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)

To examine the development and tracking of long-term vitamin B-6 status from infancy to early adolescence, measurements of erythrocyte pyridoxal 5'-phosphate concentration (EPLP), the erythrocyte aspartate transaminase (EAST) stimulation test including measurements of basal activity (EASTo) and activation coefficient (alpha EAST), were made in a follow-up study of healthy children aged 2 (n = 139), 4 (n = 147), 6 (n = 157), 9 (n = 159) and 12 mo (n = 188) and 5 y (n = 148). The EAST stimulation test was repeated at 11 y (n = 153). Vitamin B-6 status, high during infancy, reached the adult level by 5 y of age. The 10th to 90th percentile ranges for EPLP values were 61-201 nmol/L at 4 mo, 49-101 nmol/L at 12 mo and 27-59 nmol/L at 5 y. The respective ranges for Easto were 16-24 microkat/L at 4 mo, 13-19 microkat/L at 12 mo, 9-14 microkat/L at 5 y and 25-39 microkat/L at 11 y of age. For alpha EAST values were 1.29-1.54 at 4 mo, 1.48-1.77 at 12 mo, 1.70-2.07 at 5 y and 2.00-2.57 at 11 y. Values for EPLP and the EAST stimulation test in the first year of life correlated with the values at 5 and 11 y. The individuals with values at the extreme ends of the distributions remained there from infancy to childhood up to 3.3 times more often than expected from random variation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Vitamin B-6 status during childhood: tracking from 2 months to 11 years of age. 750 Jan 76

The vitamin B-6 requirement of young women consuming a constant high-protein diet (1.55 g/kg body wt) and the effect of various ratios of vitamin B-6 to protein on this requirement were studied. Eight women were fed a lactoovovegetarian basal diet containing 0.45 mg vitamin B-6 (2.66 micromol as pyridoxine) and 30 micromol carnitine for 92 d. The protocol consisted of successive baseline adjustment (9 d), depletion (27 d), and repletion (two 21-d and then one 14-d) periods. Vitamin B-6 intakes were 1.60, 0.45, 1.26, 1.66, and 2.06 mg, resulting in ratios of vitamin B-6 (in mg) to protein (in g) for the five periods of 0.016, 0.005, 0.013, 0.017, and 0.021, respectively. Direct and indirect as well as short- and long-term vitamin B-6 status measures were assessed weekly. Regression analysis revealed that the amount of dietary vitamin B-6 required to normalize urinary 4-pyridoxic acid, plasma pyridoxal-P, erythrocyte pyridoxal-P and pyridoxal, and erythrocyte alanine and aspartate aminotransferase activity coefficients to predepletion baseline values was 1.94 mg vitamin B-6/d (0.019 mg vitamin B-6/g protein). This study suggests that the current vitamin B-6 recommended dietary allowance of 1.6 mg/d based on 0.016 mg/g protein is not an adequate intake and may require reevaluation.
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PMID:Vitamin B-6 requirement and status assessment of young women fed a high-protein diet with various levels of vitamin B-6. 945 68

Reference intervals for long-term status measures of folate, riboflavin, thiamine, and vitamin B-6 were determined in a select group of adults. Reference subjects had no adverse medical history and did not use tobacco, alcohol, or nutritional supplements, and their diets met > or =70% of the Australian recommended dietary intake for nutrients. Red blood cell concentrations of thiamine and folate were measured by microbiological methods. Vitamin B-6 and riboflavin status were measured on the basis of the erythrocyte aspartate transaminase activity coefficient and erythrocyte glutathione reductase activity coefficient, respectively. A survey of first-time blood donors, which was conducted in Australia in 1995, revealed a significant prevalence of low red blood cell thiamine concentrations (13%) when compared with the calculated normal reference intervals. However, the most important finding in the survey was that the group of healthy, nonanemic adults (first-time blood donors) was found to have a median red blood cell folate concentration 24% below the median concentration of the carefully selected (nonsupplemented) reference group. Plasma total homocysteine concentrations indicated folate deficiency in the reference group. Therefore, the 2.5th percentile cutoff for reference group red blood cell folate concentrations may have underestimated the prevalence of folate deficiency in the survey group. These data, coupled with the lack of Australian food-composition data for folate in particular, reinforce the need for monitoring nutritional status by both dietary and biochemical means. We recommend consideration of mandatory fortification of the Australian food supply with folic acid.
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PMID:Folic acid, riboflavin, thiamine, and vitamin B-6 status of a group of first-time blood donors. 980 25

1 Poly (ADP-ribose) synthetase (PARS) is a nuclear enzyme activated by strand breaks in DNA, which are caused by reactive oxygen species (ROS). Here we investigate the effects of the PARS inhibitors 3-aminobenzamide (3-AB), nicotinamide and 1,5-dihydroxyisoquinoline (ISO) on the circulatory failure and the organ injury/dysfunction caused by haemorrhage and resuscitation in the anaesthetized rat. 2 Haemorrhage (sufficient to lower mean arterial blood pressure to 50 mmHg for 90 min) and subsequent resuscitation with shed blood resulted (within 4 h after resuscitation) in a delayed fall in blood pressure to 66+/-4 mmHg (control, n=13). This circulatory failure was not affected by administration (5 min prior to resuscitation) of 3-AB (10 mg kg-1 i.v., n=7), nicotinamide (10 mg kg-1 i.v., n=6) or ISO (3 mg kg-1 i.v., n=6). 3 Haemorrhage and resuscitation also resulted in rises in the serum levels of urea and creatinine. This renal dysfunction was attenuated by 3-AB and nicotinamide, but not by nicotinic acid (n=7), an inactive analogue of nicotinamide. Although ISO (n=6) also attenuated the renal dysfunction caused by haemorrhage and resuscitation, its vehicle (10% DMSO, n=4) had the same effect. 4 Haemorrhagic shock resulted in enhanced serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and lipase, indicating the development of hepatocellular and pancreatic injury, respectively. Similarly, haemorrhagic shock also resulted in an increase in the serum levels of creatine kinase (CK) indicating the development of neuromuscular injury. This was attenuated by 3-AB and nicotinamide, but not by nicotinic acid. Although ISO also attenuated the liver, pancreatic and neuromuscular injury caused by haemorrhagic shock, its vehicle had the same effect. 5 Thus, activation of PARS contributes to the organ injury and dysfunction caused by haemorrhage and resuscitation in the rat.
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PMID:Effects of inhibitors of the activity of poly (ADP-ribose) synthetase on the organ injury and dysfunction caused by haemorrhagic shock. 1057 50

The Estimated Average Requirement (EAR) and Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) of vitamin B-6 for children were recently estimated by extrapolating from adult values because of limited available information. To determine vitamin B-6 requirements and provide recommendations for intakes, vitamin B-6 intake, nutritional status and anthropometry of 168 healthy children (79 boys and 89 girls) were studied in Tainan, Taiwan. Direct and indirect vitamin B-6 status indicators were measured in plasma, erythrocytes and urine. Anthropometric data of children in this study were similar to those of the first Nutrition and Health Survey in Taiwan (NAHSIT) conducted in 1993-1996. The plasma pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) concentration of each child was >/=30 nmol/L, indicating an adequate vitamin B-6 status. Daily dietary vitamin B-6 intakes of boys and girls were 0.80 +/- 0.16 and 0.74 +/- 0.16 mg/d, respectively. Daily dietary vitamin B-6 intakes of children who had adequate urinary 4-pyridoxic acid (4-PA) (>3.0 micro mol/L), erythrocyte alanine aminotransferase activity coefficient (EALT-AC) (<1.25) and aspartate aminotransferase activity coefficient (EAST-AC) (<1.8) were not different from those of children who had adequate plasma PLP, although the percentages of adequacy for urinary 4-PA, EALT-AC and EAST-AC ranged from 20 to 91%. Vitamin B-6 status indicators were strongly correlated with vitamin B-6 intake. Adequate values of PLP, EALT-AC, EAST-AC and urinary 4-PA were used to determine the EAR according to Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) committee methodology. We determined the vitamin B-6 EAR (RDA) for boys and girls aged 7-12 y to be 0.84 (1.01) and 0.75 (0.89) mg/d, respectively.
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PMID:Determination of vitamin B-6 estimated average requirement and recommended dietary allowance for children aged 7-12 years using vitamin B-6 intake, nutritional status and anthropometry. 1236 6

A 9-month-old male German Shepherd dog was referred for evaluation of progressive exercise intolerance. Clinical examination revealed a stiff, stilted gait and marked atrophy and hypotonia of skeletal muscle. The dog had raised creatine kinase (181 U/liter), lactate dehydrogenase (510 U/liter), and aspartate aminotransferase (123.6 U/liter) levels, suggesting a muscle disease. Histochemical evaluation of muscle biopsies revealed the presence of subsarcolemmal oxidative activity, reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, and succinate dehydrogenase, and the absence of cytochrome oxidase activity. Ragged red fibers were demonstrated with Gomori trichrome stain. Ultrastructural examination of the muscle confirmed the presence of subsarcolemmal accumulations of mitochondria and morphologically atypical mitochondria.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy in a german shepherd dog. 1294 7

Because of limited available information, the Estimated Average Requirement (EAR) and Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) of vitamin B-6 for adolescents were recently estimated by extrapolation from adult values. To determine vitamin B-6 requirements and to provide recommendations for intakes, vitamin B-6 intake, nutritional status and anthropometry were studied in 134 healthy adolescents (63 boys and 71 girls) aged 13-15 y in Tainan, Taiwan. Direct and indirect vitamin B-6 indicators were measured in plasma, erythrocytes and urine. The anthropometric data of the adolescents in this study were similar to those of the first Nutrition and Health Survey in Taiwan (NAHSIT), conducted from 1993 to 1996, showing the normal growth and development of this adolescent group. All subjects had plasma pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (PLP) concentrations > or = 20 nmol/L, indicating an adequate vitamin B-6 status. The mean dietary vitamin B-6 intakes of boys and girls were 1.04 +/- 0.24 and 0.83 +/- 0.26 mg/d, respectively. Vitamin B-6 status indicators, including plasma PLP, erythrocyte alanine activity coefficient (EALT-AC), aspartate aminotransferase activity coefficient (EAST-AC) and urinary 4-pyridoxic acid (4-PA), were correlated with vitamin B-6 intake (r = 0.84, -0.84, -0.77 and 0.86, respectively, P < 0.01). Adequate values of plasma PLP (> or = 20 nmol/L), EALT-AC (<1.25), EAST-AC (<1.8) and urinary 4-PA (>3.0 micromol/d) were used to determine the EAR according to the Dietary Reference Intake committee methodology. The present study suggests that vitamin B-6 EAR (RDA) for adolescent boys and girls aged 13-15 y are 1.07 (1.28) and 0.90 (1.08) mg/d, respectively.
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PMID:Assessment of vitamin B-6 estimated average requirement and recommended dietary allowance for adolescents aged 13-15 years using vitamin B-6 intake, nutritional status and anthropometry. 1451 9

Metabolic pathways are controlled primarily by protein degradation rates. Degradation rates, in turn, are controlled by changes in physiologic condition or nutrient supply. Vitamin B(6) is associated with a greater variety of reactions than most other vitamins. Moreover, the vitamin B(6) needs of the elderly tend to be higher than those of young adults. Neutrophils seem to be appropriate cells for assessing protein turnover as affected by macronutrients and micronutrients. Thus, we assumed that vitamin B(6) supplementation, particularly in an elderly population, would change the turnover rates of the neutrophil proteins. Protein synthesis was measured after 30 minutes of (35)S-Met incorporation followed by a 30-minute washout incubation; degradation was measured after an additional 5-hour incubation. Following protein separation, radioactive images of short-lived proteins were electronically separated into bands. Vitamin B(6) supplementation significantly increased the synthesis of most neutrophil protein bands. There was a significant decrease of 25 to 66% in the degradation rates of 235 protein bands. We even detected by statistical evaluation a 20% decrease in the degradation rates of distinct protein bands. Activation coefficients of erythrocyte aspartate aminotransferase (AC-AST) decreased markedly. There was a significant positive correlation between the decrease in AC-AST and protein degradation. The N-end rule proposes that pyridoxal 5'-phosphate decreases degradation rates of short-lived proteins by binding to lysyl residues. A biochemical model of the mechanism of cellular protein turnover, as affected by nutritional intervention, in human neutrophils is demonstrated.
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PMID:Effect of vitamin B6 supplementation on degradation rates of short-lived proteins in human neutrophils. 1553 25

The serum concentrations of Unsaturated Vitamin B(12) binding (UBBC) capacity and the three individual transcobalamins were measured in 34 malnourished children aged 9 months-5 y. Levels of serum vitamin B12, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, albumin and total proteins were also estimated. The serum UBBC, Transcobalamin I (TC I), Transcobalamin III (TC III), vitamin B12 and the enzyme activities were significantly higher in the kwashiorkor children when compared with both the marasmic and control children. There was also a marked reduction of serum Transcobalamin II (TC II), albumin and total proteins in the kwashiorkor children. In contrast with kwashiorkor, there was a slight increase of serum TC II in the marasmic children. Their serum UBBC, TC I, TC III and B12 were also raised but not as high as in kwashiorkor. These results are discussed in the light of the hepatic dysfunction in kwashiorkor affecting the production of TC II in the liver, while the elevated serum B12 in Protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) may be due to both hepatic damage and intensified release of TC I as a result of infection.
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PMID:Clinical significance of serum transcobalamins in protein-energy malnutrition. 1682 16

Central core disease is a nonprogressive or slowly progressive congenital myopathy with a variable degree of hypotonia and axial and proximal muscle weakness that is histologically characterized by areas devoid of oxidative enzyme activity, resulting from an absence or low numbers of mitochondria in these regions (central core). A 10-month-old, male, pony foal was examined because of stiff gait, marked contractures of the distal portion of the limbs, flexion deformities of the hooves, and moderate hypotonia that had been present from birth. The foal had increased creatine kinase (282 U/liter; reference interval 10-135 U/liter), lactate dehydrogenase (1,188 U/liter; reference interval 150-450 U/liter), and aspartate transaminase (377 U/liter; reference interval <290 U/liter) activities, suggesting muscle disease. Muscle biopsy was performed. In cytochrome oxidase-, succinate dehydrogenase-, and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide tetrazolium reductase-reacted sections, the dominant morphologic feature was the absence of oxidative enzyme activity in the cores. By use of immunohistochemical technique with a monoclonal antibody against desmin, the cores were clearly delineated and a desmin network was present within the cores. Ultrastructurally, the core areas were characterized by preserved sarcomeres with irregular Z-lines, with some streaming or zigzag appearance and abnormal sarcoplasmic reticulum profiles and T-tubules. Lack of mitochrondria within central cores was observed. Diagnosis of myopathy with central cores was made.
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PMID:Myopathy with central cores in a foal. 1684 6


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