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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Various truncated CYR1 genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were fused to efficient promoters and expressed in Escherichia coli and S. cerevisiae cells with or without the RAS genes. The catalytic domain of adenylate cyclase encoded by the 3'-terminal 1.3 kb region of the open reading frame of the CYR1 gene produced cyclic AMP, irrespective of the presence of RAS genes. The product of the 3'-terminal 2.1 kb region of CYR1 showed guanine nucleotide-dependent adenylate cyclase activity and produced a large amount of cAMP in the presence of the RAS gene. Thus, the domain encoded by the 0.8 kb region adjacent to the catalytic domain is associated with the regulatory function of the RAS products. The cyr1 RAS1 RAS2 cells carrying the 3'-terminal 1.3 kb region of CYR1 were unable to respond to environmental signals such as sulfur starvation and temperature shift, but the cyr1 cells carrying the 2.1 kb region and at least one RAS gene were able to respond to these signals. The environmental signals may be transferred to the adenylate cyclase system through the RAS products.
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PMID:Identification of the domain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae adenylate cyclase associated with the regulatory function of RAS products. 332 73

Cell growth using homocysteine as a source of cysteine-sulphur requires two enzymes, cystathionine synthase (CS) and gamma-cystathionase (CT). The second of these enzymes, CT, is apparently present in most cell lines regardless of their tissues of origin, since most cells can grow in vitro in the absence of cystine if they are provided with cystathionine, the intermediate in the pathway. Likewise, homocysteine will support the growth of many human cells. However, of a wide range of rodent cells, only well-differentiated rat hepatoma cells were found to grow using homocysteine in place of cystine. It is shown that cell growth in homocysteine-medium correlates well with the presence in the cells of detectable levels of CS. Furthermore, in cells able to grow in homocysteine-medium, it is possible to demonstrate the homocysteine-dependent trans-sulphuration of serine to cysteine. Growth in homocysteine-medium is not dependent on the release of preformed cysteine from disulphide complexes with serum proteins. In cell hybrids, and in 'dedifferentiated' variants of rat hepatomas, CS, but not CT, is subject to extinction coordinately with well-characterized liver-specific traits. For rodent cells, homocysteine-medium thus acts as a selective medium requiring the expression of a single liver-specific trait, CS. In addition it is shown that, in certain hepatoma variants, CS is regulated co-ordinately with a urea-cycle enzyme (carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I) by glucocorticoids and cyclic-AMP. Cell death through cysteine starvation is briefly considered. The immediate cause of death is apparently an insufficient supply of reduced glutathione. Selenium and vitamin E assist cell growth when the supply of cysteine is limiting.
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PMID:Characterization of cystathionine synthase as a selectable, liver-specific trait in rat hepatomas. 379 84

A monoclonal antibody, mAb 47-19-2, was used to study the subunit topology of the rod-shaped alpha-actinin molecules of Dictyostelium discoideum and to screen for mutants defective in the production of alpha-actinin. Electron microscopy of rotary-shadowed alpha-actinin-antibody complexes showed binding of mAb 47-19-2 to both ends of the alpha-actinin rods and cleavage of the rods into its subunits, indicating that the two subunits of alpha-actinin extend in an anti-parallel mode through the whole length of the rod. The antibody binding sites were located in close proximity to the sites responsible for actin cross-linking, which is consistent with the blocking activity of the antibody. In a mutant, HG1130, no antibody label was detected in colony blots, and by immunoblotting of mutant proteins separated by SDS-PAGE, only trace amounts of alpha-actinin were found. The mutant showed normal binding of antibodies directed against the actin-binding proteins severin and capping protein. The mutation responsible for the alpha-actinin defect was recessive and located on linkage group I of the genetic map of D. discoideum. HG1130 cells grew on bacteria at a normal rate and also axenically like cells of the parent strain AX2. After starvation the mutant cells expressed the contact site A glycoprotein, a marker of the aggregation-competent stage, and reacted chemotactically to cyclic AMP. The aggregation patterns and fruiting bodies of the mutant appeared to be normal. Patching and capping on the surface of HG1130 cells was induced by antibodies against the contact site A glycoprotein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Selection of Dictyostelium mutants defective in cytoskeletal proteins: use of an antibody that binds to the ends of alpha-actinin rods. 395 80

In incubated colonocytes isolated from rat colons, the rates of utilization O2, glucose or glutamine were linear with respect to time for over 30 min, and the concentrations of adenine nucleotides plus the ATP/ADP or ATP/AMP concentration ratios remained approximately constant for 30 min. Glutamine, n-butyrate or ketone bodies were the only substrates that caused increases in O2 consumption by isolated incubated colonocytes. The maximum activity of hexokinase in colonic mucosa is similar to that of 6-phosphofructokinase. Starvation of the donor animal decreased the activities of hexokinase and 6-phosphofructokinase, whereas it increased those of glucose-6-phosphatase and fructose-bisphosphatase. Isolated incubated colonocytes utilized glucose at about 6.8 mumol/min per g dry wt., with lactate accounting for 83% of glucose removed. These rates were not affected by the addition of glutamine, acetoacetate or n-butyrate, and starvation of the donor animal. Isolated incubated colonocytes utilized glutamine at about 5.5 mumol/min per g dry wt., which is about 21% of the maximum activity of glutaminase. The major end-products of glutamine metabolism were glutamate, aspartate, alanine and ammonia. Starvation of the donor animal decreased the rate of glutamine utilization by colonocytes, which is accompanied by a decrease in glutamate formation and in the maximum activity of glutaminase. Isolated incubated colonocytes utilized acetoacetate at about 3.5 mumol/min per g dry wt. This rate was not markedly affected by addition of glucose or by starvation of the donor animal. When colonocytes were incubated with n-butyrate, both acetoacetate and 3-hydroxybutyrate were formed, with the latter accounting for only about 19% of total ketones produced.
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PMID:Fuel utilization in colonocytes of the rat. 407 34

1. Glucose uptake or glucose formation has been studied in kidney cortex slices to investigate metabolic control of phosphofructokinase and fructose-diphosphatase activities. 2. Glucose uptake is increased and glucose formation is decreased by anoxia, cyanide or an uncoupling agent. Under these conditions the intracellular concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate and ATP decreased whereas that of fructose diphosphate either increased or remained constant, and the concentrations of AMP and ADP increased. 3. Glucose uptake was decreased, and glucose formation from glycerol or dihydroxyacetone was increased, by the presence of ketone bodies or fatty acids, or after starvation of the donor animal. Under these conditions, the concentrations of glucose 6-phosphate and citrate were increased, whereas those of fructose diphosphate and the adenine nucleotides were unchanged (see also Newsholme & Underwood, 1966). 4. It is concluded that anoxia and cell poisons increase glucose uptake and decrease gluconeogenesis by stimulating phosphofructokinase and inhibiting fructose diphosphatase, whereas ketone bodies, fatty acids or starvation increase gluconeogenesis and decrease glucose uptake through the citrate inhibition of phosphofructokinase.
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PMID:Control of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis in rat kidney cortex slices. 429

1. The rise in clearing-factor lipase activity that occurs when epididymal fat bodies from starved rats are incubated in appropriate media in vitro is inhibited in the presence of 6-N-2'-O-dibutyryl-3',5'-(cyclic)-AMP (1mm). 2. Inhibition occurs at a concentration of glucose in the incubation medium of 1.3mg./ml. or less, but not at a glucose concentration of 2.4mg./ml., unless caffeine (1mm), an inhibitor of 3',5'-(cyclic)-nucleotide phosphodiesterase, is also present. Caffeine (5mm) alone inhibits the rise in clearing-factor lipase activity at a glucose concentration of 2.4mg./ml. of medium. 3. The concentration of free fatty acids in the epididymal fat bodies normally falls during incubations in vitro as the rise in clearing-factor lipase activity occurs. In the presence of 1mm-6-N-2'-O-dibutyryl-3',5'-(cyclic)-AMP, however, either the tissue free fatty acid concentration is increased or it does not fall to the same extent. The concentration of glucose in the incubation medium is important in determining the direction and extent of the changes in tissue free fatty acid concentration that occur in the presence of 6-N-2'-O-dibutyryl-3',5'-(cyclic)-AMP. 4. Free fatty acid concentrations in epididymal fat bodies in vivo rise as the clearing-factor lipase activity of the tissue falls during starvation. 5. The possibility that the concentration of 3',5'-(cyclic)-AMP in adipose tissue may regulate clearing-factor lipase activity, and that the regulation may occur through effects of the nucleotide on tissue free fatty acid concentrations, is discussed.
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PMID:Clearing-factor lipase in adipose tissue. A possible role of adenosine 3',5'-(cyclic)-monophosphate in the regulation of its activity. 430 48

1. The calculated energy charge of the liver cell from migrating salmon is very low (0.464), in keeping with the extended starvation and high rates of muscular and biosynthetic activity of these organisms. 2. Affinity of fructose 1,6-diphosphatase for substrate increases with a decrease in temperature. 3. Arrhenius plots of the saturation kinetics are complex and suggest an interconversion of one or more forms of the enzyme; this interconversion is dependent on the identity of the cofactor. 4. Affinity of salmon fructose 1,6-diphosphatase for its allosteric inhibitor (AMP) is lower than in other fructose 1,6-diphosphatases and this enzyme-AMP interaction is largely insensitive to temperature. The functional significance of diminished AMP-sensitivity is that it allows normal or high fructose 1,6-diphosphatase activity during a low energy charge. 5. These findings suggest mechanisms for the maintenance of high rates of gluconeogenesis in salmon during spawning migration.
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PMID:Temperature and the regulation of enzyme activity in poikilotherms. Fructose diphosphatase from migrating salmon. 431 40

The effects of serum deprivation on several general cellular biochemical processes ("pleiotypic response") related to the growth of normal fibroblasts can be mimicked by treatment of these cells with prostaglandin E(1) in the presence of serum. N(6),O(2)'-Dibutyryl adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate and theophylline inhibit the membrane transport processes without much effect on other pleiotypic reactions such as overall protein and RNA synthesis and protein degradation. The amount of intracellular cyclic AMP increases during serum starvation and returns to the initial concentration in unstarved cells when growth is initiated again upon addition of serum. Fibroblasts transformed by simian virus 40 have a lower cyclic AMP content than their untransformed parents. Serum deprivation neither increases cyclic AMP content nor significantly affects the pleiotypic reactions in transformed cells. Cycloheximide causes a decrease in cyclic AMP content of normal fibroblasts coincidentally with the ability of this inhibitor to stimulate uridine transport and slow protein degradation in cells deprived of serum.
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PMID:Pleiotypic control by adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate: a model for growth control in animal cells. 435 Nov 78

Addition of cyclic adenosine 3'-5'-monophosphate (c-AMP) to growing Escherichia coli cells, colicinogenic for the plasmid ColE1, results in a fourfold stimulation in the rate of synthesis of the plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). The stimulation is transient (30 min) and is succeeded by a brief period (30 min) of cessation of plasmid DNA replication. The stimulation of ColE1 DNA replication also occurs in chloramphenicol-treated cells. Rifampin inhibits ColE1 DNA replication in the presence or absence of c-AMP. Employing thymine starvation conditions to stop ColE1 DNA synthesis, it was found that c-AMP, added during the period of thymine starvation, effected a stimulation in the amount of subsequent replication which took place when replicating conditions were restored. The stimulatory effect of c-AMP under these conditions was not prevented by chloramphenicol but was completely eliminated when rifampin was present. Under these conditions, when rifampin was added after the effect of c-AMP was allowed to occur, subsequent replication of the plasmid could take place, but only one round of replication occurred. A model to account for the c-AMP effects is presented.
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PMID:Effect of inhibitors of ribonucleic acid and protein synthesis on the cyclic adenosine monophosphate stimulation of plasmid ColE1 replication. 436 26

1. The concentration of cyclic AMP and the activity of phosphodiesterase were measured in isolated pancreatic islets from fed or 48h-starved mice. 2. Two different phosphodiesterases were detected. Neither the maximum activity nor the K(m) values of these enzymes were changed by starvation. 3. The concentration of cyclic AMP in non-incubated islets was the same in islets from fed and starved mice. 4. Incubation with 3.3mm-glucose for 5-30min had no effect on the concentration of cyclic AMP, irrespective of the nutritional state of the mice. Incubation with 16.7mm-glucose for 5-30min raised the concentration of cyclic AMP by about 30% in islets from fed mice. This rise was prevented by addition of mannoheptulose (3mg/ml). Incubation with 16.7mm-glucose had no effect on the cyclic AMP content in islets from starved mice. 5. In islets from fed mice 10min incubation with 5mm-caffeine had no effect on the concentration of cyclic AMP in the presence of 3.3 or 16.7mm-glucose, whereas the cyclic AMP content was increased approx. 150% in islets from starved mice. 6. After 10min incubation with 1mm-3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine in the presence of 3.3 or 16.7mm-glucose the concentration of cyclic AMP was raised by 250% in islets from fed mice and by 400% in islets from starved mice. 7. A threefold function of glucose in the insulin-secretory process is suggested, according to which the decreased islet glucose metabolism is the primary defect in the insulin-secretory mechanism during starvation.
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PMID:The effect of starvation on phosphodiesterase activity and the content of adenosine 3' :5'-cyclic monophosphate in isolated mouse pancreatic islets. 437 13


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