might display adaptive reactions not only to oxygen deficiency but to nutrient deficiency. AICAR was found to confer strong tolerance to glucose
starvation
. By using antisense RNA expression vector for alpha subunit of 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase, the effect of AICAR was found to be dependent on 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase containing the alpha2 subunit. The AICAR effect was also dependent on the presence of amino acids, indicating an energy source switch from glucose to amino acids.
...
PMID:5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide riboside confers strong tolerance to glucose starvation in a 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase-dependent fashion. 1177 63
Hypoxia is a critical event for higher organisms, and cells and tissues react by increasing the oxygen supply by vasodilatation, angiogenesis, and erythropoiesis and maintaining cellular energy by increasing glycolysis and inhibiting anabolic pathways. Stimulation of glycolysis has been regarded as the main response that increases energy production during hypoxia; however, there is an obvious conflict during
ischemia
, because both the oxygen and glucose supply are insufficient. In this study, we found that exposure of HepG2 cells and normal fibroblasts to hypoxia induces cellular tolerance to glucose
starvation
. The tolerance induced by hypoxia is dependent on several amino acids, indicating a switch from glucose to amino acids as the energy source. When antisense RNA expression vector for 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase or protein kinase B/Akt was transfected into HepG2 cells, the induction of tolerance to glucose was greatly inhibited, indicating that the tolerance was dependent on 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase and protein kinase B/Akt. Similar tolerance was induced by nitric oxide exposure. The tolerance induced was observed in various cells and may represent a previously unknown physiological response related to hypoxia-preconditioning and tumor progression:austerity.
...
PMID:Hypoxia and nitric oxide treatment confer tolerance to glucose starvation in a 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase-dependent manner. 1209 79
Cardiac cells are subjected to hypoxia in many cardiovascular diseases. We studied a broad spectrum of genes using a macroarrays-based method to analyze RNA of rat cardiac fetal cell line H9c2 after 4 h of hypoxic conditions in the incubator-1% oxygen concentration, as compared to normoxic conditions (21% oxygen). The cDNAs were prepared from total RNAs using Atlas Rat 1.2 Array (Clontech Laboratories) and hybridized to the membrane containing 1176 rat cDNAs and 9 housekeeping control cDNAs. Genes expression was analyzed using AtlasImage 1.01 software. We found over 45 genes up-regulated in a range of 1.5-2.9 times and 9 genes down-regulated to a range of 0.4-0.7 times, under hypoxia versus normoxia. Presenilin-2 (PS2) was detected in the cultured heart cells. RT-PCR confirmed the presence of PS2 in the heart of adult rats. Using quantitative real-time RT-PCR, we further studied the expression of presenilin-2 mRNA under conditions of low oxygen supply and glucose
starvation
. Glucose deprivation itself caused significant up-regulation of the presenilin-2 (to 160%) and with low oxygen increased presenilin-2 level to over 200% of the control. Presenilin-2 has previously been associated with intercellular signaling in the central nervous system, in Alzheimer's disease. The finding of presenilin-2 in the heart and the responsiveness to low glucose and hypoxia suggests that PS2 may be regulated by conditions of
ischemia
, a condition which both the heart and brain may experience.
...
PMID:Presenilins in the heart: presenilin-2 expression is increased by low glucose and by hypoxia in cardiac cells. 1246 3
Glucose is the main substrate that fulfills energy brain demands. However, in some circumstances, such as diabetes,
starvation
, during the suckling period and the ketogenic diet, brain uses the ketone bodies, acetoacetate and beta-hydroxybutyrate, as energy sources. Ketone body utilization in brain depends directly on its blood concentration, which is normally very low, but increases substantially during the conditions mentioned above. Glutamate neurotoxicity has been implicated in neurodegeneration associated with brain
ischemia
, hypoglycemia and cerebral trauma, conditions related to energy failure, and to elevation of glutamate extracellular levels in brain. In recent years substantial evidence favoring a close relation between glutamate neurotoxic potentiality and cellular energy levels, has been compiled. We have previously demonstrated that accumulation of extracellular glutamate after inhibition of its transporters, induces neuronal death in vivo during energy impairment induced by glycolysis inhibition. In the present study we have assessed the protective potentiality of the ketone body, acetoacetate, against glutamate-mediated neuronal damage in the hippocampus of rats chronically treated with the glycolysis inhibitor, iodoacetate, and in hippocampal cultured neurons exposed to a toxic concentration of iodoacetate. Results show that acetoacetate efficiently protects against glutamate neurotoxicity both in vivo and in vitro probably by a mechanism involving its role as an energy substrate.
...
PMID:Acetoacetate protects hippocampal neurons against glutamate-mediated neuronal damage during glycolysis inhibition. 1289 May 8
Glucose-regulated proteins 75(grp75) is a member of hsp70 family. The expression of grp75 is upregulated during glucose
starvation
(such as
ischemia
). To evaluate grp75 function, CHL cells were cultured with glucose-free media for 20 h (A) and glucose-free media for 12 h + glucose-containing media for 8 h (
ischemia
reperfusion) (B). A constructed rat grp75 cDNA expression vector (pcDNA/grp75) was transfected into CHL cells and a cell strain that stably overexpressed grp75 was obtained. The transfected cells and untransfected cells(control group) were cultured with A or B. By MTT, LDH leakage measurement and flow cytometry analysis, growth rate of untransfected cells in B is significantly lower than that in glucose-containing media for 20 h (C) (p < 0.05) and A (p < 0.05). Growth rate of transfected cells is apparently higher than that of control group in B (p < 0.01). LDH liberation percentage of untransfected cells in B is obviously higher than that in C(p < 0.01) and it is not different from A(p > 0.05). LDH liberation percentage of transfected cells is apparently lower than that of control group in B(p < 0.01). Apoptosis of transfected cells is obviously lower by flow cytometry analysis. These results provide evidence for the cytoprotective function of grp75 during glucose starving and
ischemia
reperfusion.
...
PMID:[Molecular chaperone GRP75 reprove cells from injury caused by glucose deprivation]. 1472 51
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