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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. The metabolism of
oxygen
by phagocytosing neutrophils was traced by using 15O2. 2. The isotope did not exchange with the incubation medium or cells to an appreciable extent and unmetabolized
oxygen
was readily eluted by gassing the cell suspension. 3. The polarographic measurements of
oxygen
consumption closely paralleled the recovery of metabolized 15O2. 4. Almost all the metabolized 15O2 was converted into water, both in the presence and absence of KCN, supporting the concept that the
oxygen
consumed by neutrophils is converted into H2O2. It is unlikely that an appreciable proportion of this
oxygen
is incorporated into the organic composition of the cell or of the ingested micro-organism.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1978 Oct
PMID:Tracing the fate of oxygen consumed during phagocytosis by human neutrophils with 15O2. 71 56
1. To study the validity of a CO2-rebreathing method at rest and during graded exercise, cardiac output was measured simultaneously on 59 occasions in 16 subjects with normal pulmonary function with the CO2-rebreathing method and the direct Fick method for
oxygen
. The correlation coefficient between the results of both methods was significantly higher during exercise than at rest. 2. No systematic difference was shown between (a-v)CO2 content difference determined on whole blood and end-tidal gas, which justified the exclusion of a correction factor for blood to alveolar gas PCO2 gradients. 3. In the calculation of cardiac output by the direct Fick method for CO2 and by CO2 rebreathing, a standard CO2 dissociation curve was preferred to a synthetic CO2 dissociation curve, constructed by allowance for changes in haemoglobin concentration, pH and
oxygen
saturation. The latter curve tended to increase values for cardiac output and induced a large dispersion around the line of identity, when compared with simultaneous cardiac output estimates by the direct Fick method for
oxygen
.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1978 Nov
PMID:Comparison of cardiac output determined by a carbon dioxide-rebreathing and direct Fick method at rest and during exercise. 71 98
1. Pulmonary and systemic haemodynamics during repeated exercise were studied in 28 patients with chronic lung disease of various etiology, 16 of whom suffered from chronic bronchitis. They performed a moderate exercise repeated after a 20 min rest period. Ventilatory variables, blood gas tensions, cardiac output and vascular pressures (right ventricular end-diastolic, pulmonary arterial, wedge and systemic arterial) were measured at rest, during exercise and again at rest and during the same exercise. 2. Ventilation and blood gas tensions were similar during the two rest and exercise periods; there was, however, a slightly significant difference in
oxygen
consumption and hydrogen ion concentration between the first and the second exercise period. Pulmonary arterial and wedge pressures were lower during the second rest and exercise, right ventricular filling pressure was lower at rest, and systemic arterial pressure during the second exercise. Cardiac output and pulmonary vascular resistance were unchanged. 3. Changes in systemic arterial pressure were significantly different in a group of patients with arterial
oxygen
desaturation or perfusion defects, compared with those patients without such impairment.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1978 Nov
PMID:Haemodynamic variables during repeated exercise in chronic lung disease. 72 2
When in the primeval atmosphere ammonia approached exhaustion, bacteria resembling clostridia developed mechanisms for nitrogen fixation. The fixation was continued by the photosynthetic bacteria. In the later, oxidizing, atmosphere the combined activities of the nitrificants and the denitrificants could lead to a large-scale cyclic regeneration of free nitrogen. The possibility of a descent of the nitrificants from hypothetical photosynthetic bacteria, which used ammonia as electron donor, is discussed. The anoxygenic atmosphere contained no nitrate, and therefore neither nitrate fermentation nor nitrate respiration were precursors of aerobic respiration. This evolved from photosynthesis. In nitrate fermentation, nitrate serves only as an incidental electron acceptor; this process is merely an evolutionary sideline. Nitrate respiration evolved from aerobic respiration. While in present conditions the reaction of nitrogen with
oxygen
and water to give nitrate is exergonic and possibly occurs at a low rate, the antagonistic action of the denitrificants maintains the stationary concentrations of nitrogen and
oxygen
in the air.
J
Mol
Evol 1975 Dec 31
PMID:The history of inorganic nitrogen in the biosphere. 76 87
The activity of yeasts citrate synthase in cells grown under different hypoxic conditions has been investigated. A linear relationship between the citrate synthase activity and the respiratory capacity of the cells has been found. When Saccharomyces cerevisiae was grown on fermentable substrates the activity decreased as the concentration of sugars in the medium increased. The enzyme of the yeast Rhodoturula showed a high activity in spite of the existence of high sugar concentration in the culture medium. Neither feed-back repression by glutamate nor feed-forward induction by ammonia has been found in bakers' yeast. The results suggest that the regulation of the enzyme by
oxygen
availability takes place by the ""de novo'' synthesis of the enzyme.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1976 Sep 30
PMID:Regulation of the level of yeasts citrate synthase by oxygen availability. 79 Jan 60
The enzymatic destruction of oxidizing products produced during metabolic reduction of
oxygen
in the cell (such as singlet
oxygen
, H2O2 and OH radical) involves the concerted action of superoxide dismutase-which removes O-2 and yields H2O2-and H2O2 removing enzymes such as catalase and glutathione peroxidase. A difference in distribution or ratio of these enzymes in various tissues may result in a different reactivity of
oxygen
radicals. It was found that in red blood cells superoxide dismutase and catalase are extracted in the same fraction as hemoglobin, while glutathione peroxidase appears to be "loosely" bound to the cellular structure. This suggests that in red blood cells catalase acts in series with superoxide dismutase against bursts of
oxygen
radicals formed from oxyhemoglobin, while glutathione & peroxidase may protect the cell membrane against low concentrations of H2O2. On the other hand, catalase activity is absent in various types of ascites tumor cells, while glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase are found in the cytoplasm. However, the peroxidase/dismutase ratio is lower than in liver cells, and this may provide an explanation for the higher susceptibility of tumor cells to treatments likely to involve
oxygen
radicals.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1976 Jan 31
PMID:Enzyme defense against reactive oxygen derivatives. II. Erythrocytes and tumor cells. 81 6
1. The effect of mental arithmetic tasks on ventilation, breathing pattern,
oxygen
intake and carbon dioxide output was studied during air breathing and carbon dioxide rebreathing in healthy subjects. 2. Ventilation and breathing frequency increased significantly on performance of the task during 4 min air breathing and 4 min rebreathing; tidal volume was unchanged. The slopes of the ventilatory, frequency and tidal volume responses to carbon dioxide changed little during task performance. 3. During 15 min air breathing,
oxygen
intake was unchanged with task performance. Carbon dioxide output increased significantly with task performance, as a result of wash-out of carbon dioxide from body stores by the increased ventilation. 4. Mental arithmetic had no effect on the coefficients of variation of the slope and position variables of the ventilatory, frequency and tidal volume responses to carbon dioxide. It is concluded that task performance does not improve the reproducibility of these responses.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Mar
PMID:Interaction of mental factors with hypercapnic ventilatory drive in man. 84 58
1. The
oxygen
affinity in vitro, haematological indices, erythrocyte 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and plasma inorganic phosphate were determined in 20 patients with chronic ventilatory failure and in 20 healthy non-smokers of similar age. 2. No significant difference was observed between the mean
oxygen
affinity or phosphate concentrations of the patients and healthy subjects but the mean haemoglobin and packed cell volume were significantly higher in the patients. 3. There was a positive correlation between plasma and intraerythrocytic pH which was similar in both patients and healthy subjects. 4. The arteriovenous difference in
oxygen
saturation in vivo (directly measured at cardiac catheterization) correlated closely with that calculated from the individual patient's
oxygen
affinity determined in vitro and arterial and mixed venous
oxygen
and carbon dioxide tensions, suggesting that
oxygen
affinity in vitro accurately reflects the curve in vivo.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Mar
PMID:Oxygen affinity in vivo and in vitro in chronic ventilatory failure. 84 59
Hemoglobin M Milwaukee (beta67E11 Val leads to Glu) is a naturally occurring valency hybrid containing two permanently oxidized hemes on the beta chains. In this mutant, the two abnormal beta chains cannot combine with ligands whereas the two alpha chains are normal and can combine with
oxygen
with a Hill coefficient varying from 1.1 to 1.3 [Udem et al. (1970), J
Mol
. Biol. 48, 489]. High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 250 MHz has been used to investigate the exchangeable, ring-current shifted, ferrous and ferric hyperfine shifted resonances of Hb M Milwaukee in the absence and presence of organic phosphates. The alpha-heme environment, as manifested by the ring-current shifted resonances in the liganded form as well as the ferrous hyperfine shifted resonances in unliganded form, and subunit interactions, as manifested by the exchangeable resonances, are similar in Hb M Milwaukee to those in normal adult human hemoglobin. Organic phosphates can partially or completely inhibit the structural transformation which normally accompanies the binding of
oxygen
or carbon monoxide to Hb M Milwaukee. Upon stepwise addition of
oxygen
to deoxy Hb M Milwaukee, the hyperfine shifted resonance spectra of ferric beta chains show features which cannot be attributed to either fully deoxy or oxy species. However, the spectra for partially oxygenated Hb M Milwaukee can be described as an appropriately weighted average of the spectra of sero, singly, and doubly oxygenated species. The ferric hyperfine shifted resonance spectrum of the singly oxygenated intermediate has been calculated by a method employing least-squares analysis of the spectra of partially oxygenated Hb M Milwaukee at several values of
oxygen
saturation. The spectrum of this intermediate exhibits features which cannot be accounted for by a two-structure model. The present results are consistent with a sequential model for the oxygenation of this mutant hemoglobin. In view of the similarities between normal adult hemoglobin and Hb M Milwaukee, it is suggested that a two-state concerted allosteric model does not provide an adequate description of the structure-function relationship in normal adult hemoglobin.
...
PMID:Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of hemoglobin M Milwaukee and their implications concerning the mechanism of cooperative oxygenation of hemoglobin. 84 26
1. Seven patients who had suffered unilateral leg fracture were studied after removal of immobilizing plaster casts. 2. Leg volume measured anthropometrically was reduced by 12% in the injured leg (5-68 +/- 1-05 litres) compared with the uninjured (6-43 +/- 0-87 litres). Associated with this loss was a similar reduction in the net maximum
oxygen
uptake achieved in one-leg cycling, from 1-89 +/- 0-21 1/min in the uninjured leg to 1-57 +/- 0-18 1/min in the injured. 3. Measured by a percutaneous needle biopsy technique, a reduction of 42% was found in the cross-sectional area of the muscle fibres sampled from the vastus lateralis of the injured compared with the uninjured leg. 4. Staining for myosin adenosine triphosphatase activity showed that both type I and II fibres were affected, being reduced respectively from 3410 to 1840 micronm2 and from 3810 to 2390 micronm2 cross-sectional area. 5. Possible reasons and implications are discussed for the discrepancy between the magnitude of the difference observed in the gross measurement of leg function (maximum
oxygen
uptake) and structure (leg volume) as compared with the cellular level (cross-sectional fibre area).
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Apr
PMID:Functional and structural changes after disuse of human muscle. 86 28
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