Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
47,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The effect of age and Walker 256 tumor on maximal phosphate-dependent glutaminase activity of rat immune tissue was determined. Glutaminase is a key enzyme in the metabolism of glutamine, an important fuel for normal and neoplastic cells. 2. Maximal activity of phosphate-dependent glutaminase was measured in immune tissues and tumors of Walker 256 tumor-bearing young (28 days old), mature (3 months old) and aged (15 months old) Wistar rats. The following tissues were examined: thymus, spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes and tumor. 3. Tumor implantation for 14 days reduced glutaminase activity in the thymus and mesenteric lymph nodes. Tumor glutaminase activity was lowest in aged rats and highest in the mature group. 4. Comparison of glutaminase activity in immune and tumor tissues suggested the flux of glutamine between these tissues in the 3 groups. Glutaminase activity was 2.8-fold higher in immune tissues in aged rats (2.58 +/- 0.35 vs 0.93 +/- 0.16 mumol min-1 g tissue wet weight-1, mean +/- SEM, 5 rats), and 1.9- (4.14 +/- 0.47 vs 8.36 +/- 1.29 mumol min-1 g tissue wet weight-1, mean +/- SEM, 5 rats) and 2.5-fold increased (2.41 +/- 0.20 vs 5.92 +/- 0.22 mumol min-1 g tissue wet weight-1, mean +/- SEM, 5 rats) in tumor tissue in the mature and young groups, respectively. These results suggest the deviation of glutamine flux from defense cells to the neoplastic tissue in tumor-bearing young and mature rats and may partially explain the slow cancer growth in elderly patients.
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PMID:Effect of aging on the glutaminase activity of neoplastic and immune tissues. 134 14

Glutamine has been shown to be an important metabolic substrate of enterocytes in many animals, including cats, dogs, hamsters, human beings, monkeys, rabbits, rats, and sheep. To determine whether glutamine is important in the metabolism of cells of the equine gastrointestinal tract, we examined transintestinal differences in glutamine concentrations in the arterial and venous circulation, and measured activity of the major glutamine catabolizing enzyme, glutaminase. Arteriovenous differences provide an index of the amount of a given substrate removed by the tissue across which the measurements are made, and commonly are expressed as a percentage of substrate removed, or percent extraction. Arteriovenous differences for glutamine were determined in 7 anesthetized adult horses (weight, 450 to 500 kg) before and after an i.v. glutamine infusion. The mean baseline arterial glutamine concentration (+/- SEM) was 572 +/- 24 microM; this concentration quadrupled (to 2,167 +/- 135 microM, P less than 0.01) 1 minute after i.v. bolus infusion of a 17.5-g glutamine load. Baseline extraction by the portal-drained viscera was 7.5 +/- 1.5%; this value increased to 18 +/- 2% at 1 minute (P less than 0.01) and had returned to baseline values 60 minutes later. Arteriovenous differences were greatest across the jejunum (11.8 +/- 1.8% in the baseline period vs 33.1 +/- 3.1% at 1 minute, P less than 0.001), with smaller differences across the colon, suggesting that the jejunum was the more avid utilizer of glutamine. Glutaminase activity was 4.38 +/- 0.16 and 4.00 +/- 0.60 mumol/mg of protein/h under standard conditions in jejunal and ileal mucosa, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Arteriovenous differences for glutamine in the equine gastrointestinal tract. 145 33