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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The phosphorylated form of liver glycogen phosphorylase (alpha-1,4-glucan : orthophosphate alpha-glucosyl-transferase, EC 2.4.1.1) (phosphorylase a) is active and easily measured while the dephosphorylated form (phosphorylase b), in contrast to the muscle enzyme, has been reported to be essentially inactive even in the presence of AMP. We have purified both forms of phosphorylase from rat liver and studied the characteristics of each. Phosphorylase b activity can be measured with our assay conditions. The phosphorylase b we obtained was stimulated by high concentrations of sulfate, and was a substrate for muscle phosphorylase kinase whereas phosphorylase a was inhibited by sulfate, and was a substrate for liver phosphorylase phosphatase. Substrate binding to phosphorylase b was poor (KM glycogen = 2.5 mM,
glucose
-1-P = 250 mM) compared to phosphorylase a (KM glycogen = 1.8 mM, KM
glucose
-1-P = 0.7 mM). Liver phosphorylase b was active in the absence of AMP. However, AMP lowered the KM for
glucose
-1-P to 80 mM for purified phosphorylase b and to 60 mM for the enzyme in crude extract (Ka = 0.5 mM). Using appropriate substrate, buffer and AMP concentrations, assay conditions have been developed which allow determination of phosphorylase a and 90% of the phosphorylase b activity in liver extracts. Interconversion of the two forms can be demonstrated in vivo (under acute stimulation) and in vitro with little change in total activity. A decrease in total phosphorylase activity has been observed after prolonged
starvation
and in diabetes.
...
PMID:Characteristics of the dephosphorylated form of phosphorylase purified from rat liver and measurement of its activity in crude liver preparations. 0 75
Starved cells of Candida utilis accumulated Zn2+ by two different processes. The first was a rapid, energy- and temperature-independent system that probably represented binding to the cell surface. The cells also possessed an energy-, pH-, and temperature-dependent system that was capable of accumulating much greater quantities of the cation than the binding process. The energy-dependent system was inhibited by KCN, Na2HAsO4, m-chlorophenyl carbonylcyanide hydrazone, N-ethylmaleimide, EDTA and diethylenetriaminepenta-acetic acid. The system was specific inasmuch as Ca2+, Cr3+, Mn2+, Co2+ or Cu2+ did not compete with, inhibit, or enhance the process, Zn2+ uptake was inhibited by Cd2+. The system exhibited saturation kinetics with a half-saturation value of 1.3 muM and a maximum rate of 0.21 (nmol Zn2+) min(-1) (mg dry wt(-1)) at 30 degrees C. Zn2+ uptake required intact membranes since only the binding process was observed in the presence of nystatin, toluene, or sodium dodecyl sulphate. Cells did not exchange recently accumulated toluene, or sodium dodecyl sulphate. Cells did not exchange recently accumulated 65Zn following the addition of a large excess of non-radioactive Zn2+. Similarly, cells pre-loaded with 65Zn did not lose the cation during
starvation
, and efflux did not occur when
glucose
and exogenous Zn2+ were supplied after the
starvation
period. Efflux was only observed after the addition of toluene or nystatin, or when cells were heated to 100 degrees C. Cells fed a large quantity of Zn2+ contained a protein fraction resembling animal cell metallothionein. In batch culture, cells of C. utilis accumulated Zn2+ only during the lag phase and the latter half of the exponential-growth phase.
...
PMID:Accumulation and storage of Zn2+ by Candida utilis. 0 25
Studies of the thermal stability of rat liver glucose-6-phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.9) were carried out to further elevate the proposal that the enzymic activity is the result of the coupling of a
glucose
-6-P-specific translocase and a nonspecific phosphohydrolase-phosphotransferase. Inactivation was observed when micorsomes were incubated at mild temperatures between pH 6.2 and 5.6. The rate of inactivation increased either with increasing hydrogen ion concentration or temperature. However, no inactivation was seen below 15 degrees in media as low as pH 5 or at neutral pH up to 37 degrees. The thermal stability of the enzyme may be controlled by the physical state of the membrane lipids and the degree of protonation of specific residues in the enzyme protein. Microsomes were exposed to inactivating conditions, and kinetic analyses were made of the
glucose
-6-P phosphohydrolase activities before and after supplementation to 0.4% sodium taurocholate. The results support the postulate and the kinetic characteristics of a given preparation of intact microsomes are determined by the relative capacities of the transport and catalytic components. Before detergent treatment, inactivation (i.e. a decrease in Vmax) was accompanied by a decrease in Km and a reduction in the fraction of latent activity, whereas only Vmax was depressed in disrupted preparations. The possibility that the inactivating treatments caused concurrent disruption of the microsomal membrane was ruled out. It is concluded that exposures to mild heat in acidic media selectively inactivate the catalytic component of the glucose-6-phosphatase system while preserving an intact permeability barrier and a functional
glucose
-6-P transport system. Analyses of kinetic data obtained in the present and earlier studies revealed several fundamental mathematical relationships among the kinetic constants describing the
glucose
-6-P phosphohydrolase activities of intact (i.e. the "system") and disrupted microsomes (i.e. the catalytic component). The quantitative relationships appear to provide a means to calculate a velocity constant (VT) and a half-saturation constant (KT) for
glucose
-6-P influx. The well documented, differential responses of the rat liver glucose-6-phosphatase system induced by
starvation
, experimental diabetes, or cortisol administration were analyzed in terms of these relationships. The possible influences of cisternal inorganic phosphate on the apparent kinetic constants of the intact system are discussed.
...
PMID:Quantitative aspects of relationship between glucose 6-phosphate transport and hydrolysis for liver microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase system. Selective thermal inactivation of catalytic component in situ at acid pH. 1 Mar 5
Isolated rat lung cell suspensions were prepared by collagenase digestion of the lung stroma. These cells were functionally competent as judged, among other criteria, by their constant rates of oxygen uptake and
glucose
utilization. An important metabolic feature of these cells is that they display very high glycolytic rates. At least 60% of the
glucose
utilized was converted to lactate, regardless of the
glucose
concentration in the medium. The state of reduction of the nicotinamide system, as indicated by the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio, was normal, thus indicating that the high glycolytic fluxes are not related to poor oxygenation of the preparation. Utilization of
glucose
displayed Michaelis-Menten saturation type kinetics with a Vmax of 331 nmol/10(6) cells per h and an apparent Km of 2.4 mM. These values were not affected by the presence of ouabain (0.1 mM), mannoheptulose (5 mM), or insulin (1 mU/ml), whereas phloridzin produced a drastic inhibition of
glucose
utilzation showing an apparent Ki of 0.4 mM. The substitution of sodium by K+ or Li+ as the predominant cations in the incubation medium does not alter rates of
glucose
utilization. Optimal pH for
glucose
utilization was within the physiological range with a more pronounced inhibitory effect at alkaline pH's. The intracellular concentration
glucose
was found to be low. This finding, in conjunction with a Q10 (27-37 degrees C) for
glucose
utilization above 2.0 and the differential effects of D- and L-
glucose
on production, seems to indicate that a stereospecific
glucose
transport system exists in lung cells. Several findings point to
glucose
transport into the lung cells as a probable rate-limiting step for its metabolism:1) the activity of the glycolytic enzymes largely exceeded the observed rate of
glucose
utilization;2) the decrease in enzyme activity during
starvation
was not accompanied by a decreased glycolytic flux, suggesting that factors other than enzyme activity, perhaps the supply of fuel, are rate limiting in the overall process of
glucose
breakdown;3) fructose was able to increase lactate production in the presence of saturating concentrations of
glucose
. These additive effects of
glucose
and fructose seem to support the point of view that it is not the glycolytic machinery but the supply of fuel which is rate limiting for
glucose
utilization by isolated rat lung cells.
...
PMID:Metabolic features of isolated rat lung cells. I. Factors controlling glucose utilization. 1 58
The nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase (NADP-GDH) from the food yeast Candida utilis was found to be rapidly inactivated when cultures were starved of a carbon source. The addition of glutamate or alanine to the
starvation
medium stimulated the rate of inactivation. Loss of enzyme activity was irreversible since the reappearance of enzyme activity, following the addition of
glucose
to carbon-starved cultures, was blocked by cycloheximide. A specific rabbit antibody was prepared against the NADP-GDH from C. utilis and used to quantitate the enzyme during inactivation promoted by carbon
starvation
. The amount of precipitable antigenic material paralleled the rapid decrease of enzyme activity observed after transition of cells from NH(4) (+)-
glucose
to glutamate medium. No additional small-molecular-weight protein was precipitated by the antibody as a result of the inactivation, suggesting that the enzyme is considerably altered during the primary steps of the inactivation process. Analysis by immunoprecipitation of the reappearance of enzyme activity after enzyme inactivation showed that increase of NADP-GDH activity was almost totally due to de novo synthesis, ruling out the possibility that enzyme activity modulation is achieved by reversible covalent modification. Enzyme degradation was also measured during steady-state growth and other changes in nitrogen and carbon status of the culture media. In all instances so far estimated, the enzyme was found to be very stable and not normally subject to high rates of degradation. Therefore, the possibility that inactivation was caused by a change in the ratio of synthesis to degradation can be excluded.
...
PMID:Evidence for the degradation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase of Candida utilis during rapid enzyme inactivation. 2 41
To evaluate the effect of
starvation
, oral and i.v. nutriments, and hypothyroidism on the peripheral conversion of thyroxine (T4) to 3,3', 5-triiodothyronine (T3) in the rat and mouse, an in vitro system for assessing T4 conversion to T3 by fresh liver homogenates was used. A 2-day
starvation
in the rat reduced hepatic T3 generation from T4 by 47% +/- 3.5% (mean +/- SE) in six separate experiments and also impaired the metabolism of 125I-r-T3. Administration of carbohydrate (CHO) and amino acids (P), but not lipid (L), significantly increased T3 generation above values observed in the starved rat. The mean serum
glucose
concentration was similar in all nutriment-infused groups, but serum insulin was significantly greater in the CHO- and P-infused as compared to the L-infused rats. These findings suggest that CHO and P, but not L, are important modulators of hepatic outer ring thyronine deiodination in the rat, perhaps due to increased intracellular
glucose
. Hypothyroidism in the rat induced by thyroidectomy and congenital secondary hypothyroidism in the dwarf mouse resulted in a striking decrease in hepatic conversion of T4 to T3. This decrease was restored to normal by the daily s.c. administration of physiologic doses of T4 (1.5 microgram/100 g) or T3 (0.5 microgram/100 g) for 14 days, and was increased above normal following treatment of normal rate with greater than physiologic doses of T4 (3microgram/100 g) or T3 (1 microgram/100g). In vitro hepatic conversion of T4 to T3 is, therefore, dependent upon thyroid function. Since 2-days
starvation
in the rat was associated with decreased serum concentrations of T4, T3, and TSH, and hypothyroidism resulted in decreased conversion of T4 to T3, the effect of a constant 2-day infusion of physiologic doses of T4 or T3 in the starved rat on the in vitro deiodination of T4 was assessed. Thyroid hormone replacement did not enhance the conversion of T4 to T3 in the starved rat. These observations suggest that the
starvation
-induced decrease in hepatic generation of T3 from T4 is not due to hypothyroidism and that the mechanism(s) of the decreased T3 production observed in
starvation
and hypothyroidism is different.
...
PMID:Effect of starvation, nutriment replacement, and hypothyroidism on in vitro hepatic T4 to T3 conversion in the rat. 3 20
Two transport systems for
glucose
were detected: a high affinity system with a Km of 27 muM, and a low affinity system with a Km of 3.3 mM. The high affinity system transported
glucose
, 2-deoxy-D-glucose (Km = 26 muM), 3-O-methylglucose (Km = 19 muM), D-glucosamine (Km = 652 muM), D-fructose (Km = 2.3 mM) and L-sorbose (Km = 2.2 mM). All sugars were accumulated against concentration gradients. The high affinity system was strongly or completely inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, quercetin, 2,4-dinitrophenol and sodium azide. The system had a distinct pH optimum (7.4) and optimum temperature (45 degrees C). The low affinity system transported
glucose
, 2-deoxy-D-glucose (Km = 7.5 mM), and 3-O-methylglucose (Km = 1.5 mM). Accumulation again occurred against a concentration gradient. The low affinity system was inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, quercetin and 2,4-dinitrophenol, but not by sodium azide. The rate of uptake by the low affinity system was constant over a wide temperature range (30--50 degrees C) and was not much affected by pH; but as the pH of the medium was altered from 4.5 to 8.9 a co-ordinated increase in affinity for 2-deoxy-D-glucose (from 52.1 mM to 0.3 mM) and decrease in maximum velocity (by a factor of five) occurred. Both uptake systems were present insporelings germinated in media containing sodium acetate as sole carbon source. Only the low affinity system could initially be demonstrated in
glucose
-grown tissue, although the high affinity system was restored by
starvation
inglucose-free medium. The half-ti me for restoration of high affinity activity was 3.5 min and the process was unaffected by cycloheximide. Addition of
glucose
to an acetate-grown culture inactivated the high affinity system with a half-life of 5--7.5 s. Addition of cycloheximide to an acetate-grown culture caused decay of the high affinity system with a half-life of 80 min. Regulation is thus thought to depend on modulation of protein activity rather than synthesis, and the kinetics of
glucose
, 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 3-O-methylglucose uptake would be consistent with there being a single carrier showing negative co-operativity. Analysis of transport defective mutants revealed defects in both transport systems although the mutants used were alleles of a single gene. It is concluded that this gene (the ftr cistron) is the structural gene for an allosteric molecule which serves both transport systems.
...
PMID:Sugar transport in Coprinus cinereus. 3 8
Factors contributing to modifications in the capability for enzyme adaptation as an expression of aging are reviewed. Specific examples of altered enzyme adaptations during aging include the responses of hepatic glucokinase activity to
glucose
and hepatic tyrosine aminotransferase activity to
starvation
in Sprague-Dawley rats. These impaired enzyme adaptations apparently are not the consequence of alterations in hepatic function during aging. Instead, they reflect disturbances in extrahepatic hormonal regulatory mechanisms. Specific examples include modifications in the control of circulating levels of insulin glucagon, corticosteroids, and thyroid hormones. Age-dependent changes in the regulation of circulating levels of insulin probably originate within the impaired ability of pancreatic islets of Langerhans to secrete the hormone in response to
glucose
. The rationale for exploiting this experimental approach as a means to understand biological aging is discussed.
...
PMID:Loss of adaptive mechanisms during aging. 3 73
Lipogenic capacity of various dietary carbohydrates starch,
glucose
sucrose and lactose was tested during ad lib feeding and
starvation
followed by refeeding. Sucrose was found to have maximal effect on hepatic total lipid and the enzymes in the study followed by
glucose
and sago while lactose was found to be toxic.
Starvation
resulted depression in the activities of various enzymes. The enzyme activity inducing effect was again exhibited by sucrose diet during ad lib and restricted refeeding followed by
starvation
.
...
PMID:Effect of different dietary carbohydrates on some hepatic dehydrogenases and total lipid during starvation and refeeding regimen. 3 90
Changes of the metabolic pool constitutents of Monosporium olivaceum -- a mould capable of steroid hydroxylation were examined. The experiments were carried during growth and
starvation
of the microorganism. The highest activity of the 11alpha-hydroxylase was observed in the mycelium which contained the lowest level of free amino acids,
glucose
, and mannitol. It is suggested that the inhibition of biosynthetic processes and the decrease of the respiration rate, the activity of the NAD(P)H regenerating systems maintained, provide the optimal physiological conditions for the activity of the steroid hydroxylases.
...
PMID:Changes in the cellular content of the pool constituents of Monosporium olivaceum -- a steroid hydroxylating mould. 6 6
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