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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute
starvation
of adult rats resulted in a rise in the electroconvulsive threshold at 48 hours (P less than .10) and at 72 hours (P less than .01), but not at 24 hours. Biochemical correlates included (1) ketonemia and mild hypoglycemia in the blood; (2) a significant rise in the brain cytoplasmic phosphorylation potential and in the energy charge potential; (3) a shift in the brain cytoplasmic oxidation-reduction potential to a more oxidized state; (4) probable partial inhibitions in brain phosphofructokinase and
pyruvate dehydrogenase
; and (5) relatively small increases in brain sodium (4.1%), potassium (2.4%), and chloride (4.3%). No major differences were seen in brain water content or adenosine triphosphatase activity. The observed cerebral biochemical alterations are believed to be the consequence of increased ketone body utilization, although the precise relationship to the alteration in the electroconvulsive threshold remains unclear.
...
PMID:Starvation and seizures. Observation on the electroconvulsive threshold and cerebral metabolism of the starved adult rat. 12 78
1. The regulation of glucose uptake and disposition in skeletal muscle was studied in the isolated perfused rat hindquarter. 2. Insulin and exercise, induced by sciatic-nerve stimulation, enhanced glucose uptake about tenfold in fed and starved rats, but were without effect in rats with diabetic ketoacidosis. 3. At rest, the oxidation of lactate (0.44 mumol/min per 30 g muscle in fed rats) was decreased by 75% in both starved and diabetic rats, whereas the release of alanine and lactate (0.41 and 1.35 mumol/min per 30 g respectively in the fed state) was increased. Glycolysis, defined as the sum of lactate+alanine release and lactate oxidation, was not decreased in either
starvation
or diabetes. 4. In all groups, exercise tripled O2 consumption (from approximately 8 to approximately 25 mumol/min per 30 g of muscle) and increased the release and oxidation of lactate five- to ten-fold. The differences in lactate release between fed, starved and diabetic rats observed at rest were no longer apparent; however, lactate oxidation was still several times greater in the fed group. 5. Perfusion of the hindquarter of a fed rat with palmitate, octanoate or acetoacetate did not alter glucose uptake or lactate release in either resting or exercising muslce; however, lactate oxidation was significantly inhibited by acetoacetate, which also increased the intracellular concentration of acetyl-CoA. 6. The data suggest that neither that neither glycolysis nor the capacity for glucose transport are inhbitied in the perfused hindquarter during
starvation
or perfusion with fatty acids or ketone bodies. On the other hand, lactate oxidation is inhibited, suggesting diminished activity of
pyruvate dehydrogenase
. 7. Differences in the regulation of glucose metabolism in heart and skeletal muscle and the role of the glucose/fatty acid cycle in each tissue are discussed.
...
PMID:Glucose metabolism in perfused skeletal muscle. Effects of starvation, diabetes, fatty acids, acetoacetate, insulin and exercise on glucose uptake and disposition. 13 49
1. The ;initial activity' of the
pyruvate dehydrogenase
enzyme complex in whole tissue or mitochondrial extracts of lactating rat mammary glands was greatly decreased by 24 or 48h
starvation
of the rats. Injection of insulin and glucose into starved rats 60min before removal of the glands abolished this difference in ;initial activities'. 2. The ;total activity' of the enzyme complex in such extracts was revealed by incubation in the presence of free Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) ions (more than 10 and 0.1mm respectively) and a crude preparation of pig heart pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase.
Starvation
did not alter this ;total activity'. It is assumed that the decline in ;initial activity' of the enzyme complex derived from the glands of starved animals was due to increased phosphorylation of its alpha-subunit by intrinsic pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase. 3.
Starvation
led to an increase in intrinsic pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity in both whole tissue and mitochondrial extracts. Injection of insulin into starved animals 30min before removal of the lactating mammary glands abolished the increase in pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activity in whole-tissue extracts. 4. Pyruvate (1mm) prevented ATP-induced inactivation of the enzyme complex in mitochondrial extracts from glands of fed animals. In similar extracts from starved animals pyruvate was ineffective. 5.
Starvation
led to a decline in activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase in mitochondrial extracts, but not in whole-tissue extracts. 6. These changes in activity of the intrinsic kinase and phosphatase of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of lactating rat mammary gland are not explicable by current theories of regulation of the complex.
...
PMID:The mode of regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase of lactating rat mammary gland. Effects of starvation and insulin. 21 55
In animals the
pyruvate dehydrogenase
reaction is mainly responsible for the irreversible loss of glucose carbon by oxidation. Regulation of this reaction is shown to be a major determinant of glucose conservation in
starvation
and diabetes. Estimates of conservation in man in
starvation
and diabetes are reviewed. The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex is inhibited by products of its reactions; it is also regulated by a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle catalysed by a kinase intrinsic to the complex and by a more loosely associated phosphatase. Inactivation is largely accomplished by phosphorylation of the tetrameric decarboxylase component (alpha2beta2) to alpha2Pbeta2. Complete phosphorylation produces the (alpha2P3)beta2 form. Both forms are completely reactivated by phosphatase action but the initial rate of reactivation of a complex containing alpha2Pbeta2 is approximately three times that of (alpha2P3)beta2. The proportion of active (dephosphorylated) complex is decreased in rat tissues by
starvation
and diabetes and in perfused rat heart by oxidation of fatty acids and ketone bodies. In adipose tissue in vitro, insulin increases the proportion of active complex and lipolytic hormones may decrease this proportion. It is suggested that rates of oxidation of lipid fuels may be a major determinant of the activity of
pyruvate dehydrogenase
in tissues in relation to the actions of insulin and lipolytic hormones and the effects of diabetes and
starvation
. Phosphorylation and inactivation of the complex are enhanced by high mitochondrial ratios of [acetyl-CoA]/[CoA], [ATP]/[ADP], [NADH]/[NAD+] and low concentrations of pyruvate, Mg2+ and Ca2+, and vice versa.
...
PMID:Regulation of pyruvate oxidation and the conservation of glucose. 37 69
Starvation
increased
pyruvate dehydrogenase
(
PDH
) kinase activity in extracts of freshly excised rat soleus 2.2-fold (from 0.6 min-1 in fed rats to 1.31 min-1 in 48-h-starved rats). In fed rats, activities were unchanged following 24 h of culture in medium 199, but increased 2.1-fold on 24 h of culture with 50 microM dibutyryl cAMP plus 1 mM n-octanoate and 1.6-1.7-fold with either agent alone. Approx. 70% of the increase in PDH kinase induced by
starvation
was lost following 24 h of culture in medium 199; the loss was prevented by 50 microM dibutyryl cAMP plus 1 mM n-octanoate. cAMP concentrations in fresh soleus muscle were 1 nmol/g (fed rats) and 1.6 nmol/g (starved rats). After 20-60 min of culture the fed-starved difference disappeared and [cAMP] fell to 0.4 nmol/g. Calcitonin-gene-related peptide (CGRP) increased cAMP 3-fold; the increase was maintained throughout 24 h of culture, but was readily reversed at 30 min or 24 h of culture by 60-min incubation with CGRP-free medium.
Starvation
of the rat (48 h) had no effect on the sensitivity of soleus towards the [cAMP]-increasing effect of CGRP. It is concluded that culture may reverse effects of
starvation
on PDH kinase activity by lowering cAMP and by removal from the in vivo effects of circulating free fatty acids; and that
starvation
and CGRP had no detectable long-term effects on the cAMP system in soleus muscle.
...
PMID:Cyclic AMP and free fatty acids in the longer-term regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase in rat soleus muscle. 131 45
Starvation
for 48 h elicited a 74% increase in hepatic
pyruvate dehydrogenase
(
PDH
) kinase activity, measured directly by 32Pi-incorporation from [gamma-32P]ATP into a synthetic peptide corresponding to the major phosphorylation site on E1. The administration of chow ad libitum to previously-starved rats suppressed hepatic PDH kinase activity by only approx. 20% within 2 h of re-feeding, and the relatively high activity of PDH kinase was associated with continued suppression of PDC complex re-activation. Whereas there was no further decline in PDH kinase activity over the next 2 h, PDC re-activation to the fed value was observed during this time interval. PDH kinase activity decreased to fed values only after 8 h.
...
PMID:Hepatic pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase activities during the starved-to-fed transition. 155 50
1. Withdrawal of food from lactating rats produced a rapid and dramatic decrease in the uptake of glucose by the mammary gland and an inhibition of the rate of fatty acid synthesis that could not be explained alone by decreased substrate supply to the tissue. 2. Within the first 6 hr
starvation
, fatty acid synthesis and
pyruvate dehydrogenase
activity were inhibited by 87 and 80%, respectively, but acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity did not change significantly. 3. Between 6 and 24 hr
starvation
, total and expressed activities of acetyl-CoA carboxylase decreased by 62 and 55%, respectively. 4. The ratio of fructose-6-phosphate/fructose-1,6-bisphosphate concentration in mammary tissue increased 9-fold during the first 6 hr
starvation
, indicating an inhibition of 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase. However, the major inhibition of this enzyme occurred between 6 and 24 hr
starvation
when this metabolite ratio increased a further 160-fold in parallel with increased tissue citrate concentration. 5. The increase in citrate concentration between 6 and 24 hr
starvation
correlated with acetyl-CoA carboxylase inactivation and ketone body accumulation in the mammary gland. 6. This study confirms the asynchronous control of three important regulatory steps in the pathway of glucose utilization and fatty acid synthesis in the lactating rat mammary gland.
...
PMID:Regulation of fatty acid synthesis in lactating rat mammary gland in the fed to starved transition: asynchronous control of pyruvate dehydrogenase, phosphofructokinase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase. 168 75
The activity of
pyruvate dehydrogenase
(
PDH
) complex and PDH kinase were measured in brown adipose tissue (BAT) of 4-week-gold thioglucose (GTG)-obese mice. The proportion of
PDH
complex in the active dephosphorylated form was 2-fold higher in BAT of post-absorptive obese mice compared with lean controls. This result was consistent with the higher circulating insulin concentration observed in GTG-obese mice. In both obese and lean mice the
PDH
-complex activity in BAT decreased after 24 h
starvation
and increased in response to supraphysiological insulin injection, indicating that the
PDH
complex is insulin-responsive in BAT of GTG-obese mice. There was no difference in the PDH kinase activity of BAT in post-absorptive or insulin-injected lean and obese mice, suggesting that the higher
PDH
-complex activity in obese mice was not due to decreased PDH kinase activity. There is no evidence for a decreased activity of
PDH
complex contributing to insulin resistance in BAT of 4-week-GTG-obese mice.
...
PMID:Pyruvate dehydrogenase-complex activity in brown adipose tissue of gold thioglucose-obese mice. 211 59
The increased activity of
pyruvate dehydrogenase
(
PDH
) kinase induced in hearts of rats by
starvation
for 48 h was maintained following preparation of cardiac myocytes, and it was also maintained, though at a decreased level, after 25 h of culture in medium 199. This loss of PDH kinase activity was not prevented by n-octanoate, dibutyryl cyclic AMP or glucagon. The PDH kinase activity of myocytes from fed rats was increased to that of starved rats after 25 h of culture with n-octanoate, dibutyryl cyclic AMP or both agents together.
...
PMID:Longer-term regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase in cultured rat cardiac myocytes. 215 9
In the fed state, hyperthyroidism increased glucose utilization indices (GUIs) of skeletal muscles containing a lower proportion of oxidative fibres. Glycogen concentrations were unchanged, but active
pyruvate dehydrogenase
(PDHa) activities were decreased. Hyperthyroidism attenuated the effects of 48 h of
starvation
to decrease muscle GUI. Glycogen concentrations and PDHa activities after 48 h of
starvation
were low and similar in euthyroid and hyperthyroid rats. The increase in glucose uptake and phosphorylation relative to oxidation and storage in skeletal muscle induced by hyperthyroidism may contribute to increased glucose re-cycling in the fed hyperthyroid state and to glucose turnover in the starved hyperthyroid state.
...
PMID:Glucose utilization by skeletal muscles in vivo in experimental hyperthyroidism in the rat. 224 23
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