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

The study of uterine metabolism in pregnancy under chronic steady-state conditions has been confined to large mammals and, more recently, to the guinea pig. The pregnant rabbit is of interest because of its short gestation and large litter size. We developed an indirect approach involving retrograde catheterization of the uterine venous drainage, permitting measurement of both uterine metabolic quotients and uterine uptakes. Radioactive microspheres were used to measure blood flow. A large lactate and ammonia efflux from the uterus was found. In the fed state, ketogenic substrates were taken up in small amounts. However, during starvation a significant increase in ketoacid uptake was observed with a concurrent fall in acetate uptake. There was a large glucose/oxygen quotient across the uterus, but the glucose plus lactate/oxygen quotient was comparable to that found in the sheep and guinea pig (0.6 +/- 0.1). It is apparent that in all three species studied under chronic steady-state conditions (sheep, guinea pig, and rabbit) there is a large glucose uptake associated with a net lactate production, and fuels other than glucose and lactate must be used by the uterus.
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PMID:Uterine metabolism of the pregnant rabbit under chronic steady-state conditions. 370 43

The general objective of this study was to identify biochemical correlates of life expectancy in the adult male housefly. All houseflies lose flying ability prior to death, whereby, in an aging population, shorter-lived flies can be identified as flightless 'crawlers' from their longer-lived cohorts, the 'fliers'; the average lifespan of crawlers is about one-third shorter than the fliers. Neither crawlers nor fliers exhibited any physical damage to their chemoreceptive tarsi, thereby ruling out starvation as a probable cause of death. Levels of antioxidant defenses (superoxide dismutase, catalase and glutathione) and products of oxygen free radical reactions (inorganic peroxides and thiobarbituric acid [TBA]-reactants) were compared between crawlers and fliers. The fliers showed higher superoxide dismutase and catalase activities and glutathione concentration than crawlers, whereas, the amount of inorganic peroxides (H2O2) and TBA-reactants was higher in the crawlers than in fliers. Results of this study demonstrate, for the first time, that longer life expectancy of organisms belonging to the same cohort group is associated with relatively higher levels of antioxidants and lower concentrations of products of oxygen free radical reactions.
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PMID:Relationship between life expectancy, endogenous antioxidants and products of oxygen free radical reactions in the housefly, Musca domestica. 376 35

Proceeding from the concept of individual radiosensitivity as a sign of total reactivity 3 directions in a study of its possible prediction were considered: establishing correlation between separate indices characterizing the initial state and total radiosensitivity; correlation between body reactions to non-radiation exposures and subsequent irradiation; comparison of total radiosensitivity to irradiation at a small dose and subsequent irradiation at LD50. The following indices were used for the evaluation of the basal status of the body: oxygen consumption level, body mass increase rate, the level of water and basal metabolism, peripheral blood indices, body temperature, basal indices of the functional adrenocortical activity, the state of the cardiovascular system. The following non-radiation stress-exposures were used: physical exercise, constant magnetic field, starvation, hypoxia, and adrenaline administration. A V-type dependency was established for most investigated indices of the basal status and reaction of the body to non-radiation exposures. The utmost radioresistance was shown by animals in whom the basal indices or their reaction to non-radiation exposure approximated the average group level. The third direction: comparison of radiosensitivity and radiation damage--was analyzed by comparing the reaction of cerebral biocurrents to radiation exposure at a small dose with subsequent damage of the body following irradiation at a lethal dose. The accuracy of predicting the outcome of radiation injury by some of the indices varied from 65 to 80%. In some indices of the basal status and reactivity evaluation it reached 85-90%.
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PMID:[Possibilities of prognostication of individual radiation sensitivity]. 379 56

Pyruvate formate-lyase (PFL) (formate acetyltransferase; EC 2.3.1.54) of oral streptococci is essential for metabolizing sugar into volatile compounds (formate, acetate, and ethanol). This enzyme is extremely sensitive to oxygen, and its activity is irreversibly inactivated by oxygen. When Streptococcus sanguis was anaerobically starved, a part of the active form of PFL was converted into a reversible inactive form that was tolerant of oxygen. This reversible inactive enzyme could be reactivated to the active enzyme by anaerobic sugar metabolism, with the recovery of volatile compound production. The PFL in Streptococcus mutans was not converted into an oxygen-tolerant inactive form by anaerobic starvation, and after exposure of the cells to oxygen the PFL could not be reactivated. These findings suggest that S. mutans can produce acids rapidly under anaerobic conditions because of its capacity to keep PFL active and that S. sanguis can protect its sugar metabolism from oxygen impairment because of its interconversion of PFL.
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PMID:Oxygen sensitivity of sugar metabolism and interconversion of pyruvate formate-lyase in intact cells of Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus sanguis. 381 89

The basal blood glycerol concentration was determined and the rate of glycerol turnover was assessed by a nonradioactive infusion technique in six healthy nonobese adults after an overnight fast and again after four days of total starvation. Simultaneously, estimates of total energy expenditure and net fat oxidation were made from measurements of oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production, and urinary nitrogen excretion. The data were combined to provide quantitative estimates of the activity of the triglyceride/fatty acid cycle. The basal concentration of glycerol in venous blood rose from a mean value of 54 +/- 8 mumol/L (SEM) before starvation to 154 +/- 5 mumol/L on day 4 of starvation. Glycerol turnover rates correlated well with the basal blood glycerol concentration (r = .95) and increased from a mean value of 115 +/- 17 mumol/min before starvation (equivalent to mobilization of about 3.95 kJ triglyceride/min) to 304 +/- 20 mumol/min (equivalent to mobilization of about 18.41 kJ/min). The estimated rate of net fat oxidation was 3.00 +/- 0.47 kJ/min before starvation and 4.00 +/- 0.14 kJ/min on day +4 of starvation. The rate of triglyceride energy recycling or rate of deposition of triglyceride energy into fat stores was calculated from the difference in the rate of fat energy mobilization and the rate of energy released during net fat oxidation. The values were found to be 0.94 +/- 0.26 kJ/min before starvation and 6.29 +/- 0.54 kJ/min on day +4 of starvation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The energy cost of triglyceride-fatty acid recycling in nonobese subjects after an overnight fast and four days of starvation. 382 5

Natural-abundance high-resolution 13C NMR spectra (linewidth, 10 Hz) of the hyphal fungus Aspergillus nidulans have been obtained after growth on glycolytic or gluconeogenic carbon sources. Various polyols, some tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates and amino acids, and some phospholipids and fatty acyl compounds are present. The polyols found are mannitol, arabitol, erythritol, and glycerol. The nature of the carbon source has a pronounced effect on the pool sizes of the various polyols. All are present when the fungus is grown on sucrose or sucrose/acetate under strongly aerobic conditions. When grown on acetate, both arabitol and glycerol levels are low, whereas on glycerol erythritol is also hardly detectable. The effect of oxygen is most outspoken in glycolytically grown cultures. Limited oxygenation leads to low levels of arabitol and glycerol. Strong oxygenation changes the ratio of erythritol to mannitol, favoring the C4 polyol. An increase in oxygen supply leads to (i) stimulation of the fluxes through the pentose phosphate pathway and glycolysis, (ii) an overflow of reduced metabolites both at the pentose phosphate pathway level (erythritol and arabitol) and at the C3 level of the glycolytic pathway (glycerol), and (iii) the usual accumulation of mannitol. Upon starvation, glycerol, the other three polyols, and the tricarboxylic acid-cycle intermediates and their associated amino acids disappear in this order. As in yeast, gluconeogenic substrates lead to the synthesis of trehalose, which also occurs when mycelium is grown on acetate/sucrose under limiting aeration. A transient formation of trehalose has been observed upon incubation of starved mycelium, cultured on different substrates, with [13C]glucose.
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PMID:13C NMR studies of carbon metabolism in the hyphal fungus Aspergillus nidulans. 388 52

Depletion of hepatic glutathione in male rats by starvation caused a significant increase in microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity, which was not affected by acute ethanol pretreatment. An additional depletion in fasted rats by diethylmaleate (0.5 g/kg) caused a further increase in the enzyme activity, but this increase was delayed in ethanol intoxicated rats. Although ethanol caused a small increase in hepatic microsomal lipid peroxidation in control animals, this effect of ethanol was not observed in diethylmaleate treated rats and thus was apparently not responsible for the delay in enzyme activation. It is suggested that the activation of microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity towards 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene in glutathione-depleted rat liver may be produced by changes in thiol/disulfid ratio and/or some reactive oxygen species.
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PMID:Effect of ethanol on the microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity in glutathione-depleted rat liver. 401 36

Bone death is always due to a disparity between the oxygen need of the bone cell and the ability of the local circulation to supply that need. As with infarction anywhere else, this can be brought about either by interruption of the arterial supply or by occlusion of the venous drainage, resulting in stasis and gradual oxygen starvation. In this article, these mechanisms and the events surrounding them are discussed, and the pathogenetic pathways linking the various clinical disorders with osteonecrosis are explored.
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PMID:Mechanisms of idiopathic osteonecrosis. 405 95

We have found that Ehrlich ascites tumour (EAT) cells, deprived of any carbon source, and suspended at a density of 2 X 10(5) cells/cm3, begin to die only after 12 h of starvation, though it is known that under these conditions they lose over 80% of their ATP within 30 min. Moreover, we have found that the viability of the cells incubated in the absence of any substrate for energy metabolism is strongly dependent on the density of the cell suspension, and can be significantly improved simply by increasing the suspension density. This prompted us to investigate the density dependence of the maintenance of EAT cell viability in the presence of various substrates for energy metabolism and metabolic intermediates. It was found that: Glucose ensures 48 h viability of EAT cells irrespective of suspension density. Fatty acids and pyruvate as sole carbon source do not improve EAT cell survival. In the presence of glutamine as sole carbon source the EAT cell survival shows dependence on cell-suspension density. At densities of 1.6 X 10(6) to 3.2 X 10(6) cells/cm3 the cell viability is maintained at least as well as in the presence of glucose, but at low cell-suspension densities glutamine does not support cell viability. In the presence of glutamine, addition of 1 mM-inosine and 1 mM-uridine ensures high cell survival irrespective of the cell-suspension density. In the presence of inosine or uridine (10 mM) as sole carbon source, the EAT cell survival is the same as in the presence of glucose and does not depend upon cell-suspension density. Guanosine is less effective, whereas adenosine has no effect at all on the maintenance of EAT cell viability for 48 h. There is no correlation at all between EAT cell survival and the rate of lactic acid production. At a cell-suspension density of 1.6 X 10(6) cells/cm3 the cell survival is of the same order in the presence of glutamine as in the presence of glucose, in spite of the fact that in the first case the rate of lactic acid production is more than 20 times lower. There is no correlation between the capacity of particular nucleosides to support EAT cell survival and their effects on glycolysis and oxygen consumption.
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PMID:Density-dependent survival of Ehrlich ascites tumour cells in the presence of various substrates for energy metabolism. 408 20

The aspartic transcarbamylase (ATCase) activity of Bacillus subtilis cells disappears rapidly from stationary-phase cells prior to sporulation. ATCase activity does not appear in the culture fluid during the stationary phase; hence the enzyme appears to be inactivated in the cells. The enzyme is inactivated normally in two different mutants lacking proteases; the activity is very stable in crude extracts of cells or in the culture fluid. These results suggest that ATCase is not inactivated by the general proteolysis that occurs in sporulating bacteria. The inactivation of ATCase can be completely inhibited after it has begun by oxygen starvation or addition of fluoroacetate. Inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation and electron transport also interrupt the inactivation of ATCase. The inactivation of ATCase is very slow in two mutant strains that are deficient in enzymes of tricarboxylic acid cycle. Addition of gluconate to stationary cultures of the mutant strains, which is known to restore depleted adenosine 5'-triphosphate pools in these bacteria, also restores inactivation of ATCase. These experiments support the conclusion that the generation of metabolic energy is necessary for the inactivation of ATCase in stationary cells. ATCase activity is stable in growing cells in which ATCase synthesis is repressed by addition of uracil; the enzyme is inactivated normally, however, when such cells cease growing.
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PMID:Inactivation of aspartic transcarbamylase in sporulating Bacillus subtilis: demonstration of a requirement for metabolic energy. 419 42


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