Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P20020 (
adenosine triphosphatase
)
3,299
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The intracellular distribution of
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) activity was measured and mapped in iliotibialis cranialis muscle fibers of growing turkeys. Two weeks after hatching, fibers with strong myofibrillar
adenosine triphosphatase
(
ATPase
) were larger in cross sectional area than fibers with weak
ATPase
, but fibers with weak
ATPase
subsequently exhibited more rapid relative growth. At two weeks, both types of fibers had stronger
SDH
activity in their central axis than in the subsarcolemmal region. At ten weeks this gradient was reversed so that
SDH
activity declined from the periphery to the axis (a negative centripetal gradient of
SDH
activity). Fibers with strong
ATPase
developed the steepest negative gradients of
SDH
activity. Fibers with weak
ATPase
tended to have more uniformly distributed
SDH
activity, even when fibers had grown quite large.
...
PMID:Growth-related changes in the intracellular distribution of succinate dehydrogenase activity in turkey muscle. 294 Jan 58
Extensor digitorum longus muscles of male adult White New Zealand rabbits were indirectly stimulated at 10 Hz for 12 h daily for periods ranging up to 28 days. After four weeks the stimulated muscles showed a nearly uniform profile of high
succinate dehydrogenase
activity and, when incubated after acid preincubation for myofibrillar
adenosine triphosphatase
, displayed more dark- and intermediate-staining fibers than their contralateral counterparts. Muscles stimulated from between 6 to 21 days revealed degenerative foci and phagocytosis of degenerated fibers. These fibers were mostly of the fast-twitch, glycolytic type. Small myofibers, which often contained central nuclei, and structures identified as myoblasts or myotubes, reacted with a monoclonal antibody prepared against embryonic myosin heavy chains. The data suggest that under the employed conditions the fast to slow conversion of chronically stimulated fast-twitch rabbit muscle is not exclusively caused by adult fiber transformation, but results in part from the substitution of fast-twitch glycolytic fibers with newly formed fibers that have a high oxidative profile.
...
PMID:Degeneration-regeneration as a mechanism contributing to the fast to slow conversion of chronically stimulated fast-twitch rabbit muscle. 294 Nov 48
The effect of a single dose of 5 mg/kg body weight of aflatoxin B1 on rat liver mitochondrial enzymes,
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) and Mg++
adenosine triphosphatase
(Mg++-ATPase) and on certain lipids were studies at various intervals of time from 3 to 24 hours. A significant decrease in the specific activity of
SDH
was observed after 6, 12, 18 and 24 hr treatment. The Mg++-ATPase activity remained unaffected up to 12 hr but appreciably decreased after, 18 and 24 hr of the treatment. The level of phospholipids and cholesterol were not altered after 3, 6 and 12 hr treatment, thereafter (18 and 24 hr) an increase was observed in both the lipids following the aflatoxin treatment. Medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) did not cause any alteration in the specific activities of these enzymes as well as levels of cholesterol and phospholipids. The treatment with MPA caused significant increase in contents of cytochromes P-450, b5 and activities of Arylhydrocarbon hydroxylase (AHH), UDP-glucuronyl transferase (UDP-GT) and NADPH-cytochrome C-reductase of hepatic microsomes. It was observed that pretreatment with medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) could significantly minimuze the depression caused in mitochondrial
SDH
and Mg++-ATPase activities by aflatoxin B1.
...
PMID:Modification of aflatoxin B1-induced changes in certain mitochondrial enzymes and lipids by medroxyprogesterone acetate. 294 74
Observations made during a growth and development study of the semitendinosus and trapezius muscles of 49 purebred Large White pigs between birth and 128 days of age revealed the presence of giant fibres. The occurrence, histochemical and ultrastructural properties of these giant fibres were investigated. A high proportion of the pigs (85 per cent) contained giant fibres in their muscles but these giant fibres usually represented less than 1 per cent of the total myofibre population. Giant fibres possessed enhanced
adenosine triphosphatase
activity and a high capacity for oxidative metabolism (indicated by
succinate dehydrogenase
activity) which was reflected ultrastructurally by the greatly heightened electron density of myofibrils and by an abnormally high percentage of mitochondria and lipid droplets. These deviations from normal muscle fibre composition, together with the reduced percentage volume of sarcoplasmic reticulum, were consistent with changes seen in functionally over-loaded muscle. It appears that giant fibre anomalies occur through increased activity stimulated in occasional muscle fibres, perhaps by a structural defect, such as an inadequate amount of sarcoplasmic reticulum, which causes hyper-contractile activity within the fibres and associated compensatory adaptations. Giant fibres did not appear to represent fibres undergoing degenerative changes.
...
PMID:"Giant" muscle fibres in skeletal muscle of normal pigs. 294 80
By means of histological methods for revealing
adenosine triphosphatase
of myosin (pH 4.6) and
succinate dehydrogenase
activity, using postmortem material, development of various muscle fibers of the femoral m. quadriceps and m. soleus has been studied in human ontogenesis. The first stage of rearrangements lasts from the 5th-6th month of the uterine development up to 2 years of age and is characterized by formation (from non-differentiated) of oxidative, glycolytic and oxidative-glycolytic fibers. During the period from 2 up to 7-8 years of age the ratio in the types changes slightly, but transversal section size of the muscle fiber increases intensively. Then from 11 up to 17 years of age, together with maximal increment of the fibers transversal section, there is an essential change in the type relation. By the 17th years of age, in the femoral m. quadriceps the part of the fibers with glycolytic type of energy supply increases, while in the m. soleus the oxidative fibers become more numerous. By the 70th years of age in the femoral m. quadriceps relative amount of intermediate fibers increases.
...
PMID:[Development of various types of muscle fibers in the quadriceps femoris and the soleus during human ontogenesis]. 294 54
The possibility that chlorhexidine is a specific inhibitor of membrane bound bacterial
adenosine triphosphatase
(
ATPase
) was addressed. The in-vitro susceptibilities of several Providencia stuartii cell envelope enzymes, including
ATPase
, to chlorhexidine were compared. The following concentrations of chlorhexidine were required to cause 50% inhibition of enzyme activity in preparations from chlorhexidine-sensitive strains (MIC 50 mg chlorhexidine/l):
ATPase
(160 mg/l),
succinic dehydrogenase
(greater than 300 mg/l), penicillin binding protein 7 (300 mg/l) and beta-lactamase (45 mg/l). Fifty per cent inhibition of the
ATPase
from a chlorhexidine-resistant strain (MIC 1600 mg/l) was achieved at an in-vitro concentration of 225 mg chlorhexidine/l. Our observations do not support the suggestion that bacterial membrane-bound ATPases are specific targets for chlorhexidine.
...
PMID:Inhibition of Providencia stuartii cell envelope enzymes by chlorhexidine. 295 30
1. Normal and chronically stimulated peroneus longus muscles of the cat's hind limb were studied with respect to fibre size and staining properties for myofibrillar (myosin)
adenosine triphosphatase
(
ATPase
) and
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) activity. The intensity of staining for
SDH
activity was measured by microphotometry from the central portions of the muscle fibres ('core-
SDH
staining'). For comparison, histochemical properties were also studied in non-stimulated soleus muscles. 2. On account of the pH sensitivity of their myofibrillar
ATPase
, about 18% of the fibres in normal peroneus longus muscles were classified as type I, and about half of the remainder as II A and II B respectively. 3. In the normal peroneus longus muscles, the mean diameter of single muscle fibres generally varied between about 25 and 75 micron, whereby the average size of type I less than type II. 4. In the normal peroneus longus muscles the staining intensity for core
SDH
varied over a wide range. The average heaviness of staining was clearly ranked in the order type I greater than type II A greater than type II B. 5. Chronic stimulation was given to the deafferented common peroneal nerve by aid of a portable and remotely controlled mini-stimulator. The stimulation was delivered in 'tonic' patterns (greater than or equal to 50% of total time taken up by activity) of 'fast' (20 or 40 Hz) or 'slow' (5 or 10 Hz) rates. 6. Prior to the period of long-term stimulation, the cats had been subjected to a dorsal rhizotomy and hemispinalization on the ipsilateral (left) side. In the absence of chronic stimulation, these operations had no evident effects on the sizes or staining properties of peroneus longus fibres. 7. After 8 weeks of treatment with tonic patterns of stimulation, the fibres of peroneus longus muscles clearly became more similar to each other with respect to their diameter as well as their staining for
ATPase
and
SDH
activity. With respect to
ATPase
staining, however, the chronically stimulated peroneus longus fibres had become more similar to non-stimulated soleus fibres than to non-stimulated type I fibres of peroneus longus. With respect to the staining for core
SDH
, the chronically stimulated fibres all became similar to normal II A fibres of peroneus longus. The 'fast' and 'slow' patterns of chronic stimulation had the same effects on the staining properties. 8. Chronically stimulated peroneus longus muscles showed a decrease in fibre diameter which corresponded, roughly, to the concomitant decrease in muscle weight.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fibre sizes and histochemical staining characteristics in normal and chronically stimulated fast muscle of cat. 295 93
The effect of senescence on the metabolic profile of rat coronary arteries and arterioles was studied using enzyme histochemical techniques. In coronary arteries anaerobic metabolism predominates. In senescence an increase of
adenosine triphosphatase
(
ATPase
) occurred. The
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) and the respiratory chain metabolism marker NADH2-tetrazolium reductase (NADHD) showed an age-related decrease. Lactate dehydrogenase was unchanged. In the coronary arterioles, on the contrary, aerobic metabolism dominates. In senescence a significant decrease of NADHD and a moderate reduction of
SDH
and
ATPase
was observed. L-Carnitine administration significantly stimulated some enzymatic activities related to aerobic metabolism primarily at the arteriolar level.
...
PMID:Metabolism of coronary vasculature in senescent rats--a histochemical study. 295 67
Muscle growth and development was studied in 49 Large White pigs from a total of 17 litters. Representative large (mean birthweight of 1544 g), small (1144 g) and runt (776 g) littermates were selected and slaughtered at the same age, ages ranging from birth to 128 days. Fresh frozen, serial transverse sections taken from the semi-tendinosus and trapezius muscles of these animals were stained for the histochemical demonstration of acid and alkaline pre-incubated
adenosine triphosphatase
,
succinate dehydrogenase
and glycogen phosphorylase. Profiles of the muscle fibre types were compiled for each animal. In both muscles the number of slow oxidative (SO) fibres, that were arranged together in groups within 'metabolic bundles', increased with growth. The transverse sectional area (TSA) of the semitendinosus muscle increased with the 2/3 power of liveweight whereas the area occupied by SO fibres increased at a rate significantly greater than 1.0 (P less than 0.01). Regression analysis revealed that the area of this muscle occupied by SO fibres was greater (P less than 0.001) in runt and small littermates relative to their large littermates when they were compared at an equal liveweight. This greater TSA of the semitendinosus classified as 'SO' in lower birthweight pigs was the result of a combination of higher percentages (P less than 0.05) of SO fibres and significantly greater (P less than 0.001) SO fibre mean TSAs. The mean TSAs of all myofibre types were similar between littermates of the same age but most types were of greater TSA in the lower birthweight littermates when compared (by regression analysis) at the same liveweight suggesting that fibre TSA was age- rather than weight-related. The higher percentage of SO fibres in the low birthweight pigs, when compared at an equivalent liveweight to their large littermates, appeared to be related to their affected secondary/primary fibre number ratio. This phenomenon, plus the data on the number of slow fibres per metabolic bundle, indicated that it was apparently the number of slow fibres per metabolic bundle which was regulated with liveweight gain rather than the resultant percentage of slow fibres within the muscle.
...
PMID:The growth and differentiation of porcine skeletal muscle fibre types and the influence of birthweight. 295 39
Using quantitative histochemical techniques, it was determined that the tensor tympani muscle of the cat consists of three muscle fiber types: type 1, type 2A (staining characteristics similar to the type 1 and type 2A muscle fibers found in the control tibialis anterior muscles), and a third unclassified fiber type (type 3) similar to the 2A fiber type except that it had extremely dense alkaline actomyosin
adenosine triphosphatase
staining (mean transmittance, type 2A = 33.6%; type 3 = 17.3%), as well as dense staining for periodic acid-Schiff, menadione-linked alpha-glycerolphosphate dehydrogenase, nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide tetrazolium reductase, and
succinic dehydrogenase
. The type 1 fiber population was smaller in diameter (mean +/- SD, 14 +/- 4 microns) than the type 2A fiber (mean +/- SD, 21 +/- 5 microns) and the type 3 fiber (mean +/- SD, 22 +/- 6 microns) populations. In all muscles, intrafascicular and extrafascicular fat accumulations were found, with the majority being extrafascicular. Calculations indicate that the tendon occupies approximately 41% of the total muscle volume, while the muscle fibers constitute 59% of the volume.
...
PMID:Muscle fiber types in the cat middle ear muscles. II. Tensor tympani. 296 26
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>