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

Arabidopsis seedlings grown for 14 d without phosphate (P) exhibited stunted growth and other visible symptoms associated with P deficiency. RNA contents in shoots decreased nearly 90%, relative to controls. In shoots, expression of Pht1;2, encoding an inducible high-affinity phosphate transporter, increased threefold, compared with controls, and served as a molecular marker for P limitation. Transcript levels for five enzymes (aspartate transcarbamoylase, ATCase, EC 2.1.3.2; carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, CPSase, EC 6.3.5.5); UMP synthase, EC 2.4.1.10, EC 4.1.1.23; uracil phosphoribosyltransferase, UPRTase, EC 2.4.2.9; UMP kinase, EC 2.7.1.14) increased 2-10-fold in response to P starvation in shoots. These enzymes, which utilize phosphorylated intermediates at putative regulated steps in de novo synthesis and salvaging pathways leading to UMP and pyrimidine nucleotide formation, appear to be coordinately regulated, at the level of gene expression. This response may facilitate pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis under P limitation in this plant. Expression of P-dependent and P-independent phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate (PRPP) synthases (PRS2 and PRS3, respectively) which provide PRPP, the phosphoribosyl donor in UMP synthesis via both de novo and salvaging pathways, was differentially regulated in response to P limitation. PRS2 mRNA levels increased twofold in roots and shoots of P-starved plants, while PRS3 was constitutively-expressed. PRS3 may play a novel role in providing PRPP to cellular metabolism under low P availability.
...
PMID:Effects of phosphate limitation on expression of genes involved in pyrimidine synthesis and salvaging in Arabidopsis. 1582 Jun 55

1. The activities of enzymes of the urea cycle, carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, ornithine transcarbamoylase, argininosuccinate synthetase, argininosuccinase (the last two comprising the arginine synthetase system) and arginase, were measured in the liver during development of the rat. All five enzymes exhibited relatively low activities in foetal liver and a rapid postnatal increase was found. The rate-limiting enzyme of urea synthesis in the rat, the condensing enzyme of the arginine synthetase system, showed the lowest activity at birth and the most rapid postnatal increase, a fivefold increase within 24hr. after birth. A second increase of activity was noted after the tenth day. These results suggest that the postnatal increase of arginine synthetase activity initiates the ability for urea synthesis in the rat. 2. Some factors influencing the development of the rate-limiting arginine synthetase system were studied in more detail. (a) Intraperitoneal administration of puromycin inhibited the postnatal increaseof the enzyme activity. (b) Starvation of newborn animals for 24hr. after birth had no effect on the postnatal development of the enzyme. (c) Bilateral adrenalectomy at birth caused a marked diminution in the postnatal increase of the enzyme activity and injections of triamcinolone were effective in preventing the effect of adrenalectomy. (d) Administration of triamcinolone alone had a marked stimulatory effect on the postnatal development of this enzyme. (e) Premature and postmature birth had virtually no effect on the developmental pattern of the arginine synthetase activity, suggesting that the increase of this enzyme activity after birth is not initiated by the birth process.
...
PMID:Factors influencing the development of urea-synthesizing enzymes in rat liver. 1674 4

The rodent liver eliminates toxic ammonia. In mammals, three enzymes (or enzyme systems) are involved in this process: glutaminase, glutamine synthetase and the urea cycle enzymes, represented by carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. The distribution of these enzymes for optimal ammonia detoxification was determined by numerical optimization. This in silico approach predicted that the enzymes have to be zonated in order to achieve maximal removal of toxic ammonia and minimal changes in glutamine concentration. Using 13 compartments, representing hepatocytes, the following predictions were generated: glutamine synthetase is active only within a narrow pericentral zone. Glutaminase and carbamoyl phosphate synthetase are located in the periportal zone in a non-homogeneous distribution. This correlates well with the paradoxical observation that in a first step glutamine-bound ammonia is released (by glutaminase) although one of the functions of the liver is detoxification by ammonia fixation. The in silico approach correctly predicted the in vivo enzyme distributions also for non-physiological conditions (e.g. starvation) and during regeneration after tetrachloromethane (CCl4) intoxication. Metabolite concentrations of glutamine, ammonia and urea in each compartment, representing individual hepatocytes, were predicted. Finally, a sensitivity analysis showed a striking robustness of the results. These bioinformatics predictions were validated experimentally by immunohistochemistry and are supported by the literature. In summary, optimization approaches like the one applied can provide valuable explanations and high-quality predictions for in vivo enzyme and metabolite distributions in tissues and can reveal unknown metabolic functions.
...
PMID:Optimality in the zonation of ammonia detoxification in rodent liver. 2643 5


<< Previous 1 2