Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P17174 (aspartate aminotransferase)
14,872 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The inability of the 'ethanol/high vitamin A Lieber-DeCarli diet' to induce liver fibrosis in two different rat strains was further evaluated by determining changes in parameters of liver cell damage and of retinoid and lipid metabolism. In the ethanol/vitamin A-treated group, slight but constant hepatic cell damage, as indicated by elevated alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase and glutamate dehydrogenase activities in blood, was already observed at 6 months and maintained until the time of death at 16 months. Serum gamma-glutamyl transaminase activities were not raised. Moderate parenchymal liver cell damage was not accompanied by fibrosis. Hypertriglyceridemia or hypercholesterolemia were observed at 6-16 months of chronic alcohol administration. This response was strain dependent. In ethanol-treated rats of both strains, total liver retinoids and serum retinol concentrations were not altered. Therefore, the hypothesis that interaction between alcohol and retinoids is a major factor in the pathogenesis of alcoholic liver disease, needs to be reconsidered.
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PMID:Chronic administration of ethanol with high vitamin A supplementation in a liquid diet to rats does not cause liver fibrosis. 2. Biochemical observations. 174 28

The effect of cercal deafferentation (cercectomy) on the ganglionic protein metabolism of the cricket, Gryllotalpa africana was studied. Significant changes in the activities of the enzymes acetylcholinesterase, glutamate dehydrogenase, alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase were observed in the terminal ganglion following unilateral and bilateral cercectomy.
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PMID:Cercal sensory regulation of ganglionic protein metabolism in the field cricket, Gryllotalpa africana. 179 75

Changes in the protein metabolism of gill, kidney and intestine of freshwater fish, Cyprinus carpio exposed to 1, 15 and 30 days to sublethal concentration (0.1 mg/l) of mercury were studied. The total, soluble and structural protein contents recorded the depletion followed by progressive increase in accumulation of free aminoacids. Concurrently, the activity of protease in the tissues was also increased. A steady enhancement in the activities of aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase paralleled the elevation of glutamate dehydrogenase activity in the organs studied. Levels of ammonia and urea have also reported elevation. All these changes clearly documented the induction of severe proteolysis. The magnitude of these changes increased overtime. These changes were more in the gill at the initial periods of exposure (1 and 15 days), but as the period of exposure increased, these changes were more pronounced in the kidney at 30 days of exposure to sublethal concentration of mercury.
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PMID:Shifts in protein metabolism in some organs of freshwater fish, Cyprinus carpio under mercury stress. 193 Feb 54

Leucine and beta-(+/-)-2-aminobicyclo[2.2.1]heptane-2-carboxylic acid (BCH) stimulated, in a dose-dependent manner, reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate in rat brain synaptosomes treated with Triton X-100. The concentration dependence curves were sigmoid, with 10-15-fold stimulations at 15 mM leucine (or BCH); oxidative deamination of glutamate also was enhanced, albeit less. In intact synaptosomes, leucine and BCH elevated oxygen uptake and increased ammonia formation, consistent with stimulation of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). Enhancement of oxidative deamination was seen with endogenous as well as exogenous glutamate and with glutamate generated inside synaptosomes from added glutamine. With endogenous glutamate, the stimulation of oxidative deamination was accompanied by a decrease in aspartate formation, which suggests a concomitant reduction in flux through aspartate aminotransferase. Activation of reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate by BCH or leucine could not be demonstrated even in synaptosomes depleted of internal glutamate. It is suggested that GDH in synaptosomes functions in the direction of glutamate oxidation, and that leucine may act as an endogenous activator of GDH in brain in vivo.
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PMID:Activation of glutamate dehydrogenase by leucine and its nonmetabolizable analogue in rat brain synaptosomes. 196 60

Sensitive flow-injection analyses of aspartate, glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, and oxaloacetate were developed. The analytes were enzymatically coupled with NADH which was monitored by light emission from immobilized bacterial bioluminescence enzymes. Aspartate (or oxaloacetate) was assayed on the basis of NADH consumption by introducing the sample through a coimmobilized aspartate aminotransferase-malate dehydrogenase column. The assay responded linearly from 100 pmoles to 5 nmoles per assay. Glutamate (2-oxoglutarate) was determined by formation of NADH in the glutamate dehydrogenase reaction. The measuring range for glutamate was from 10 pmoles to 100 nmoles per assay. The precision of the flow-injection method was generally excellent, and the sensitivities of the described assays were 100-1000-fold higher than with spectrophotometric methods. The immobilized enzyme preparations were stable for several months in storage, and the enzyme columns could be used for 600-800 analyses. Flow-injection analyses of amino acids and related compounds by NADH/bioluminescence-coupled reactions provide a sensitive, fast, and inexpensive assay method for a wide variety of purposes.
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PMID:Flow-injection analysis of amino acids and their metabolites by immobilized vitamin B6-dependent enzymes. Sensitive determination of L-aspartate, L-glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate, and oxaloacetate. 197 15

Viable toadfish hepatocytes were separated into distinct subpopulations by gradient centrifugation. Although 3-5 density subpopulations were obtained for each fish, only two metabolically and enzymatically different subpopulations could be discerned. In all cases, hepatocytes with the lowest density (less than 1.040 g ml-1) were more oxidative in scope, as judged by the activities of mitochondrial enzymes (citrate synthase, aspartate aminotransferase, glutamate dehydrogenase); activities of these enzymes (normalised to cell protein) were on average two- to threefold higher than in subpopulations with higher densities. Lower-density hepatocytes also contained higher levels of the urea cycle enzymes arginase and ornithine carbamoyltransferase. The higher-density subpopulations showed no significant differences from each other in enzymatic activities. Compared with lower-density cells, these hepatocytes had higher activities of two cytosolic enzymes, malate dehydrogenase and glutathione-S-transferase. There was no distinct distribution pattern for alanine aminotransferase and glutamine synthetase. Despite generally lower oxidative enzyme content, higher-density hepatocytes were metabolically more active, with 2.5- to fourfold higher rates of urea synthesis, gluconeogenesis and oxidation of lactate. We conclude that, although the toadfish liver shows distinct enzymatic and metabolic heterogeneity, this heterogeneity is dissimilar to the zonation pattern in the livers of mammals, in that separated toadfish hepatocyte types did not appear to possess exclusive metabolic functions. Notably, all cells were capable of metabolic functions that are strictly localised in mammalian liver. In nitrogen metabolism, glutamine synthetase displays a distribution pattern commensurate with its unique metabolic function in the liver of the ureogenic toadfish. Further, all subpopulations possessed detoxification capabilities as indicated by high levels of glutathione-S-transferase, a 'phase II' conjugation enzyme.
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PMID:Metabolic and enzymatic heterogeneity in the liver of the ureogenic teleost Opsanus beta. 205 Nov 31

The effects of oral administration of different doses of the latex of Calotropis procera on the activities of drug-metabolizing enzymes in the liver, kidneys and duodenal mucosa of Nubian goats were investigated. Lesions and changes in total plasma protein concentration and in the activities of plasma sorbitol dehydrogenase (SD), glutamate dehydrogenase (GD) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) were studied. The daily oral administration of the latex at dose rates of 0.4 and 0.8 ml per kg for 7 days resulted in a significant inhibition of the activity of aniline 4-hydroxylase. No signfiicant effects on the activities of aminopyrine N-demethylase and UDP-glucuronyltransferase were observed. A single oral dose of 1.2 or 1.6 ml per kg killed goats within 7 h and resulted in increased activities of aminopyrine N-demethylase and aniline 4-hydroxylase. UDP-glucuronyltransferase was found to be insensitive to tissue injury induced by the latex of C. procera. There were no pathological changes in goats given 10 mg per kg of dieldrin alone or in those pretreated with dieldrin and given the latex at a dose rate of 1.2 ml per kg 14 days later. Dieldrin pretreatment resulted in the induction of the activities of drug-metabolizing enzymes in the liver, kidneys and duodenal mucosa and it may have protected goats from the lethal effects of the latex.
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PMID:The activities of drug-metabolizing enzymes in goats treated orally with the latex of Calotropis procera and the influence of dieldrin pretreatment. 206 26

No interactions related to the analytical method were observed between chlorpromazine (1) or carbamazepine (2) and activities of alanine aminotransferase (ALAT), aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT), glutamate dehydrogenase (GLDH) or lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). With respect to its cytotoxic potential 1 in cultures of isolated rat hepatocytes increased markedly the release of enzymes into the culture medium, whereas the overall activities of the enzymes were not influenced. 2 in cultured hepatocytes caused no significant effects on the activities of the enzymes investigated. Besides the investigation of methodically related interactions in pooled human serum the methodic procedure including the use of cultures of isolated hepatocytes allows to study also pharmacologically and toxicologically related interactions between drugs and diagnostically relevant liver enzymes.
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PMID:[The effect of chlorpromazine and carbamazepine on diagnostically relevant liver enzymes]. 208 Feb 2

Two decades of research in ethanol metabolism have culminated in the molecular elucidation of an ethanol-inducible cytochrome P450 (P450IIE1) which is not only involved with ethanol metabolism and ethanol tolerance, but also with the activation of a number of xenobiotics. The unique ability of P450IIE1 to activate xenobiotic agents now appears to be responsible for the increased susceptibility of the heavy drinker to hepatotoxic industrial solvents, commonly used drugs, over-the-counter medications and chemical carcinogens. It also explains some of the interaction of ethanol with nutritional factors, such as hepatic vitamin A: enhanced microsomal degradation of retinoids (together with hepatic mobilisation) promotes depletion. Treatment, however, is complicated by the fact that ethanol also enhances the toxicity of excess vitamin A. All pathways of ethanol metabolism result in the production of acetaldehyde, the toxicity of which has been reviewed (Lieber 1982). New aspects discussed here include the formation of acetaldehyde-protein adducts and an associated immune response that may play a pathogenic role. Also discussed are the implications of ethanol-induced alterations in microtubules, mitochondria and plasma membranes, as they relate, in part, to accompanying acetaldehyde-induced toxicity, to the production of free radicals or to lipid peroxidation-mediated injury associated with glutathione depletion. There is also depletion of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAMe). Administration of synthetic SAMe results in a partial correction of the SAMe depletion and a consequent restoration of glutathione levels. Other beneficial effects of SAMe include a significant attenuation of the increase in plasma aspartate transaminase and glutamate dehydrogenase activities. Mitochondrial damage, including giant forms, documented by light and electron microscopy, is also attenuated by SAMe. Thus, the new understanding of the pathophysiology of alcohol-induced liver damage has led to more successful therapy with drugs and nutritional factors.
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PMID:Interaction of alcohol with other drugs and nutrients. Implication for the therapy of alcoholic liver disease. 208 78

Catalytic enzyme histochemistry offers the possibility to demonstrate enzymes qualitatively and their activities quantitatively in brain sections at those sites where they are localized. To get an appropriate histochemical demonstration of enzymes, requirements are to be fulfilled with respect to the preparation of brain tissue, the detection methods, and the incubation conditions. For enzyme demonstration at the light microscopic level, brain tissue should be frozen as quickly as possible and for those at the electron microscopic level perfusion fixation using low concentrations of aldehydes seems to be best suited. The detection of enzymes in brain sections is preferentially performed by the so-called precipitation reactions with metallic ions, the tetrazolium and the diaminobenzidine methods. The application of these methods was shown in the example of aspartate aminotransferase, glutamate dehydrogenase, and cytochrome c oxidase. In the detection of enzymes incubation conditions should be chosen so that soluble enzymes cannot diffuse out of the sections into the incubation media and that the activities of enzymes are completely demonstrated. On the whole, all the precipitation reactions result in a water-insoluble reaction product which is precipitated at the enzymatic sites in brain sections. Finally, it is shown that scanning microphotometry is a valuable tool for the quantification of enzyme activities in brain sections. It is concluded that catalytic enzyme histochemistry using improved detection methods could be a source of results complementary to those provided by immunocytochemistry and microchemistry.
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PMID:Enzyme histochemical methods applied in the brain. 224 27


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