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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lectins purified by affinity chromatography on immobilized asialofetuin from extracts of mouse K-1735P melanoma cells appeared as two polypeptides [L-14.5 (Mr 14,500) and L-34 (Mr 34,000)] in one-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of
sodium
dodecyl sulfate. However, in two-dimensional electrophoresis (isoelectric focusing followed by
sodium
dodecyl sulfate:polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) the L-14.5 polypeptide was resolved into three acidic forms of pI 4.6, 4.9, and 5.8, whereas the L-34 was resolved into two polypeptides of pI 4.9 and 5.3. Antibodies directed against galactoside-binding lectins from rat and bovine lungs, mouse 3T3 fibroblasts, and mouse UV-2237 fibrosarcoma cells reacted with the K-1735P lectins in immunoblots, and normal mouse lung extracts were found to contain cross-reactive proteins that comigrated with the two melanoma lectins. Indirect immunofluorescence staining using the above antibodies demonstrated that both L-14.5 and L-34 were expressed on the surface of viable K-1735P cells. Treatment of these cells with 1 microM beta-all-trans-retinoic acid or 1 mM N6,O2'-dibutyryl cyclic AMP for 5 days induced morphological differentiation, inhibition of anchorage-dependent and anchorage-independent growths, and a selective decrease in the L-34 lectin level. Growth inhibition by
starvation
for serum factors, which did not induce differentiation, had no effect on the level of L-34. These results demonstrate that the melanoma lectins are immunologically related to normal cell lectins and that the two polypeptide species are expressed on the cell surface. Further, they demonstrate that the L-34 lectin level can be modulated by agents that suppress the transformed phenotype by enhancing differentiation.
...
PMID:Biochemical and immunological characterization of K-1735P melanoma galactoside-binding lectins and their modulation by differentiation inducers. 253 46
PC12 cells were manipulated in such a way as to permit the study of differentiation-specific responses independently from proliferative responses. Cells were starved for serum then exposed to nerve growth factor (NGF) or serum. Following addition of serum, cells incorporated thymidine in a synchronous manner. Subsequent to the wave of DNA synthesis, the cell number increased approximately two-fold. Addition of NGF to serum-starved cultures had no measurable effect on either parameter. Neurite outgrowth was more rapid and extensive and appearance of
Na+
channels, measured as saxitoxin binding sites, more rapid than when NGF was added to exponentially-growing cells. Epidermal growth factor receptors were heterologously down-regulated by NGF with similar kinetics under both conditions. Induction of the proto-oncogene c-fos by NGF was also greater in the serum-starved cells than in exponentially-growing cultures. These results indicated that serum
starvation
resulted in synchronisation of the cultures and that NGF action may be cell cycle-specific. Analysis of the cellular response to NGF at different times during the cell cycle showed that c-fos was induced in the G1 phase but not in S or G2. Fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis demonstrated that addition of NGF to exponentially-growing cells, resulted in their accumulation in a G1-like state. With regard to the study of the mechanism of NGF action, these results illustrate that measurements of NGF effects on specific components in the signal transduction pathway may be confounded by the use of exponentially-growing cultures.
...
PMID:Cell cycle-specific action of nerve growth factor in PC12 cells: differentiation without proliferation. 255 60
Two chemically defined media were developed for the induction of germ tubes in exponential phase cells of Candida albicans. One medium was N-acetyl-D-glucosamine medium which is composed of L-thiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid, L-proline, NaHCO3,
sodium
acetate, NaH2PO4 and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine. The other one was glucose medium in which N-acetyl-D-glucosamine is exchanged for glucose plus NH4Cl in N-acetyl-D-glucosamine medium. In these media, a high percentage of germ tube forming cells was obtained without a temperature shift. However,
starvation
of the cells in water at 37 degrees C was a necessary pretreatment to consistently obtain a high percentage of germ tube forming cells. The effect of
starvation
was remarkable in glucose medium, the percentages of germ tube forming cells among the normal cells and starved cells were 20 and 80, respectively. As for intracellular changes during
starvation
, a decrease in adenosine triphosphate concentration and an increase in adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate concentration were observed.
...
PMID:Starvation and germ tube formation in the exponential phase Candida albicans. 256 99
Substrate regulation of System A transport activity in rat H4 hepatoma cells is described. The uptake of several amino acids was tested in the presence of system-specific inhibitors. System A activity was increased in a RNA- and protein synthesis-dependent manner by amino acid deprivation of the cells (adaptive regulation), whereas transport by Systems ASC, N, y+, and L was unaffected. Unlike human fibroblasts, the H4 cells did not require serum to exhibit the depression of System A. At cell densities between 88 X 10(3) and 180 X 10(3) cells/cm2, the degree of adaptive regulation was inversely related to cell density. Both transport of AIB and adaptive regulation of System A were nearly abolished if either K+ or Li+ was substituted for
Na+
in the medium. The presence of cycloheximide or tunicamycin blocked further increases in
starvation
-induced activity within 1 hr of addition, suggesting the involvement of a plasma membrane glycoprotein. In contrast, if the medium was supplemented with actinomycin after the stimulation of System A had begun, the activity continued to increase for an additional 2 hr before being slowed by the inhibitor. The contributions of trans-inhibition and repression to the amino acid-induced decay of System A activity were estimated for several representative amino acids. In general, the System A activity in normal rat hepatocytes was much less sensitive to trans-inhibition than the corresponding activity in H4 hepatoma cells. The half-life values for the amino acid-dependent decay of System A ranged from 0.5 to 2.0 hr.
...
PMID:Adaptive regulation of neutral amino acid transport System A in rat H4 hepatoma cells. 257 76
Cells of Streptococcus sanguis strain Challis were incubated with
sodium
lauroylsarcosinate to extract surface proteins. A polypeptide of apparent molecular mass 16 kDa comprising about 12% of the extract was purified using anion-exchange chromatography. The polypeptide was shown to be a phosphocarrier protein (HPr) that could also be found in the soluble (cytoplasmic) fraction from cells broken by homogenization with glass beads. In vivo labelling of S. sanguis cells with 32Pi showed that the polypeptide carried a heat- and acid-stable phosphorylation and that during sucrose
starvation
the HPr became dephosphorylated. Antiserum raised to the S. sanguis HPr reacted on Western blots with HPrs from all oral streptococci tested, together with strains of S. pyogenes and S. salivarius, but not with HPrs from S. faecalis or S. bovis, nor with proteins from Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, Actinomyces viscosus and various lactobacilli. The S. sanguis HPr had a high content of alanine (17.2%) and was similar in overall amino acid composition to the HPrs from S. mutans an S. salivarius. The N-terminal residues (to 37) of the S. sanguis HPr showed strong sequence identity (82%) with the N-terminal sequence of S. faecalis HPr. It is suggested that HPr in S. sanguis is associated closely with the cytoplasmic membrane. Non-disruptive methods of removing cell-surface proteins from streptococci effect release of HPr and possibly other cytoplasmic components.
...
PMID:Properties of a phosphocarrier protein (HPr) extracted from intact cells of Streptococcus sanguis. 263 56
This article reviews work we have carried out to investigate (1) the transport mechanisms responsible for the high distribution ratio of free glutamine commonly observed in skeletal muscle; (2) the fall in the distribution ratio that accompanies
starvation
, injury and chronic disease, whether directly involving muscle or not; and (3) the effect of modulation of intracellular free-glutamine concentration on protein synthesis and breakdown in skeletal muscle. We suggest that the results are consistent with the controlling role of the muscle membrane glutamine-
sodium
cotransporter in the regulation of the intracellular glutamine pool, the existence of pathophysiological mechanisms for the modulation of intramuscular glutamine and anabolic effects of glutamine in promoting protein synthesis, with a smaller effect in reducing protein breakdown. The mechanisms by which glutamine affects skeletal muscle protein turnover, and thus muscle protein balance, and the extent of the net flow of amino acids between the periphery and the viscera are unknown as yet, but the results suggest that modulation of transporter activity may offer the possibility of therapeutic intervention to reduce muscle wasting associated with injury and disease.
...
PMID:Skeletal muscle glutamine transport, intramuscular glutamine concentration, and muscle-protein turnover. 266 3
The effects of 3-hydroxybutyrate (3-OHB) and hyperosmolarity on glucagon secretion were examined in the isolated perfused canine pancreas. When 3-OHB was infused for 15 min into the pancreas perfused with 2.8 mM glucose, 5 and 20 mM
sodium
3-OHB inhibited it after a transient stimulation, whereas a similar transient stimulation was observed also by the infusion of 20 mM NaCl in a control experiment. The above inhibition was not observed under the perfusate condition of 5.5 mM glucose plus 10 mM arginine. When the isolated canine pancreas was perfused under the perfusate condition of acidosis (pH 7.1), ketoacidosis (pH 7.1 and 20 mM 3-OHB) or hyperosmolarity (+60 mOsm/kg with sucrose) throughout the experiment, the glucagon concentrations produced by 2.8 mM glucose under the ketoacidotic and hyperosmolar conditions, were less than half of those obtained under the standard condition. The insulin level was not influenced by the above perfusate conditions. These results suggest that 3-OHB inhibits glucagon secretion stimulated by glucopenia, but does not inhibit it stimulated by amino acids, and that hyperosmolarity inhibits glucagon secretion but does not inhibit insulin secretion. The pathophysiological significance of these results must be slight, considering the presence of hyperglucagonemia during prolonged
starvation
or diabetic ketoacidosis.
...
PMID:Effects of 3-hydroxybutyrate and hyperosmolarity on glucagon release from isolated perfused canine pancreas. 268 20
Between 50%-80% of
sodium
absorption in the colonic mucosa is dependent upon CO2 generation from SCFAs derived from the colonic lumen. Lumenal
starvation
leading to diminished SCFAs levels in the colon greatly reduce the absorptive capacity of the colonic mucosa. Mechanisms whereby SCFAs regulate
sodium
absorption in the colon include 1) an enzyme induced adaptive regulation of SCFA-oxidation in colonocytes, 2) a flexible CO2 supply from SCFA depending upon stimulation or suppression of fatty acid oxidation., 3) the variable sidedness of Na(+)-H+ and Cl(-)-HCO3- exchange pumps in colonic epithelial cells, and 4) colonic epithelial cell membrane synthesis from SCFAs. Precise details of these regulatory mechanisms need to be elucidated by further experimental investigation.
...
PMID:Short chain fatty acids as metabolic regulators of ion absorption in the colon. 269 72
The LLC-PK1 cell line has been well characterized concerning its proximal tubule-like
Na+
-dependent active sugar transporter in the apical membrane. In this study, we investigated the uptake of the glucose analogue, 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2DOG), a paradigm substrate for the facilitated diffusion,
Na+
-independent sugar transporter in the renal basolateral membrane. The uptake of 0.1 mM 2-[14C]DOG by confluent LLC-PK1 cell sheets at 25 degrees C is linear at least to 10 min, at which time greater than 90% of intracellular radioactivity is 2DOG phosphate. The uptake of this analogue by LLC-PK1 cells is
Na+
independent, and the transporter appears to be localized to the basolateral cell membrane. Phlorizin is a much less effective inhibitor than its aglycon, phloretin. Cytochalasin B is also an effective inhibitor, but it causes morphological changes in the cells at concentrations required to inhibit transport. Specificity studies indicate that this transport system requires a hexose with a free hydroxyl at C-1, and that the hydroxyls at C-3 and C-4 be preferably in the equatorial position. Glucose
starvation
causes an increased rate of 2DOG uptake. Subconfluent (cycling) cultures of LLC-PK1 cells have a threefold greater rate of 2DOG uptake than that seen in confluent (noncycling) LLC-PK1 cells.
...
PMID:Na+-independent sugar transport by cultured renal (LLC-PK1) epithelial cells. 275 Sep 15
Anti-vitellin IgG directed against Dermacentor variabilis egg vitellin was used in
sodium
dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide (SDS-PAGE) gradient gel immunoblots to detect the presence of vitellin and its precursor, vitellogenin, in the organs of feeding adults and in the immature stages of this tick. Vitellin polypeptides were found in the egg, larvae, nymph, and in the unfed adult stages of both sexes. Vitellin polypeptides were first detected in the ovary of mated females during the rapid-engorgement feeding period. These polypeptides were also present in the ovaries of ovipositing females, unmated females fed for extended periods, and fed unmated females that were detached from the host and held for 12 h before dissection. The same anti-vitellin antibody was used in immunoblots to monitor the appearance of vitellogenin in the organs and hemolymph of female ticks. Immunoreactive peptides of vitellogenin were found in the fat body, midgut, and hemolymph of pre-rapid-engorging mated and unmated females. These polypeptides were not found in fed males nor in Malpighian tubes of feeding or ovipositing females. Our data supported the following conclusions: 1) presence of immunoreactive vitellogenin in the adult female fat body, hemolymph, and midgut was dependent upon feeding; 2) in mated feeding females, we could not detect the uptake of vitellogenin by the ovary until rapid engorgement; 3) in unmated females, vitellogenesis did not begin unless prolonged feeding occurred; and 4) during the early developmental stages of this tick, vitellin served as an embryonic nutrient reserve and as a reserve against
starvation
between feedings.
...
PMID:Relationship between feeding, mating, vitellogenin production and vitellogenesis in the tick Dermacentor variabilis. 275 40
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