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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. The effects of varying PCO2 on glucose output and the intracellular concentrations of lactate, pyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate, 2-phosphoglycerate and 3-phosphoglycerate were studied in the isolated rat liver perfused with differing concentrations of lactate. 2. When the perfusate lactate concentration is above 1.5 mmol/l respiratory acidosis (simulated by high perfusate PCO2) inhibits gluconeogenesis from lactate, whereas respiratory alkalosis stimulates gluconeogenesis. 3. In general there were significant positive correlations between intracellular pH (pHi) and hepatocyte phosphoenolpyruvate, 2-phosphoglycerate and 3-phosphoglycerate concentrations, and negative correlations between pHi and lactate and pyruvate concentrations; there were usually significant correlations in the opposite sense between these metabolites and log PCO2. 4. The results suggest that
CO2
exerts an inhibitory effect on gluconeogenesis at a step between pyruvate and phosphoenolypruvate; however, this is not the only effect of
CO2
on the gluconeogenic sequence.
CO2
probably acts by changing pHi, but direct effects of
CO2
and HCO-3 cannot be excluded. 5. Except at low lactate concentrations, nonionic diffusion probably does not play a major role in the entry of lactate into the hepatocyte.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1978 Aug
PMID:Mechanism of the effect of varying PCO2 on gluconeogenesis from lactate in the perfused rat liver. 2 98
Various chemical, physical and geological observations indicate that smectite clays are probably the major components of the Martian soil. Satisfactory ground-based chemical simulation of the Viking biology experimental results was obtained with the smectite clays nontronite and montmorillonite when they contained iron and hydrogen as adsorbed ions. Radioactive gas was released from the medium solution used in the Viking Labeled Release (LR) experiment when interacted with the clays, at rates and quantities similar to those measured by Viking on Mars. Heating of the active clay (mixed with soluble salts) to 160 degrees C in
CO2
atmosphere reduced the decomposition activity considerably, again, as was observed on Mars. The decomposition reaction in LR experiment is postulated to be iron-catalyzed formate decomposition on the clay surface. The main features of the Viking Pyrolytic Release (PR) experiment were also simulated recently (Hubbard, 1979) which the iron clays, including a relatively low '1st peak' and significant '2nd peak'. The accumulated observations on various Martian soil properties and the results of simulation experiments, thus indicate that smectite clays are major and active components of the Martian soil. It now appears that many of the results of the Viking biology experiments can be explained on the basis of their surface activity in catalysis and adsorption.
J
Mol
Evol 1979 Dec
PMID:Smectite clays in Mars soil: evidence for their presence and role in Viking biology experimental results. 4 7
Thyroid hormones regulate lipid metabolism by affecting lipogenesis as well as lipolysis. The present paper discusses the way thyroidectomy induced an enhancement in lipogenesis in rat fat cells. The doubling in the conversion of glucose to
CO2
and fatty acids seen after thyroidectomy was found to be due to a modification in the actual pathway of glucose metabolism: there was a preferential stimulation of the conversion of glucose to
CO2
by the pentose cycle (utilisation of [1-14C]glucose) while the production of fatty acids and glyceride-glycerol proceeded, respectively, much more, or only slightly more, via the pathway of [6-14C]glucose metabolism. Studies employing the phosphodiesterase inhibitor MIX, or the cyclic AMP analogue, DBcAMP showed that the lipogenic process depends on cyclic AMP. As the stimulatory effect of thyroidectomy was not abolished, however, lipogenesis must be under the independent control of both cyclic AMP and absence of thyroid hormones. Insulin, a further mediator of lipogenesis was found to further enhance the already preexisting high conversion of glucose to
CO2
in fat cells from thyroidectomized rats. It is concluded that at least three factors modify lipogenesis: thyroidectomy, cyclic AMP and insulin; each achieving its effect in an independent manner.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 1979 Jun
PMID:Cyclic AMP and lipogenesis in fat cells from thyroidectomized rats. 8 52
Anacystis nidulans was grown photoautotrophically in a chemostat in the presence of light, air and
CO2
as the sole carbon source. Either the amount of the nitrogen source in the medium or light intensity were used as growth-limiting parameters. 1. Cells of high glycogen content obtained by pre-incubation under nitrogen starvation conditions maintained their glycogen content during continuous cultivation. Both growth rate and the amount of cell-mass and of glycogen depended on the nitrate content of the medium and the light intensity. The values for the growth rate, the maximal rates of glycogen synthesis and of cell mass formation were 0.1 h-1, 6 mg/l.h and 17 mg/l.h, respectively. 2. Cells without glycogen which had been transferred from an exponentially growing batch culture to chemostat conditions showed increasing rates of growth and of cell mass formation when the light intensity was increased. A determination of specific values resulted in 0.15 h-1 for growth rate and 23 mg/1.h for cell mass formation. 3. The chemostat apparatus is described in detail.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1978 May 31
PMID:Continuous cultivation in a chemostat of the phototrophic procaryote, Anacystis nidulans, under nitrogen-limiting conditions. 9 28
Several characteristics of the binding of insulin and glucagon to human circulating mononuclear leukocytes have been studied. Functional analysis (latex bead ingestion) revealed that cell mixtures, as prepared according to Boyum and used generally in studies of insulin resistance in humans, consist of 20-29% phagocytic monocytes, with the remainder being lymphocytes. Partial separation of monocytes from lymphocytes on columns of Sephadex G-10, followed by correlation of insulin binding with cell type, confirms that the monocyte is the binding species. Insulin influenced neither glucose uptake nor the further conversion of glucose to lipids and
CO2
by the leukocytes. The transport of alpha-aminoisobutyrate, a nonmetabolizable amino acid, into these cells was also unaffected by insulin. Monocyte/lymphocyte mixtures specifically bound glucagon and prostaglandin E1. At physiological concentrations of these hormones, steady states were reached in 15 min and 45 min, respectively. In contrast to the 8-10-fold increases in cellular cyclic AMP produced by prostaglandins, the effect of glucagon was very small but apparently real. Under appropriate preincubation conditions, sodium azide and iodoacetamide inhibited phagocytosis and insulin binding in parallel. The binding of glucagon was unaffected by these agents. Although both antimycin A and actinomycin D inhibited phagocytosis of the monocytes, only the former inhibited insulin binding; there was only a slight effect on glucagon binding. We would conclude that the binding of insulin to human circulating monocytes, although reflective of insulin resistance in diabetes mellitus and obesity, may not be to traditional receptors. In contrast, the binding of glucagon to lymphocyte/monocyte mixtures may be to function-linked receptors.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 1977 Oct
PMID:Hormone receptors: VI. On the nature of the binding of glucagon and insulin to human circulating mononuclear leukocytes. 20 May 11
1. Carbon dioxide titration curves were determined in vivo in dog and man at various degrees of acute non-respiratory acidaemia and alkalaemia. 2. The slope of the
CO2
titration curve (delta log Pco2/delta pH) was found to increase with the severity of the acute non-respiratory alkalaemia the slope (delta log Pco2/delta pH) tended towards unity. 3. A simple scheme based on the
CO2
titration curves determined in vivo has been proposed for the assessment of acute acid-base disturbances in man. 4. Carbon dioxide titration curves were also determined in vivo in patients with chronic respiratory and non-respiratory acidaemia and it was found that these curves were not significantly different from those obtained in states of acute acid-base disturbances. It is therefore suggested that the scheme described in this paper is applicable to all acid-base disturbances.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1975 Feb
PMID:The assessment of acid-base disturbance in man by the use of carbon dioxide titration curves. 23 20
1. The acid-base state of arterial blood and cerebrospinal fluid, and the ventilatory response to
CO2
, were measured in twelve patients with liver disease. The
CO2
response was also measured in eight goats before and after the experimental production of liver failure. Arterial PCO2 and pH, cerebral blood flow and the cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen were also measured in four of the goats while they breathed air and various
CO2
-enriched gas mixtures. 2. Liver failure was accompanied by a respiratory alkalosis in both the patients and in the goats. Decreased PCO2 and increased pH occurred in the cerebrospinal fluid and in the arterial blood of the patients. 3. The slope of the ventilatory response to
CO2
was reduced when liver failure was severe, in patients and goats alike. In addition there was a reduction in the extrapolated PCO2 at zero ventilation, even when liver failure was mild. 4. Cerebral blood flow and metabolic rate were consistently reduced in the goats during liver failure. There was also less cerebral vasodilatation and a greater reduction in cerebral metabolism during experimental hypercapnia when these animals were in liver failure. 5. The decreases in the ventilatory and cerebral circulatory responsiveness to
CO2
indicate that the brain is less well defended against hypercapnia in liver failure, and these changes are especially unfavourable as cerebral function deteriorates when the PCO2 is increased.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1975 Aug
PMID:Effect of liver failure on the response of ventilation and cerebral criculation to carbon dioxide in man and in the goat. 23 83
The transport and metabolism of glucose was examined in monolayers of C-6 glioma cells. 1) Glucose transport appeared to have both a low (Km = 7.74 mM) and a high (Km = 1.16 mM) affinity site in C-6cells; whereas 2-deoxyglucose had only one (Km = 3.7 mM). 2) A large portion of the accumulated glucose was rapidly metabolized to the two glycolytic end products, lactate and pyruvate, and then extruded into the medium. The temperature-dependent efflux of lactate and pyruvate was linear up to 2 hrs with 6 to 10 times more lactate being extruded into the medium than pyruvate. 3) The efflux of lactate and pyruvate increased with increasing extracellular (medium) pH. The presence of 5 percent
CO2
not only inhibited the acid efflux but also inhibited the short-term uptake of glucose. The
CO2
effect was attributed to a lowering of the medium pH since bicarbonate alone either increased or did not inhibit efflux. 4) Valinomycin increased the levels of cellular lactate but not those of pyruvate by almost three-fold. Lactate efflux was stimulated while that of pyruvate was inhibited. The addition of 5 percent
CO2
increased the cellular levels of both lactate and pyruvate, but unlike valinomycin decreased the acid efflux. Idoacetate inhibited the acid efflux by 50 percent suggesting that glycolysis is necessary for efflux.
Mol
Cell Biochem 1975 Sep 30
PMID:Glycolytic metabolism in cultured cells of the nervous system. I. Glucose transport and metabolism in the C-6 glioma cell line. 24 29
Different characteristics of flies relating to sigma virus allow us to class the following drosophila genotypes according to their permissivity for the virus strains which are sensitive to the Pp allele: (formula: see text). It is concluded 1) that the two alleles Po and Pp of ref(2)P gene are active and 2) that the viral protein which interact with the product of ref(2)P is effective, or effectively transformed, without interaction with the product of ref(2)P. The delayed appearance of
CO2
sensitivity symptom in flies which are issued from stabilized maternal lines, while they are immune to a superinfection non Pp sensitive virus, leads us to believe that ref(2)P is active not only on a function necessary to viral genome replication, as assumed by preceding workers, but also on a function necessary to maturation for the viral strain which was used.
Mol
Gen Genet 1978 Feb 27
PMID:[Dosage effects of the non permissive allele of Drosophila ref(2)P gene on sensitive strains of sigma virus (author's transl)]. 41 37
A laboratory study of the interaction of H2O frost with samples of the minerals olivine (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 and pyroxene (Mg,Fe)SiO3 at -11 degrees C to -22 degrees C revealed that an acidic oxidant was produced. Exposure of the frost-treated minerals to liquie H2O produced a sudden drop in pH and resulted in the production of copious O2(g) (as much as approximately 10(20) molecules g-1). Exposure of frost-treated samples to 5 ml of 0.1M HCOONa solution resulted in the rapid oxidation of up to 43% of the formate to
CO2
(g). These reactions were qualitatively similar to the chemical activity observed during the active cycles of the Viking lander Gas Exchange and Labeled Release Biology experiments. Attempts to identify the oxidant by chemical indicators were inconclusive, but they tentatively suggested that chemisorbed hydrogen peroxide may have formed. The formation of chemisorbed peroxide could be explained as a byproduct of the chemical reduction of the mineral. The following model was proposed. H+ was incorporated into the mineral from surface frost. This would have left behind a residual of excess OH-(ads) (relative to surface H+). Electrons were then stripped from the surface OH-(ads) (due to the large repulsive potential between neighboring OH-(ads)) and incorporated into the crystal to restore charge balance and produce a chemical reduction of the mineral. The resultant surface hydroxyl radicals could then have combined to form the more stable chemisorbed hydrogen peroxide species. While the chemisorbed peroxide should be relatively stable at low temperatures, it should tend to decay to O(ads)+ H2O(g) at higher temperatures with an activation energy of greater than or approximately 34 kcal mole-1. This is consistent with the long-term storage and sterilization behavior of the Viking soil oxidants. It is possible that as little as 0.1--1% frost-weathered material in the martian soil could have produced the unusual chemical activity that occurred during the Viking Gas Exchange and Labeled Release experiments.
J
Mol
Evol 1979 Dec
PMID:Frost-weathering on Mars: experimental evidence for peroxide formation. 52 48
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