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)

1. Primary heart cell cultures from neonatal hamsters yielded a heterogeneous cell population, containing muscle cells undergoing progressive differentiation, as well as non-muscle cells. 2. Addition of 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine, at an early stage, to such cultures enhanced the formation of beating sheets of differentiated muscle cells. Accumulation of myosin heavy chains and creatine kinase also occurred in the presence of the analogue. 3. To obtain these effects, the analogue had to be added during the initial rapid growth phase of the cells. Division of the treated cells then ceased when the cell numbers had approximately doubled. 4. Similar results were obtained with other inhibitors of DNA synthesis. Thus improved muscle cell cultures can be obtained by preventing non-muscle cells from overgrowing the cultures. 5. One effect caused only by 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine was a large increase in the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase (adenosine triphosphatase) activity which sedimented at low ionic strength. This increase was not due to a greater content of myofibrillar myosin, or to myosin isoenzyme changes, because purified myosin prepared from treated and untreated cultures did not exhibit the increased Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activity.
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PMID:Effects of 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine on beating heart cell cultures from neonatal hamsters. 14 80

1. Addition of a non-dialysable, heat-labile and acid-precipitable factor which was not absorbed on DEAE-cellulose column, could restore the sensitivity of the chromatographed muscle pyruvate kinase from Marphysa sanguinea towards phosphocreatine inhibition. 2. This factor, being non-specific as it acts on pyruvate kinase isozymes from different sources, demonstrated high creatine kinase activity. 3. High concentrations of ADP, creatine or replacement of ADP with IDP/UDP or high pH abolished the inhibition indicating that the inhibition was mediated through creatine kinase by depleting ADP. 4. Apparent inhibition of phosphocreatine was related to the relative activities of 3 intracellular enzymes--pyruvate kinase, creatine kinase and adenosine triphosphatase.
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PMID:Apparent inhibition of pyruvate kinase by phosphocreatine and phosphoarginine. 31 98

Metal (Me) and MeATP interactions with adenylate cyclases associated with rabbit ventricular particles and with a detergent-dispersed preparation from rat cerebellum have been studied. data were simulated to fit kinetic models in which an inhibitor (HATP or ATP) is added in constant proportion to the variable substrate (MeATP). The specific models considered were that the enzyme binds (a) MeATP as the substrate; (b) MeATP as the substrate and HATP or ATP as an inhibitor; (c) MeATP as the substrate and free Me as an activator; and (d) MeATP as the substrate, free Me as an activator, and HATP or ATP as an inhibitor. Both equilibrium-ordered and random (rapid equilibrium assumption) types of sequential kinetic models were considered. The various models were tested using cardiac particulate adenylate cyclase in the presence of either a phosphoenolpyruvate-pyruvate kinase or a creatine phosphate-creatine kinase ATP-regeneration system. Although the enzyme with either system appeared to bind Mg2+ as an activator, one or both ATP-regeneration systems also seemed to interact directly with adenylate cyclase, making clear interpretations difficult. With the phosphoenolpyruvate-pyruvate kinase system, kinetic patterns on double reciprocal plots were linear as a function of MgATP, but with creatine phosphate-creatine kinase, kinetic patterns were concave downward. The kinetic models were further tested using the detergent-dispersed cerebellar enzyme, a preparation with low adenosine triphosphatase activity and not requiring the addition of an ATP-regeneration system. Reciprocal plots were linear and intersecting as a function of either MeATP or Me (Me = Mg2+ or Mn2+), and secondary replots of slopes and intersecting as function of either MeATP or Me (Me = Mg2+ or Mn2+), and secondary replots of slopes and intercepts also were linear. These data indicate that the brain detergent-dispersed enzyme conforms to a bireactant, sequential mechanism where free cation is a required activator and free ATP is not a potent inhibitor.
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PMID:Metal and metal-ATP interactions with brain and cardiac adenylate cyclases. 119 61

We have studied the effects of hypo- and hyperthyroidism on sarcolemmal (SL) and sarcoplasmic reticular (SR) ion transport processes and mitochondrial energy production in rat heart. The following conclusions were derived. 1) Compared with euthyroid state, hyperthyroidism led to increased SR Ca(2+)-accumulation. In SL, the activities of Ca(2+)-stimulated adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase), ATP-dependent Ca2+ pumping, and Na(+)-Ca2+ exchanger were not affected; but ouabain-sensitive Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity was enhanced. 2) Hypothyroidism resulted in depressed activities of Ca2+ pumps both in SL and SR. In SL, the Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity was decreased, but Na(+)-Ca2+ exchange was unaltered. 3) Thus slower relaxation of the hypothyroid myocardium may be attributed to depressed functioning of Ca2+ pumps in SR and SL, whereas faster relaxation of the hyperthyroid heart may be based on increased Ca(2+)-pumping activity of SR. 4) Hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism, respectively, led to enhanced and decreased rates of mitochondrial phosphocreatine synthesis. The thyroid state appears to control the functional coupling between mitochondrial creatine kinase and ATP-ADP translocase: the energy of oxidative phosphorylation was transformed into phosphocreatine more effectively in mitochondria from hypothyroid hearts than in those from hyperthyroid hearts.
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PMID:Thyroid control over membrane processes in rat heart. 165 94

In response to increasing demand, the cardiac muscle has developed several adaptational mechanisms. Gene expression is modified in a quantitative and a qualitative way since the heart hypertrophies and since its structure changes to improve the efficiency of the contraction. The sarcomere modifications are both species- and tissue-specific. An isoenzymic shift of myosin from high adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity form V-1 to low activity form V-3 occurs in all conditions in which V-1 is initially predominant, i.e., in rat (and also rabbit) ventricles and the atria of other species, including humans. It was not observed in conditions in which V-3 was predominant, as in human ventricles (and also in those of cats and pigs). Another shift from creatine kinase (CK) monomer M to CK B, the form that predominates in the fetal heart, is also observed. The sarcolemma is also modified, at least in rats. The digitalis receptor was characterized by studying the inotropic effect of the drug on an isolated heart preparation and on a purified preparation of sarcolemma with a high Na+,K(+)-ATPase activity by binding [3H]ouabain and ouabain-induced inhibition of the enzymatic activity. In hypertrophied heart, both the recovery of normal contractility after ouabain infusion and the release of previously bound ouabain infusion and the release of previously bound ouabain were slowed, as for fetal hearts. Changes in other inotropic receptors have also been reported. From a practical point of view, this means that screening of new inotropic agents has to be done on hypertrophied hearts and not, as usual, on normal tissue.
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PMID:Adaptational changes of sarcomere and sarcolemma during chronic cardiac overloading in rats and in humans. 248 18

The pathogenesis of reduced systolic left ventricular function in dilated cardiomyopathy is yet unclear. To analyze a possible involvement of contractile protein, function and structure of left ventricular myofibrils were examined in hearts of patients with advanced cardiomyopathy undergoing heart transplantation and in normal control hearts (from renal transplant donors). Myosin and actin content of the left ventricular myocardium was slightly reduced in cardiomyopathic hearts. Myofibrillar polypeptide composition was determined using two-dimensional electrophoresis and immunoblotting. No differences in constituting polypeptides were apparent, including Z-line proteins and proteins of the endosarcomeric lattice. M-line-bound creatine kinase was identical in both groups. Further, basal and maximal myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activities were unaltered in dilated cardiomyopathy. The structure of purified myosin was identical in both groups by the following criteria: electrophoretic mobility of native myosin, identical pattern of light chains after isoelectric focusing, identical cleavage peptides of myosin's heavy chain, and identical patterns after immunoblotting of heavy chain cleavage peptides using polyclonal antibodies generated against myosin from normal and cardiomyopathic ventricles. Ca2+-activated, K+-EDTA-activated and actin-activated myosin ATPase activities were identical in control and cardiomyopathic hearts. A structural alteration or functional defect of myofibrils does not seem to be primarily involved in the pathogenesis of reduced myocardial contractility in dilated cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Structure and function of contractile proteins in human dilated cardiomyopathy. 258 58

N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) is an agonist used to identify neuronal receptive sites for dicarboxylic amino acid neurotransmitters; NMDA receptors are implicated in neuronal damage of ischemic or hypoglycemic origin in newborns although involved mechanisms remain to be identified. In the present study, 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy with fast (6/min) data acquisition was used in newborn rat brain slices to measure changes of intracellular phosphocreatine and nucleotide triphosphate levels following extracellular NMDA applications. The rapid exhaustion of phosphocreatine stores in 50% of the total population of brain cells was induced in all cases by application of NMDA (30-45 s, 25-100 mM). It was not reproduced by other excitatory agents: potassium ions (24.6 mM, 4 min), isobutylxanthine (1mM), muscarine (10 mM), serotonin (0.1 mM) or substance P (10 microM). Such an effect of NMDA was not modified after tetrodotoxin (1 microM) and was reduced by extracellular 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (50 microM) or magnesium ions (2.2 mM). However it did develop during NMDA-induce neuronal excitations and was reversible within 10-30 min. This action of NMDA was followed by an irreversible decrease of phosphorus metabolites if mitochondrial creatine kinase and adenosine triphosphatase were decoupled by atractyloside (50 microM). Experiments revealed a link between selective NMDA action at neuronal plasma membranes, neurotoxicity and energy production by mitochondria.
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PMID:Metabolic action of N-methyl-D-aspartate in newborn rat brain ex vivo: 31p magnetic resonance spectroscopy. 268 43

Attempts to identify mechanisms by which calcium antagonists might influence intracellular metabolism have not yet yielded conclusive findings. In this study bepridil, verapamil, nifedipine, and nisoldipine were found to have no influence on the rate of rat heart myosin adenosine triphosphatase or the calcium dependence of myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase. None of these calcium antagonists alters the rate of reaction of any of the adenine nucleotide catabolic or adenosine salvage enzymes, adenylate kinase, creatine kinase, adenosine kinase, adenosine deaminase, or 5' nucleotidase, in extracts of rat heart. All four compounds, however, reduced, apparently in a non-specific manner, the rate of uptake of adenosine by myocytes isolated from rat heart. It is concluded that calcium antagonists may, through intercalation with the sarcolemmal membrane, inhibit efflux of adenosine formed by catabolism of adenine nucleotides in ischaemic myocytes. This might offer therapeutic advantage since the intracellular concentration of adenosine would thereby be increased, allowing an increased rate of incorporation of adenosine into the adenosine triphosphate pool in reoxygenated myocardium.
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PMID:Calcium antagonists and adenine nucleotide metabolism in rat heart. 349 85

1. The absence of creatine was demonstrated enzymically in the hen's-egg yolk and in the albumin contrary to former reports. 2. A comparison of the results obtained by enzymic and colorimetric methods to measure creatine is presented. 3. Creatine phosphate was not detected in the yolk extracts. 4. The content of free arginine enzymically assayed was 15.7mumol in the yolk and 3.38mumol in the albumin. Arginine amounts to practically all of the guanidine compounds in the yolk and one-half of those in the albumin. 5. No glycine amidinotransferase activity was found in the egg-yolk homogenates. 6. The heart of the chick embryo does not receive creatine from the egg and the creatine kinase activity present in this organ starting from the 27th hour of incubation suggests that the enzyme is a constitutive one working probably as an adenosine triphosphatase in a way similar to the kinase isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle. 7. Liver glycine amidinotransferase activity appeared clearly after day 5 of incubation. The specific activity reached a maximum at day 12 and then declined; however, the activity per total mass of liver increased steadily during all the prenatal period. Concomitantly with this steady increase a rise in the creatine content of the whole embryo was observed. An analogous increasing relationship between total liver amidinotransferase activity and liver creatine content was also detected during the postnatal period. 8. Repression of amidinotransferase by creatine cannot be accepted as occurring under physiological conditions since an inverse relationship between the two parameters was not observed. 9. Repression of liver amidinotransferase is observed only when pharmacological concentrations of the exogenous creatine are present in the chick liver.
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PMID:Creatine regulation in the embryo and growing chick. 549 9

Skeletal limb muscles of the dog could generally be differentiated into three fibre types according to myosin adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) (pH 9.4) and succinic dehydrogenase activities. However, because this was not always possible, for comparative purposes only, division into low myosin ATPase (slow twitch) type I and high myosin ATPase (fast twitch) type II fibres was used. The percentage of these fibre types in m deltoideus, m triceps brachii caput longum, m vastus lateralis, m gluteus medius, m biceps femoris and m semitendinosus was examined in the greyhound, crossbred and foxhound. In all muscles the greyhound had a significantly higher percentage of fibres with high myosin ATPase activity at pH 9.4 than the other breeds, with almost 100 per cent in most muscles examined. The activities of nine enzymes and glycogen concentration were determined in m gluteus medius and m semitendinosus of the greyhound and crossbred. Significantly higher levels of creatine kinase, aldolase, alanine aminotransferase and citrate synthase and significantly lower activities of 3-hydroxyacyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase and hexokinase were found in both muscles of the greyhound. The implications of these findings are discussed.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle fibre composition in the dog and its relationship to athletic ability. 645 29


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