Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P20020 (adenosine triphosphatase)
3,299 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Heart dysfunction in chronic diabetes has been observed to be associated with depressed myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase activities as well as abnormalities in the sarcoplasmic reticular and sarcolemmal calcium transport processes. The evidence has been presented to show that alterations in the expression of myosin isozymes and regulatory proteins as well as myosin phosphorylation contribute to the development of myofibrillar remodeling in the diabetic heart. Defects in sarcoplasmic reticular and sarcolemmal calcium transport appear to be due to the accumulation of lipid metabolites in the membrane. Different agents, such as calcium-antagonists, beta-adrenoceptor blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, metabolic interventions and antioxidants, have been reported to exert beneficial effects in preventing subcellular remodeling and cardiac dysfunction in chronic diabetes. Clinical and experimental investigations have suggested that increased sympathetic activity, activated cardiac renin-angiotensin system, myocardial ischemia/functional hypoxia and elevated levels of glucose for a prolonged period, due to insulin deficiency, result in oxidative stress. It is proposed that oxidative stress associated with a deficit in the status of the antioxidant defense system may play a critical role in subcellular remodeling, calcium-handling abnormalities and subsequent diabetic cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Subcellular remodeling and heart dysfunction in chronic diabetes. 989 15

Metabolic abnormalities observed in retina and in cerebral cortex were compared in diabetic rats and experimentally galactosemic rats. Diabetes or experimental galactosemia of 2 months duration significantly increased oxidative stress in retina, as shown by elevation of retinal thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) and subnormal activities of antioxidant defense enzymes, but had no such effect in the cerebral cortex. Activities of sodium potassium adenosine triphosphatase [(Na,K)-ATPase] and calcium ATPase became subnormal in retina as well as in cerebral cortex. In contrast, protein kinase C (PKC) activity was elevated in retina but not in cerebral cortex in the same hyperglycemic rats. Dietary supplementation with an antioxidant mixture (containing ascorbic acid, Trolox, alpha-tocopherol acetate, N-acetyl cysteine, beta-carotene, and selenium) prevented the diabetes-induced and galactosemia-induced elevation of retinal oxidative stress, the elevation of retinal PKC activity and the decrease of retinal ATPases. In cerebral cortex, administration of the antioxidant diet also prevented the diabetes-induced decreases in (Na,K)-ATPase and calcium ATPases, but had no effect on TBARS and activities of PKC and antioxidant-defense enzymes. The results indicate that retina and cerebral cortex differ distinctly in their response to elevation of tissue hexose, and that cerebral cortex is more resistant than retina to diabetes-induced oxidative stress. The greater resistance to oxidative stress in cerebral cortex, as compared to retina, is consistent with the resistance of cerebral cortex to microvascular disease in diabetes, and with a hypothesis that oxidative stress contributes to microvascular disease in diabetes. Dietary supplementation with these antioxidants offers a means to inhibit multiple hyperglycemia-induced retinal metabolic abnormalities.
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PMID:Abnormalities of retinal metabolism in diabetes or experimental galactosemia. VI. Comparison of retinal and cerebral cortex metabolism, and effects of antioxidant therapy. 989 29

Many vascular diseases in diabetes are known to be associated with the activation of the diacylglycerol (DAG)-protein kinase C (PKC) pathway. The major source of DAG that is elevated in diabetes is de novo synthesis from glycolytic intermediates. Among the various PKC isoforms, the beta-isoform has been shown to be persistently activated in diabetic animals. Multiple lines of evidence have shown that many vascular alterations in diabetes--such as a decrease in the activity of Na+-K+-adenosine triphosphatase (Na+-K+-ATPase), and increases in extracellular matrix, cytokines, permeability, contractility, and cell proliferation--are caused by activation of PKC. Inhibition of PKC by two different kinds of PKC inhibitors, LY333531, a selective PKC-beta-isoform inhibitor, and d-alpha-tocopherol, were able to prevent or reverse the various vascular dysfunctions in diabetic rats. These results have also provided in vivo evidence that DAG-PKC activation could be responsible for the hyperglycemia-induced vascular dysfunctions in diabetes. Clinical studies are now being performed to clarify the pathogenic roles of the DAG-PKC pathway in developing vascular complications in diabetic patients.
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PMID:The role of protein kinase C activation in the pathogenesis of diabetic vascular complications. 1040 23

The interaction between low density lipoproteins (LDL) and platelets might play a central role in the development of atherosclerosis in diabetes. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the glycation of LDL is associated with modifications of their physico-chemical and functional properties and to study the action of glycated LDL (glycLDL) on platelets. LDL and platelets were isolated from 15 healthy subjects. The content of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances and the generalized polarization of the fluorescent probe Laurdan were determined in LDL glycated in vitro. Platelets were incubated with native LDL, GlycLDL, and minimally oxidized LDL, and the following parameters were evaluated: platelet aggregation, nitric oxide production, intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations, Na(+)/K(+)-adenosine triphosphatase (Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase), and Ca(2+)-ATPase activities. GlycLDL showed increased thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance levels, a red shift of the Laurdan emission maximum, and a decrease in generalized polarization, indicating a higher polarity and a reduced molecular order compared with native LDL. GlycLDL caused a significant increase in platelet nitric oxide production, intracellular Ca(2+) concentration, and aggregating response to ADP; an inhibition of the platelet membrane Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase activity; and a stimulation of Ca(2+)-ATPase activity. Minimally oxidized LDL did not cause statistically significant changes in the parameters studied. The present work demonstrates that glycation induces compositional and structural changes in LDL and suggests that an altered interaction between glycLDL and platelets might play a role in the vascular complications of diabetes.
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PMID:Glycated low density lipoproteins modify platelet properties: a compositional and functional study. 1199 61

The development of immune-mediated diabetes in BB rats may involve a defect of the gastrointestinal tract (GI), as suggested by increased gut permeability. This study aimed at measuring invertase, maltase, lactase, and peroxidase activities in the duodenum of diabetesprone BioBreeding (BBdp) rats and control BioBreeding rats (BBc) given free access to NIH-07 diet up to the time of killing at 60 66 d of age. After washing the entire small intestine, the duodenal mucosa was scraped off in the first 5-cm segment from the pylorus and frozen in distilled water. Invertase, maltase, and lactase activities were measured by monitoring the conversion of [U-(14)C]sucrose, [U-(14)C]maltose, and [D-[1-(14)C]glucose] lactose to radioactive hexoses, which were phosphorylated in the presence of adenosine triphosphatase and yeast hexokinase and then separated from their precursor by ion-exchange chromatography. Peroxidase activity was measured by a spectrophotometric procedure. In the BBdp rats, the activity of invertase, maltase, and lactase averaged, respectively, 70.2 +/- 4.4, 81.2 +/- 4.3, and 75.7 +/- 4.1% (n = 16 and p < 0.001 in all cases) of the control values found in BBc rats of the same sex. Inversely, after exclusion of two female BBc rats with abnormally high plasma D-glucose concentration, the activity of peroxidase in the BBdp rats averaged 157.4 +/- 20.0% (n = 16; p < 0.02) of the mean control value recorded in BBc rats of the same sex (100.0 +/- 9.3%; n = 14). These findings are compatible with the view that a proinflammatory state of the GI associated with compromise function may precede the occurrence of pancreatic insulitis in BBdp rats and, possibly, human subjects with type 1 diabetes.
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PMID:Invertase, maltase, lactase, and peroxidase activities in duodenum of BB rats. 1262 29

Patients with diabetes mellitus have a high incidence of heart failure, which contributes significantly to their increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. One of the major complications of diabetes is the development of cardiomyopathy, a condition characterized by defects of contractile function in the absence of significant coronary artery disease or systemic hypertension. Experimental data in animal models show that contractile depression begins as early as 1 week after induction of diabetes, and the dysfunction is related to an isomyosin distribution shift from V(1) with high adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) to V(3) with low ATPase activity. Moreover, diabetes is associated with an increased or poorly regulated rate of amino acid catabolism at the cardiac level. Abnormal responses to acute left ventricular (LV) overload induced by exercise (isometric or isotonic) have been demonstrated in patients with diabetes. Impaired augmentation of LV ejection fraction occurs in up to 40% of patients with diabetes. Analysis of the LV afterload-pump function (LV circumferential wall stress-ejection fraction) relationship shows that defective contractile recruitment is the main cause of this anomaly. Exercise-induced LV dysfunction may be the first manifestation of cardiac involvement in patients with diabetes. Increasing the supply of amino acids in addition to conventional therapy significantly attenuates this phenomenon. Although the precise underlying pathophysiologic mechanism is not completely known, these observations may eventually be important in designing an optimal dietary or supplemental approach for patients with diabetes in order to prevent progressive myocardial dysfunction.
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PMID:Early myocardial dysfunction in the diabetic heart: current research and clinical applications. 1509

Women diagnosed as having hysterocarcinoma (HC) demonstrate even prior to surgical intervention manifest abnormalities in metabolic indices, such as increase in the level of medium-size molecules, decrease in the blood content of adenosine triphosphatase, and profound disturbances in microhemodynamics. The most significant abnormalities of metabolism and microcirculation occur in clinical stage III HC against the background of concomitant somatic pathology, diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, adiposis in particular.
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PMID:[The endogenous intoxication syndrome and indices of the adenyl system and microhemodynamic in patients with uterine cancer]. 1531 95

We have studied the activities of adenosine triphosphatase (Na+/K+ATPase, Mg2+ATPase, Ca2+ATPase and Total ATPase) in erythrocyte, liver, kidney and cardiac tissues of control and Casearia esculenta treated streptozotocin (STZ) diabetic rats. The activity of Na+/K+ATPase plays a central role in the regulation of intra and extra cellular homeostasis and alteration of this transport system is thought to be linked to several complications of diabetes mellitus. An Mg2+ dependent ATPase activity is responsible for controlling the energy requiring process in cells whereas Ca2+ATPase is responsible for the signal transduction pathways and membrane fluidity. Activities of these enzymes were significantly altered (p < 0.05) in STZ diabetic rats. Oral administration of C. esculenta root extract for a period of 45 days resulted in significant (p < 0.05) reversal of these enzymes' activities to near normal. Thus the results suggest that C. esculenta protects the membrane integrity and functional status in STZ diabetic rats.
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PMID:Modulating role of 'Saptarangi' (Casearia esculenta) on membrane bound ATPase in streptozotocin diabetic rats. 1632 Sep 53

The sulfonylurea receptors (SURs) ABCC8/SUR1 and ABCC9/SUR2 are members of the C-branch of the transport adenosine triphosphatase superfamily. Unlike their brethren, the SURs have no identified transport function; instead, evolution has matched these molecules with K(+) selective pores, either K(IR)6.1/KCNJ8 or K(IR)6.2/KCNJ11, to assemble adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-sensitive K(+) channels found in endocrine cells, neurons, and both smooth and striated muscle. Adenine nucleotides, the major regulators of ATP-sensitive K(+) (K(ATP)) channel activity, exert a dual action. Nucleotide binding to the pore reduces the activity or channel open probability, whereas Mg-nucleotide binding and/or hydrolysis in the nucleotide-binding domains of SUR antagonize this inhibitory action to stimulate channel openings. Mutations in either subunit can alter this balance and, in the case of the SUR1/KIR6.2 channels found in neurons and insulin-secreting pancreatic beta cells, are the cause of monogenic forms of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia and neonatal diabetes. Additionally, the subtle dysregulation of K(ATP) channel activity by a K(IR)6.2 polymorphism has been suggested as a predisposing factor in type 2 diabetes mellitus. Studies on K(ATP) channel null mice are clarifying the roles of these metabolically sensitive channels in a variety of tissues.
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PMID:ABCC8 and ABCC9: ABC transporters that regulate K+ channels. 1689 43

Diabetes mellitus induces a decrease in sodium potassium-adenosine triphosphatase (Na+/K(+)-ATPase) activity in several tissues in the rat and red blood cells (RBC) and nervous tissue in human patients. This decrease in Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity is thought to play a role in the development of long-term complications of the disease. Angiotensin enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) and angiotensin-II receptor antagonists (ARBs) reduce proteinuria and retard the progression of renal failure in patients with IDDM and diabetic rats. We investigated the effects of captopril and losartan, which are used in the treatment of diabetic nephropathy, on Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity. Captopril had an inhibitory effect on red cell plasma membrane Na+/K+ ATPase activity, but losartan did not. Our study draws attention to the inhibitory effect of captopril on Na+/K+ ATPase activity. Micro and macro vascular complications are preceeding mortality and morbidity causes in diabetes mellitus. There is a strong relationship between the decrease in Na+/K+ ATPase activity and hypertension. The non-sulphydryl containing ACEi and ARBs must be the choice of treatment in hypertensive diabetic patients and diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:The effects of captopril and losartan on erythrocyte membrane Na+/K(+)-ATPase activity in experimental diabetes mellitus. 1751 48


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