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)

Hepatic serine dehydratase activity was significantly lower in the obese Zucker rats. In both skeletal muscle and kidney adenylate deaminase showed a lower activity in the obese animals. In the small intestine the activity of glutamate dehydrogenase was increased while that of glutamine synthetase was reduced. No changes were found in the enzymatic activities of white adipose tissue while those found in brown adipose tissue were lower for glutamine synthetase. Starvation resulted in increase in liver serine dehydratase in the lean animals and in aspartate transaminase in both lean and obese. Kidney aspartate transaminase and glutamine synthetase were increased with starvation in the lean rats while kidney adenylate deaminase and small intestine glutamine synthetase and branched-chain amino acid transaminase were increased with starvation in the obese animals. In brown adipose tissue starvation caused an increase in branched-chain amino acid transaminase in the lean rats while it significantly lowered the adenylate deaminase and increased branched-chain amino acid transaminase in the obese rats.
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PMID:Amino acid metabolism enzyme activities in the obese Zucker rat. 810 Nov 20

Male rats of Wistar SPF stain (Velaz Prague) were used to investigate the influence of prolonged starvation on changes in the activity of selected adaptive enzymes in the liver and corticosterone in serum. Analyses were carried out on days 1,2,3,5 and 7 of starvation. The activity of tyrosine aminotransferase significantly increased in the period between days 2 and 5 of starvation, after which a decrease to the level of satiated animals was observed in the terminal period. Activities of tryptophane-2-3-dioxygenase and alanine aminotransferase increased in two phases reaching maximum values on days 2 and 7 of starvation. The activity of aspartate aminotransferase showed a progressive significant increase in dependence on the length of starvation. A more than threefold increase in corticosterone concentration was observed in the serum of starved animals in comparison with satiated rats.
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PMID:[The effect of prolonged starvation on changes in the activity of selected adaptive enzymes in rat liver]. 862 17

Seven female and three male common wombats (Vombatus ursinus) collected from forested areas of Victoria (Australia) over a 10 mo period, 10 April 1997 to 22 February 1998 had at least 30% of their skin affected by severe hyperkeratotic sarcoptic mange. Mangy wombats were grazing during the day, could be readily approached, were in poor body condition, and lacked subcutaneous fat. The anterolateral surface of the body was most heavily parasitised with Sarcoptes scabiei var wombati followed by the posterolateral surface, the dorsal region between the ears, the ears, ventral abdomen, medial aspect of the legs, axillary and inguinal areas, and the dorsal midline. Larvae were the most prevalent life-cycle stage followed by eggs, nymphs, females, and males. Mite numbers and the severity of clinical signs, namely thickness of scale crust and the degree of alopecia, were correlated and were symmetrical on each side of the body. Fissuring of crust and skin only occurred when scale crust was present. Bacterial infections occurred in three of 10 wombats within lymph nodes or the pleural cavity. Lymphoid depletion did not occur in lymph nodes or spleens and prescapular lymph nodes contained a greater amount of nuclear debris in germinal centres than non-mangy wombats. Seven wombats had fatty change in their livers. Gonads of mature wombats were not active or had minimal activity. Significant histopathological changes were not seen in the gastrointestinal tract, kidney, brain, myocardium, spleen, thyroid, reproductive tract, and gonads. Hematocrit, mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, and concentrations of hemoglobin, lymphocytes, calcium, glucose, creatinine, total solids, total protein, albumin determined both colormetrically and electrophoretically, and globulins were significantly lower and concentrations of neutrophils, monocytes, phosphorus, urea, glutamate dehydrogenase, aspartate aminotransferase and creatine kinase were significantly higher in mangy versus captive wombats. Concentrations of erythrocytes, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, leucocytes, band neutrophils, eosinophils, nucleated erythrocytes, sodium, potassium, chloride, total bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and gamma glutamyltransferase for mangy wombats were not significantly different from that reported for captive wombats. Hematological and pathological changes in mangy wombats were consistent with anemia, inflammation, and changes seen with starvation.
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PMID:Distribution of life cycle stages of Sarcoptes scabiei var wombati and effects of severe mange on common wombats in Victoria. 1057 22

Acetaminophen is a widely used nonprescription analgesic and antipyretic agent. It is also a dose-related hepatotoxin that can cause fulminant liver failure when taken in massive overdoses or, much less commonly, at therapeutic doses in susceptible individuals. Persons who regularly consume alcohol or persons who have been fasting may be more susceptible to this hepatotoxicity. This liver injury is due not to the drug itself but to the formation of the toxic metabolite N-acetyl-p-benzoquinine imine generated through the cytochrome P-450 drug-metabolizing system. Normally, hepatic stores of glutathione combine with the toxic metabolite and prevent liver cell injury. When glutathione stores are depleted by overproduction of this metabolite, however, the reactive metabolite binds to liver cell proteins and causes hepatic necrosis. P-450 2E1 is induced by alcohol consumption and possibly starvation, and glutathione depletion can occur due to the inadequate nutrition occurring in chronic alcohol use or in starvation. Recent studies have shown that activated Kupffer cells and their secreted toxic agents such as cytokines may also play a role in this liver injury. This liver injury is characterized by extremely high levels of serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) (> 1000), and bad prognostic signs include severe prolongation of the prothrombin time, renal dysfunction, and, most importantly, acidosis. N-acetylcysteine is a highly effective antidote when given early (within 15 hours) of overdose. Some patients may develop such fulminant liver injury that they require transplantation. Unfortunately, many such patients have a course so rapid that a donor liver may not become available in time. Thus, both the medical community and the general public require a heightened understanding of this clinical problem in order to initiate prevention measures and to implement early therapeutic measures if an overdose situation occurs.
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PMID:Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity: An update. 1098 Sep 26

Birds have evolved alternate physiologic strategies to contend with dehydration, starvation, malnutrition, and reproduction. Basic anatomic and functional differences between birds and mammals impact clinical chemistry values and their evaluation. Interpretation of the results of standard biochemical analyses, including BUN, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, creatine kinase, gamma glutamyltransferase, bilirubin, ammonia, alkaline phosphatase, cholesterol, bile acids, glucose, albumin, globulins, calcium, phosphorus, prealbumin (transthyretin), fibrinogen, iron, and ferritin, is reviewed and discussed in relation to these physiological differences. The use and interpretation of alternative analytes appropriate for avian species, such as uric acid, biliverdin, glutamate dehydrogenase, and galactose clearance, also are reviewed. Normal avian urine and appropriate use of urinalysis, an integral part of laboratory diagnosis in mammalian species that frequently is omitted from avian diagnostic protocols, is discussed.
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PMID:Clinical chemistry of companion avian species: a review. 1218 2

Routine laboratory investigations that had been performed at disease assessment on 327 teenage girls with eating disorders and weight loss were analyzed. The laboratory investigations included erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), blood haemoglobin concentration (Hb), white blood cell count (WBC), platelet count, serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity, serum aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT) activity, serum alanine aminotransferase (ALAT) activity, serum albumin concentration, glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) and serum concentrations of sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium (corrected for albumin), inorganic phosphate, creatinine and urea. The results were for ESR, Hb, WBC, platelet count, ALP, ASAT, ALAT, inorganic phosphate, creatinine, urea and HBA1C related to weight and (ongoing) weight loss. The variations of the biochemical measurements were, however, largely within reference ranges, weight and weight changes predicted the biochemical measurements only to a small degree and in individual patients the results of the analyses often suggested normality. These analyses may therefore not be suited to assess the degree of weight loss and starvation in eating disorders. They may, however, be useful for the exclusion of other diseases which could show weight loss and biochemical abnormalities.
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PMID:The significance of routine laboratory analyses in the assessment of teenage girls with eating disorders and weight loss. 1584 99

The neurotoxic effect of palmyrah (Borassus flabellifer L.) shoot flour on Wistar rats has been reported previously by Arseculeratne and co-workers. A deficiency in previous studies was an inadequate description of the methodology, especially on the composition and consumption of test and control feed, and weight gain/losses. This study shows that feeds containing 100% and 70% palmyrah flour result in very little or no feed consumption, and deaths reported could have been interpreted as being due to starvation. A mixture of 50% palmyrah flour and 50% standard breeding feed results in the neurotoxic symptoms such as muscle in-coordination, spasms and immobility of hind limbs reported previously (Arseculeratne and coworkers). These neurotoxic symptoms can be eliminated by heating the palmyrah flour at 80 degrees C for 45 min; that is, detoxification. Attempts were made to reproduce the neurotoxic effect by administering two-fold palmyrah flour extractive compared with that contained in the same flour consumed by experimental rats per day. This did not produce a neurotoxic effects (as reported previously while using rats fed on standard breeding feed). It is interpreted that the nutritional status of the diet influences that manifestation of the neurotoxic effect; the effect being suppressed with a nutritious diet. Studies on the blood enzyme levels of rats showed that while alanine aminotransferase was not affected, aspartate aminotransferase was significantly affected by oral administration of organic solvent-free water and methanol:water (1:1) extractives (P = 0.023 and P = 0.0044), respectively. This study shows that while the reported hepatotoxin is not extracted by these solvent systems, there appears to be a tissue non-specific cellular damage reflected at a subclinical level.
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PMID:The neurotoxic effect of palmyrah (Borassus flabellifer) flour re-visited. 1601 5

This study investigated the physiological adaptations to fasting using the farmed blue fox (Alopex lagopus) as a model for the endangered wild arctic fox. Sixteen blue foxes were fed throughout the winter and 32 blue foxes were fasted for 22 d in Nov-Dec 2002. Half of the fasted blue foxes were food-deprived again for 22 d in Jan-Feb 2003. The farmed blue fox lost weight at a slower rate (0.97-1.02% body mass d(-1)) than observed previously in the arctic fox, possibly due to its higher initial body fat content. The animals experienced occasional fasting-induced hypoglycaemia, but their locomotor activity was not affected. The plasma triacylglycerol and glycerol concentrations were elevated during phase II of fasting indicating stimulated lipolysis, probably induced by the high growth hormone concentrations. The total cholesterol, HDL- and LDL-cholesterol, urea, uric acid and total protein levels and the urea:creatinine ratio decreased during fasting. Although the plasma levels of some essential amino acids increased, the blue foxes did not enter phase III of starvation characterized by stimulated proteolysis during either of the 22-d fasting procedures. Instead of excessive protein catabolism, it is liver dysfunction, indicated by the increased plasma bilirubin levels and alkaline phosphatase, alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase activities, that may limit the duration of fasting in the species.
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PMID:Physiological adaptations to fasting in an actively wintering canid, the Arctic blue fox (Alopex lagopus). 1635 68

The jawless fish, the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus), spends part of its life as a burrow-dwelling, suspension-feeding larva (ammocoete) before undergoing a metamorphosis into a free swimming, parasitic juvenile that feeds on the blood of fishes. We predicted that animals in this juvenile, parasitic stage have a great capacity for catabolizing amino acids when large quantities of protein-rich blood are ingested. The sixfold to 20-fold greater ammonia excretion rates (J(Amm)) in postmetamorphic (nonfeeding) and parasitic lampreys compared with ammocoetes suggested that basal rates of amino acid catabolism increased following metamorphosis. This was likely due to a greater basal amino acid catabolizing capacity in which there was a sixfold higher hepatic glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) activity in parasitic lampreys compared with ammocoetes. Immunoblotting also revealed that GDH quantity was 10-fold and threefold greater in parasitic lampreys than in ammocoetes and upstream migrant lampreys, respectively. Higher hepatic alanine and aspartate aminotransferase activities in the parasitic lampreys also suggested an enhanced amino acid catabolizing capacity in this life stage. In contrast to parasitic lampreys, the twofold larger free amino acid pool in the muscle of upstream migrant lampreys confirmed that this period of natural starvation is accompanied by a prominent proteolysis. Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase III was detected at low levels in the liver of parasitic and upstream migrant lampreys, but there was no evidence of extrahepatic (muscle, intestine) urea production via the ornithine urea cycle. However, detection of arginase activity and high concentrations of arginine in the liver at all life stages examined infers that arginine hydrolysis is an important source of urea. We conclude that metamorphosis is accompanied by a metabolic reorganization that increases the capacity of parasitic sea lampreys to catabolize intermittently large amino acid loads arising from the ingestion of protein rich blood from their prey/hosts. The subsequent generation of energy-rich carbon skeletons can then be oxidized or retained for glycogen and fatty acid synthesis, which are essential fuels for the upstream migratory and spawning phases of the sea lamprey's life cycle.
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PMID:Shifting patterns of nitrogen excretion and amino acid catabolism capacity during the life cycle of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus). 1692 35

It is hypothesized that autophagy, a global catabolic pathway which is highly conserved from yeast to man, plays an important role in many bioprocesses. Though autophagy is known to be induced by either nutrient starvation or treatment with the drug rapamycin, it is not clear whether the two modes of induction have the same long-term impact in the cell, particularly in the biotechnologically important filamentous fungi. Here, we compare the overall proteomes from the carbon-starved (G-) and rapamycin treated (R+) model fungus Aspergillus nidulans. From about 1,100 visualized protein spots, we conservatively selected a total of 26 proteins with significant different expression. To highlight, increased levels of glucosidases and decreased levels of N-acetylglucosamine pyrophosphorylase were observed, suggesting degradation of the fungal cell wall as an alternate carbon source for both modes of induction. Cdc37 was reduced in expression while 14-3-3 ArtA was increased, implying regulation of polar growth, while also potentially regulating autophagy negatively via PKA or Tor. Other proteins included aspartate transaminase, tryptophan synthase B (TrpB), glycylpeptide N-tetradecanoyltransferase (Nmt1), and aldehyde dehydrogenase (aldA). More interestingly, the majority of the identified proteins (16 of 26) were uniquely expressed in elevated levels in G-. A novel predicted protein from AN8223 which has no sequence homology to other organisms is also implicated to be involved in carbon-starvation. Thus, proteomic data here show that in A. nidulans, rapamycin-induced autophagy and carbon-starvation induced autophagy share some effectors for cell survival, but predominantly involve different long-term effectors.
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PMID:Autophagy induced by rapamycin and carbon-starvation have distinct proteome profiles in Aspergillus nidulans. 2161 77


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