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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

By an improved isolation procedure chloroplasts could be obtained from the alga Bumilleriopsis filiformis (Xanthophyceae) which exhibited high electron transport rates tightly coupled to ATP formation. Uncouplers both stimulate electron transport and inhibit photophosphorylation. These chloroplasts retain almost all soluble cytochrome c-553 besides a membrane-bound cytochrome c-554.5 (=f-554.5). Sonification or iron deficiency removed the soluble cytochrome only with a concurrent decrease of electron transport from water to methyl viologen or to NADP and decreased non-cyclic and cyclic photophosphorylation. However, photosynthetic control and the P/2e ratios remain unaltered. In Bumilleriopsis, which apparently has no plastocyanin, the soluble cytochrome c-553 seemingly links electron transport between the bound cytochrome c and P-700.
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PMID:The role of plastidic cytochrome c in algal electron transport and photophosphorylation. 20 17

The purpose of this study was to determine whether severe iron deficiency alters the adaptive response of skeletal muscle fibers to a sustained increase in tonic contractile activity. Seven weanling rabbits consumed a low iron diet and underwent phlebotomy twice weekly for 6 mo, resulting in severe anemia (mean Hb 5.5 g/dl). Compared with control animals, tibialis anterior skeletal muscles of iron-deficient animals exhibited reduced concentrations of cytochrome c (4.4 +/- 0.7 vs. 8.6 +/- 0.7 nmol/g tissue; P less than 0.01), and reduced activities of citrate synthase (83 +/- 10 vs. 133 +/- 13 mU/mg protein; P less than 0.01) and cytochrome-c oxidase (2.2 +/- 0.2 vs. 3.6 +/- 0.5 U/mg protein; P less than 0.05). In these muscles mitochondria were swollen and displayed deformed cristae. Less severe biochemical abnormalities were observed in cardiac and soleus skeletal muscles. Ten days of continuous electrical stimulation of the motor nerve supplying anterior compartment muscles of iron-deficient rabbits increased expression of mitochondrial proteins: cytochrome c was increased to 154% of control levels (P less than 0.05), and cytochrome-c oxidase and citrate synthase activities were increased to 199 and 272% of control levels, respectively (P less than 0.005). In addition, electrical pacing increased the fractional volume of mitochondria observed by electron microscopy and reduced the activity of aldolase A by 28% (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Activity-induced adaptations in skeletal muscles of iron-deficient rabbits. 284 18

We measured mitochondrial enzyme activities in skeletal muscle under conditions of iron deficiency and endurance training to assess the effects of these interventions on the contents and proportions of non-iron-containing and iron-dependent enzymes and proteins. Male Sprague-Dawley rats, 21 days of age, received a diet containing either 6 (iron deficient) or 50 mg iron/kg diet (iron sufficient). At 35 days of age animals were subdivided into sedentary and endurance training groups (running at 0.7 mph, 0% grade, 45 min/day, 6 days/wk). By 70 days of age, iron deficiency had decreased gastrocnemius muscle cytochrome c by 62% in sedentary animals. In contrast, the activities of tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes were increased, remained unchanged or were slightly decreased, indicating that iron deficiency markedly altered mitochondrial composition. Endurance training increased cytochrome c (35%), tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes (approximately 15%), and manganese superoxide dismutase (33%) in iron-deficient rats, whereas the same exercise regimen had no effect on the skeletal muscle of iron-sufficient animals. The interactive effect of dietary iron deficiency and mild exercise on mitochondrial enzymes suggests that adaptation to a training stimulus is, to some extent, geared to the relationship between the energy demand of exercise and the capacity for O2 transport and utilization.
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PMID:Effects of iron deficiency and training on mitochondrial enzymes in skeletal muscle. 303 29

Spirillum itersonii contains b- and c-type cytochromes as well as a carbon monoxide-binding pigment of the cytochrome o type. Synthesis of cytochromes b and c is increased by about two- and fourfold, respectively, when cells are transferred from high to low aeration. The increased concentration of cytochrome is not accompanied by an increase in the respiration rate of the cells. Both cytochrome b and cytochrome c are located in the particulate fraction of cells grown under high or low aeration, and both pigments are fully reducible by succinate. No evidence was found for the accumulation of the protein component of either cytochrome when synthesis of the prosthetic group was limited by iron deficiency, nor did heme or precursors accumulate when protein synthesis was prevented. It was therefore concluded that the formation of the heme prosthetic group is closely integrated with the synthesis of the protein moiety. delta-Aminolevulinate synthase was detected in extracts of the organism. Its activity was correlated with cytochrome synthesis; it was reduced by high aeration and increased under low aeration. The synthase was inhibited by hemin at concentrations of 10 mum or higher. The observations are consistent with a central role for the heme prosthetic group in the regulation of cytochrome synthesis.
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PMID:Cytochrome synthesis and its regulation in Spirillum itersonii. 605 11

The purpose of this study was to determine the interrelationships between iron stores, serum iron, hemoglobin, myoglobin, and cytochrome c under conditions of iron deficiency that did not interfere with normal growth. Rats were given diets containing from 7 to 500 mg iron per kilogram of diet during a period of 3 weeks of rapid growth between weaning at 21 days and approaching sexual maturity at 42 days. We found that the level of iron intake required for a maximum concentration of hemoglobin was similar to that which results in a maximum level of tissue cytochrome c. The severity of iron deficiency anemia was proportionally similar to the degree of depletion of muscle cytochrome c at all levels of iron intake below 25 mg/kg diet. The results indicate that even the mildest degree of nutritional iron deficiency anemia also affected tissue cytochrome c and could impair cytochrome-dependent mitochondrial function.
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PMID:Manifestation of iron deficiency at various levels of dietary iron intake. 624 52

Young rats were made iron deficient by feeding them a low-iron diet for 8 wk. Iron deficiency resulted in a 50% decrease in cytochrome c and cytochrome oxidase and a 26% decrease in mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in skeletal muscle. Respiratory capacity of muscle homogenates was reduced 55%. After 8 days of iron treatment, respiratory capacity, cytochrome c, cytochrome oxidase, and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase had returned 50% toward normal. Maximum O2 uptake of contracting hindlimb muscles averaged 8.5 mumol O2.min-1.g-1 in control, 4.3 mumol O2.min-1.g-1 in iron-deficient, and 6.2 mumol O2.min-1.g-1 in the 8-day-iron-repleted rats. Muscle fatigue during 10 min of stimulation was greater in the iron-deficient group. Lactate concentration in red muscle was higher in iron-deficient than in control rats after stimulation. The muscle fatigue and lactate responses returned 50% toward normal during 8 days of iron treatment. We conclude that iron deficiency results in a decrease in skeletal muscle capacity for aerobic metabolism and, by this mechanism, increases susceptibility to fatigue.
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PMID:Physiological and biochemical effects of iron deficiency on rat skeletal muscle. 626 4

Male weanling rats were fed a control diet (46 ppm iron) or an iron-deficient diet (11 ppm iron) for 7 wk to determine the influence of iron deficiency on heme proteins and skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiration. At the end of 7 wk, the hemoglobin in the blood of the iron deficient rats was 35% less and skeletal muscle myoglobin was 20 to 37% less than in the control animals. The concentration of myoglobin in the heart was not appreciably diminished by iron deficiency. Cytochrome c concentration was 20% less in the heart and 35% less in the mixed-fiber gastrocnemius in the iron-deficient animals. Iron deficiency did not influence the activity of metmyoglobin reductase in either heart or skeletal muscle. There was about 30% more methemoglobin reductase activity in the red blood cells of the iron-deficient animals, which resulted in methemoglobin levels that were so low as to be virtually unmeasurable. In the iron-deficient rats, skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiration with either pyruvate-malate or palmitylcarnitine as substrate was 17 to 20% less than in the control animals. This study demonstrates that dietary iron deficiency of sufficient severity to reduce blood Hb and skeletal muscle myoglobin or cytochrome c also results in an impaired skeletal muscle oxidative capacity. The study also illustrates the preferential utilization of iron, not only between tissues, but within tissues, and tissue specific adaptive responses to iron deficiency.
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PMID:Influence of dietary iron deficiency on hemoglobin, myoglobin, their respective reductases, and skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiration. 627 Oct 3

This study was designed to determine the interrelationships among storage iron, transport iron, and iron compounds that serve known physiological functions (Hb, myoglobin, and cytochrome c) during the gradual progression of dietary iron deficiency. These three categories of iron compounds are generally considered to become depleted in three corresponding, sequential stages. However, there is scattered evidence of substantial overlap between these stages in man. The presence of such overlap may prove pertinent to the interpretation of laboratory tests used in the diagnosis of iron deficiency. The rat was used as an experimental model to allow more complete evaluation of the interrelationships between the stages of iron deficiency than would be possible in man. Rats were given diets containing 2, 6 and 50 mg iron/kg diet during early adult development, between 36 and 90 days of age. The iron-deficient diets (2 and 6 mg iron/kg diet) resulted in decreases in hematocrit and in muscle and intestinal cytochrome c well before storage iron in the liver and spleen was exhausted. The results in the rat model may help to explain why there is not a consistent pattern of laboratory abnormalities in individuals with chronic, mild dietary iron deficiency.
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PMID:Sequence of development of iron deficiency in the rat. 628 Apr 87

Myocardial iron deficiency complicates chronic intrauterine hypoxemia during diabetic pregnancies. To understand the effect of both conditions during fetal life on intracardiac iron prioritization, we measured heart myoglobin, cytochrome c, and elemental iron concentrations in six iron-deficient, hypoxic, five iron-sufficient, hypoxic, six iron-deficient, normoxic, and six iron-sufficient, normoxic newborn guinea pigs. The iron-deficient, hypoxic group had lower heart iron (p = 0.03) but higher myoglobin concentration (p < 0.0001) when compared with the iron-sufficient, normoxic group. The percentage of iron incorporated into myoglobin was higher than control in the iron-deficient, hypoxic group (23.2+/-7.2% vs. 5.2+/-0.8%; p < 0.001) and increased as total heart iron decreased (r = 0.97; p < 0.001). In contrast, heart cytochrome c concentration was lower than control in the iron-deficient, hypoxic group (p = 0.01), with equal percentages of heart iron incorporated into cytochrome c. This intracellular prioritization of myocardial iron to myoglobin and away from cytochrome c following combined fetal hypoxemia and iron deficiency may represent an adaptive mechanism to preserve myocardial tissue oxygenation, although at the expense of oxidative phosphorylative capability.
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PMID:Intracardiac iron distribution in newborn guinea pigs following isolated and combined fetal hypoxemia and fetal iron deficiency. 1006 44

A genetic screen for Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants with copper-dependent growth or nonphotosynthetic phenotypes revealed three loci, COPPER RESPONSE REGULATOR 1 (CRR1), COPPER RESPONSE DEFECT 1 (CRD1), and COPPER RESPONSE DEFECT 2 (CRD2), distinguished as regulatory or target genes on the basis of phenotype. CRR1 was shown previously to be required for transcriptional activation of target genes like CYC6, CPX1, and CRD1, encoding, respectively, cytochrome c(6) (which is a heme-containing substitute for copper-containing plastocyanin), coproporphyrinogen III oxidase, and Mg-protoporphyrin IX monomethylester cyclase. We show here that CRR1 is required also for normal accumulation of copper proteins like plastocyanin and ferroxidase in copper-replete medium and for apoplastocyanin degradation in copper-deficient medium, indicating that a single pathway controls nutritional copper homeostasis at multiple levels. CRR1 is linked to the SUPPRESSOR OF PCY1-AC208 13 (SOP13) locus, which corresponds to a gain-of-function mutation resulting in copper-independent expression of CYC6. CRR1 is required also for hypoxic growth, pointing to a physiologically meaningful regulatory connection between copper deficiency and hypoxia. The growth phenotype of crr1 strains results primarily from secondary iron deficiency owing to reduced ferroxidase abundance, suggesting a role for CRR1 in copper distribution to a multicopper ferroxidase involved in iron assimilation. Mutations at the CRD2 locus also result in copper-conditional iron deficiency, which is consistent with a function for CRD2 in a pathway for copper delivery to the ferroxidase. Taken together, the observations argue for a specialized copper-deficiency adaptation for iron uptake in Chlamydomonas.
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PMID:Genetic dissection of nutritional copper signaling in chlamydomonas distinguishes regulatory and target genes. 1551 54


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