Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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The drugs used to treat diabetes mellitus are diverse and involve several classes. However, these drugs can be roughly separated into hypoglycaemic agents, such as insulin and the sulphonylureas, and antihyperglycaemic agents, such as the biguanides, the alpha-glucosidase inhibitors and troglitazone. Reports of insulin overdose are rare. The major effects of insulin overdose are secondary to the insult to the CNS produced by hypoglycaemia. The mainstay of insulin overdose management is glucose replacement therapy. Sulphonylureas are the most commonly used oral antihyperglycaemic agents in the management of type 2 (non-insulin-dependent; NIDDM) diabetes mellitus. Sulphonylureas primarily cause serum glucose reduction by stimulating the release of preformed insulin from the pancreatic islets. The mainstay of sulphonylurea overdose management is glucose replacement therapy, and in severe cases, reduction of insulin release. In the large majority of patients intravenous glucose supplementation will be sufficient to maintain euglycaemia. Repaglinide, a meglitinide analogue, is a new nonsulphonylurea oral hypoglycaemic agent. In overdose, this drug may produce prolonged hypoglycaemia similar to the sulphonylureas. The primary problem with biguanide overdose is the potential for lactic acidosis. The management of biguanide overdose is largely supportive and directed at correcting the metabolic acidosis along with associated complications. The alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, acarbose, voglibose and miglitol competitively and reversibly inhibit the alpha-glucosidase enzymes (glucoamylase, sucrase, maltase and isomaltase) in the brush border in the small intestine, which delays the hydrolysis of complex carbohydrates. They appear unlikely to produce hypoglycaemia in overdose, but abdominal discomfort and diarrhoea may occur. Troglitazone is the first thiazolidinedione antidiabetic drug available. There are no data on overdose, probably because of its very recent introduction. Overdoses with antidiabetic drugs produce major morbidity, with many cases requiring intensive care medicine and prolonged hospital stays. However, fatalities are rare when treatment is initiated early. The management of the hypoglycaemic drugs (insulin and sulphonylureas) is based primarily on restoring and maintaining euglycaemia via intravenous dextrose supplementation. In the case of the sulphonylureas, reduction of insulin secretion via pharmacological intervention may also be necessary. With biguanides the main risk appears to be cardiovascular collapse secondary to profound acidosis. The management focus is on restoring acid-base balance with hyperventilation and the use of insulin to shift the utilisation of glucose from the nonoxidative pathway to the oxidative pathway. Use of haemodialysis has shown equivocal results but may be valuable in metformin overdose.
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PMID:Management of antidiabetic medications in overdose. 982 53

In this study, 200 ps molecular dynamics simulations were conducted to investigate the unfolding mechanism of the catalytic domain of glucoamylase from Aspergillus awamori var. X100. The unfolding of this domain was suggested to follow a putative hierarchical manner, in which the heavily O-glycosylated belt region from residues T440 to A471 acted as the initiation site, followed by the alpha-helix secondary structure destruction, and then the collapse of the catalytic center pocket. The O-glycosylated belt region surrounded the surface of the catalytic domain in its native state at low temperature, whereas it was extended and is more suitable to be classified as part of the subsequent linker domain at high temperatures due to its high flexibility. The inner set helices of the (alpha/alpha)(6)-barrel seemed to exhibit higher helical content than the outer set ones at all temperatures examined. The distances between the C(alpha) of the three Cys residue pairs fluctuated rapidly at higher temperatures, indicating that these disulfide bonds have little effect on the structural stabilization. The melting temperature, at which the residual total helicity of the catalytic domain is 50%, is much lower than the critical temperature, at which the catalytic center pocket has lost its structural integrity.
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PMID:Molecular dynamics simulations of the unfolding mechanism of the catalytic domain from Aspergillus awamori var. X100 glucoamylase. 1252 55

Empty fruit bunch (EFB) and palm oil mill effluent (POME) are the major wastes generated by the oil palm industry in Malaysia. The practice of EFB and POME digester sludge co-composting has shown positive results, both in mitigating otherwise environmentally damaging waste streams and producing a useful product (compost) from these streams. In this study, the bacterial ecosystems of 12-week-old EFB-POME co-compost and POME biogas sludge from Felda Maokil, Johor were analysed using 16S metagenome sequencing. Over ten phyla were detected, with Chloroflexi being the predominant phylum, representing approximately 53% of compost and 23% of the POME microbiome reads. The main bacterial lineage found in the compost and POME was Anaerolinaceae (Chloroflexi) with 30% and 18% of the total gene fragments, respectively. The significant differences between compost and POME communities were abundances of Syntrophobacter, Sulfuricurvum and Coprococcus. No methanogens were identified due to the bias in general 16S primers to eubacteria. The preponderance of anaerobic species in the compost and high abundance of secondary metabolite fermenting bacteria is due to an extended composting time, with anaerobic collapse of the pile due to the tropical heat. Predictive functional profiles of the metagenomes using 16S rRNA marker genes suggest that the presence of enzymes involved in degradation of polysaccharides such as glucoamylase, endoglucanase and arabinofuranosidase, all of which were strongly active in POME. Eubacterial species associated with cellulytic methanogenesis were present in both samples.
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PMID:Insights into microbial community structure and diversity in oil palm waste compost. 3158 88