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)

In vascular smooth muscle, oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis are independently regulated. Previous studies indicated that the independent regulation of these pathways was related to a compartmentation of carbohydrate metabolism. To further study carbohydrate metabolism, glucose transport and the incorporation of radiolabel from glucose into glycogen and lactate were measured after the oxidative and glycolytic pathways were independently altered. Ouabain stimulated mechanical activity, oxygen consumption, and glycogenolysis, whereas lactate production was decreased. Although glycogenolysis was substantial, glucose was the only substrate for lactate, indicating that intermediates derived from glycogen do not mix with those from glucose uptake. Thus glycogenolysis and glycolysis are carried out by independent enzymatic pathways. Insulin-stimulated lactate production and glucose transport without affecting the other parameters. Again, lactate was produced only from glucose. Phenytoin decreased isometric tension and oxygen consumption, whereas stimulating lactate production and glycogenolysis. Glycogen was the primary substrate for the lactate produced. Our findings indicate that the compartmentation of substrate utilization is ascribable to the coordination of glycogenolysis with increases in oxygen consumption and the coupling of glycolysis to the Na-K-adenosine triphosphatase. The coupling of independent energy providing pathways to specific endergonic processes indicates a mechanism by which cellular energetic efficiency may be optimized.
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PMID:Compartmentation of carbohydrate metabolism in vascular smooth muscle. 303 Jan 31

The effect of triiodothyronine (T3) on the resting membrane potential was measured in primary cultured rat submandibular gland cells. The resting membrane potential was 29.5 +/- 0.71 mV. The hormone T3, at concentrations of 10(-9) M or greater, hyperpolarized the cells 5.8 mV (p less than 0.05). Hyperpolarization was complete within 24 hours. Ouabain (1 mM) depolarized the cells 5.9 mV. Cells exposed to T3 and ouabain had the same membrane potential as cells treated with ouabain alone. These data suggest that the hyperpolarization observed can be, in part, attributed to triiodothyronine-induced synthesis of (Na-K)-adenosine triphosphatase.
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PMID:Effects of triiodothyronine on resting membrane potential of primary cultured rat submandibular gland cells. 322 76

The spontaneous efflux of endogenous noradrenaline, dopamine, dihydroxyphenylglycol (DOPEG) from adrenergic nerve endings of 2 canine blood vessels (the mesenteric artery and the saphenous vein) were studied during 8 successive incubation periods of 15 min each. Extraneuronal uptake and O-methylation were minimized by the presence of adequate concentrations of tropolone and hydrocortisone. Both vessels had an efflux characterized by a decline in the 3 catechols, which was most marked for noradrenaline; the mesenteric artery lost larger amounts than the saphenous vein. Ouabain caused a large increase in the efflux of noradrenaline and dopamine and a reduction of DOPEG efflux. Cocaine had only a modest effect, more evident in the case of the mesenteric artery, increasing noradrenaline and reducing DOPEG effluxes. The combination of ouabain and cocaine had no additive effects, and the effects of ouabain were even reduced (on some parameters) by cocaine. Accordingly, the noradrenaline:DOPEG ratio was markedly increased by ouabain, but not by cocaine; cocaine significantly reduced the effects of ouabain. The ratio dopamine:noradrenaline was decreased by cocaine and by ouabain. Comparison of tissue content and efflux allowed us to conclude that apparently no significant de novo synthesis of noradrenaline occurred during the incubation period. We conclude that a fast and early component of spontaneous efflux is due to loss from the neurons and that its greater magnitude in the mesenteric artery may be due to differences in neuronal [Na+] and/or to differences in neuronal membrane adenosine triphosphatase activity. The results also suggest that neuronal reuptake plays only a minor role in the handling of spontaneously released noradrenaline.
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PMID:Spontaneous and ouabain-induced efflux of catecholamines and dihydroxyphenylglycol in two canine blood vessels. 324 Sep 15

1. Using a previously established method of isolating an active-sodium-transport inhibitor (ASTI) from hypothalamic cell culture medium, the inhibitor was isolated and partially purified from sequential passages through Sephadex G-25 and h.p.l.c., and its effects on de-endothelialized rabbit aortic strips were investigated. 2. ASTI caused a cumulative concentration-dependent increase in tension which reversed slowly after wash, and the wash showed an identical effect on fresh strips. 3. Ouabain, used as a control, also caused a concentration-dependent increase in tension which reached a plateau at a concentration of 10 mmol/l. Both ouabain and ASTI caused a significant potentiation of the vasoconstrictor effect of noradrenaline at concentrations of 1 nmol/l-0.1 mmol/l. 4. Both ASTI and ouabain caused a significantly greater (P less than 0.01) calcium retention than control medium in aortic strips. 5. Incubation of ASTI with prolidase, chymotrypsin and carboxypeptidase A destroyed the vasoconstrictor effects as well as its inhibitory effects on sodium, potassium-dependent adenosine triphosphatase and sodium efflux from erythrocytes, but leucine aminopeptidase was ineffective. 6. These studies suggest that hypothalamic cells in culture release a peptidic inhibitor of active sodium transport which increases vascular reactivity, potentiates vasoconstrictor effects of noradrenaline and causes calcium retention.
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PMID:Calcium retention and increased vascular reactivity caused by a hypothalamic sodium transport inhibitor. 340 35

To investigate the effects of sodium-potassium activated adenosine triphosphatase inhibition on central cardiovascular regulation a microinjection of ouabain was given into the hypothalamus of urethane anaesthetised rats. Doses of 0.01-1.0 micrograms per rat injected into the posterior hypothalamus produced a rise in blood pressure within 1 min, the maximum rise occurring 15-20 min later in a dose dependent manner. Both heart rate and abdominal sympathetic nerve activity increased with the rise in blood pressure. Ouabain injected into either the anterior preoptic hypothalamus or the ventromedial hypothalamus produced no notable cardiovascular responses. These results suggest that an endogenous digitalis like substance produced in the hypothalamus as a result of sodium loading may participate in central cardiovascular regulation by increasing sympathetic outflow in the discrete area of the brain, as does ouabain.
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PMID:Cardiovascular and sympathetic responses to ouabain injected into the hypothalamus in rats. 371 10

Rottem, Shlomo (Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel), and Shmuel Razin. Adenosine triphosphatase activity of mycoplasma membranes. J. Bacteriol. 92:714-722. 1966.-Adenosine triphosphatase activity of Mycoplasma laidlawii, M. gallisepticum, and Mycoplasma sp. strain 14 was confined to the cell membrane. The enzymatic activity was dependent on magnesium, but was not activated by sodium and potassium. Ouabain did not inhibit the adenosine triphosphatase activity of the mycoplasmas, and did not interfere with the active accumulation of potassium by M. laidlawii cells. Sulfhydryl-blocking reagents and fluoride inhibited the enzymatic activity, whereas 2,4-dinitrophenol was without any effect. Membranes of M. laidlawii hydrolyzed other nucleotide triphosphates and adenosine diphosphate (ADP), but at a lower rate than adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Nucleoside-2'-(3')-phosphates, ribose-5-phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, and pyrophosphate were not hydrolyzed by the membrane preparations. It seems that the enzyme(s) involved in ATP hydrolysis by M. laidlawii membranes is strongly bound to the membrane subunits, which would account for the failure to purify the enzyme by protein fractionation techniques. The adenosine triphosphatase activity of mycoplasma membranes resembles in its properties that of similar enzymes studied in bacteria. The mycoplasma enzyme(s) seems to differ from the adenosine triphosphatase associated with ion transport in mammalian cell membranes and from mitochondrial adenosine triphosphatase.
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PMID:Adenosine triphosphatase activity of mycoplasma membranes. 422 19

The preparation of cytoplasmic membranes from suspensions of Staphylococcus aureus lysed by an enzyme recently isolated in these laboratories is described. These membranes contained: protein, 34.4%; ribonucleic acid, 6.6%; lipids, 34.5%; and total phosphorus, 1.4%. Such membranes exhibited adenosine 5'-triphosphatase (E.C. 3.6.1.3) activity, liberating orthophosphate at an initial rate of 0.53 mumole per min per mg of protein under optimal conditions. The enzyme was Mg(++)-dependent and K(+)- or Na(+)-stimulated. Maximal activity was observed with a molar adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) to Mg(++) ratio of 1. One mole of orthophosphate was liberated per mole of ATP; the other product of digestion was adenosine 5'-diphosphate. Inorganic pyrophosphate and the 5'-triphosphates of guanosine, uridine, and cytidine were also attacked by membrane preparations, but more slowly than ATP. Ouabain, p-chloromercuribenzoate, and 2,4-dinitrophenol did not alter adenosine triphosphatase activity, whereas both Atebrine and chlorpromazine were inhibitory.
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PMID:Adenosine triphosphatase in isolated membranes of Staphylococcus aureus. 423 Aug 57

The purpose of this study was to see whether the receptor for cardiac glycosides might be localized upon or within the plasma membrane of digitalis-sensitive cells. Ouabain and digoxin were joined covalently to several large protein molecules. These macromolecular conjugates are too large to enter intact cells; consequently, any pharmacologic or biochemical effects which they display should arise from interaction with a cell surface receptor. Conjugates were tested in several cardiac glycoside-sensitive systems: (a), contractility response of isolated cardiac muscle; (b), active (86)Rb(+) uptake by red cells; (c), enzymatic activity of isolated myocardial microsomal (Na(+) + K(+))-activated adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase); and (d), enzymatic activity of solubilized red cell (Na(+) + K(+))-activated ATPase. Results demonstrated that in all of these systems, the macromolecular-glycoside conjugates were 100- to 1000-fold less active than the free glycosides. Careful chromatographic examination of the various conjugates revealed that they contained a small but persistent free cardiac glycoside contaminant. The amount of this species ranged from 0.1 to 1.0% of the total macromolecule-bound glycoside, and its presence fully explains the levels of biologic activity observed with the conjugates. To try to minimize steric factors which could interfere with glycoside-receptor interaction, digoxin and ouabain were also coupled to macromolecule via long, flexible polyamide side-chains. These extended chain conjugates, in which the cardiac glycoside potentially lay some 30 A removed from the surface of the macromolecule, also exhibited negligible digitalis-like effects when tested upon isolated cardiac muscle, red cell (86)Rb(+) uptake, and enzymatic activity of cardiac microsomal (Na(+) + K(+))-ATPase. However, the extended chain conjugates were fully active when examined with the solubilized red cell (Na(+) + K(+))-ATPase system. To further ensure that the chemical reactions used to couple macromolecule to glycoside did not inactivate the drug, all conjugates were subjected to extensive proteolytic digests exhibited full pharmacologic activity. Digoxin was also coupled to the tripeptide alanylglycylglycine, and the resulting conjugate was fully active. Taken together, these results suggest that if the receptor(s) for cardiac glycosides is associated with the plasma membrane, then it may lie deep within it.
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PMID:Studies on the localization of the cardiac glycoside receptor. 426 Jun 87

The effect of ouabain (g-strophanthin), a cardiac glycoside, on the growth of several enveloped viruses was examined. It was found that the growth of HVJ (Sendai virus) in chick embryo cells was markedly inhibited by the drug at a concentration as low as 5 x 10(-5)m. A virus-inhibitory concentration of ouabain did not cause morphological changes in uninfected cells, nor did it have the capacity to inactivate virus infectivity. Ouabain interfered with the intracellular synthesis of viral macromolecules. Although viral ribonucleic acid and viral antigens were synthesized by the ouabain-treated cells, the rate of synthesis was slower, and the total amounts of these macromolecules were smaller than those in the untreated control cells. It is suggested that ouabain inhibits the function of membrane-bound Na, K-adenosine triphosphatase of the chick embryo cells and thus prevents accumulation of K ion in them. Accumulation of intracellular K ion to a certain level would be needed for events of exponential growth of virus to proceed, and ouabain might inhibit this step by preventing such accumulation of K ion. This view was supported by the finding that the concentration of K ion in the HVJ-infected cells was rapidly reduced by the treatment with ouabain, and that, when the ouabain-treated culture was shifted to a medium containing a higher concentration of K ion than normal medium, virus production started in parallel with the increase of intracellular K ion. The fact that the concentration of K ion in BHK-21 cells, which support virus growth in the presence of ouabain, is not reduced by the treatment with the drug also suggested this possibility.
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PMID:Inhibition of virus growth by ouabain: effect of ouabain on the growth of HVJ in chick embryo cells. 433 18

1. The respiration and aerobic glycolysis of pig ciliary processes in oxygenated phosphate and bicarbonate buffers have been investigated. 2. Significant amounts of lactic acid are produced only in the presence of added glucose, but this does not change the endogenous respiration rate. 3. Succinate and citrate increase the oxygen uptake considerably, but pyruvate has almost no effect; oxaloacetate and fumarate stimulate slightly in the presence of glucose. Aspartate and fumarate together stimulate pyruvate utilization and are oxidized as fast as citrate. 4. Ouabain inhibits the oxidation of glucose and other substrates by limiting the ADP supply from the sodium transport system. Cyanide and azide inhibit respiration and stimulate glycolysis. 5. The transport mechanism depends largely on ATP from oxidative phosphorylation and regulates the rate of respiration and glycolysis by controlling ADP production from the Na(+)-K(+)-activated adenosine triphosphatase.
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PMID:The tricarboxylic acid cycle and glycolysis in relation to ion transport by the ciliary body. 591 34


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