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:P56851 (
epididymal
)
11,273
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) inhibited the incorporation of 14C from 14C-labelled glucose, pyruvate, citrate and acetate into fatty acids but it did not inhibit the conversion of 14C from citrate and acetate into CO2, and the citrate conversion into glyceride-glycerol in
epididymal
and mesenteric adipose tissue from 24h-fasted rats. 5-HT stimulated the formation of lactate from glucose and pyruvate, and increased the ratio of lactate produced/pyruvate taken up. This ratio was similar to the NADH:NAD ratio. These results indicate that 5-HT inhibits fatty acid synthesis in rat white adipose tissue by mechanisms similar to those of the catecholamines.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effect of 5-hydroxytryptamine on lipogenesis in rat adipose tissues. 4 10
Spermatozoa were collected from the caput and cauda epididymidis of rabbits and rats and diluted in Hank's solution containing BSA, with various concentrations of Na+ and K+. Ionic strength and osmolarity were kept constant. Motility was assessed at various intervals during incubation at 25 degrees C. In the pH range 7.05--7.20, the motility of rabbit spermatozoa was not affected by changes in the ratio of K+ to Na+. Similarly, the motility of rat cauda spermatozoa was not altered, but that of caput spermatozoa was slightly depressed by a high K+/Na+ ratio. In the pH range 5.45--5.85, rabbit cauda and caput spermatozoa had much greater motility in media with a high K+/Na+ ratio. The reverse result was obtained for the rat. These findings indicate that the motility of
epididymal
spermatozoa is influenced by external Na+ and K+ concentrations and that this phenomenon is pH-dependent.
...
PMID:Effect of sodium and potassium concentrations and pH on the maintenance of motility of rabbit and rat epididymal spermatozoa. 4 45
In order to clarify the relationships between perivascular cells, capillaries and fat cells, with a special reference to the origin of fat cells, we have made a light and electron microscopical study on the developing
epididymal
adipose tissue of newborn to 5-week-old rats, and also on the differentiating, transplanted
epididymal
preadipose tissue from 6-day-old rats. Development of
epididymal
preadipose tissue progressed rapidly 6 or 7 days after birth. The preadipose tissue on the 5th day after transplantation consisted of differentiated areas with many mature fat cells, and of undifferentiated areas in which these cells were scanty. In the differentiated areas of developing
epididymal
preadipose tissue, both in situ and transplanted, many fat cells seemed to develop in the area immediately adjacent to growing capillaries, but cells intermediate between perivascular cells and preadipocytes were seldom observed. However, in undifferentiated areas of transplanted tissue, we found ultrastructural evidence that immature pericytes of capillaries can differentiate into preadipocytes.
...
PMID:Electron microscopical studies on the genesis of white adipocytes: differentiation of immature pericytes into adipocytes in transplanted preadipose tissue. 4 11
1. Exposure of rat
epididymal
fat-pads or isolated fat-cells to adrenaline results in a decrease in acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity measured both in initial extracts and in extracts incubated with potassium citrate; in addition the concentration of citrate required to give half-maximal activation may also be increased. 2. Incorporation of 32Pi into acetyl-CoA carboxylase within intact fat-cells was investigated and evidence is presented that adrenaline increases the extent of phosphorylation of the enzyme. 3. Dephosphorylation of 32P-labelled acetyl-CoA carboxylase was studied in cell extracts. The rate of release of 32P is increased by 5mM-MgCl2 plus 10--100 microM-Ca2+, whereas it is inhibited by the presence of bivalent metal ion chelators such as EDTA and citrate. 4. The effects of adrenaline on the kinetic properties of acetyl-CoA carboxylase disappear if pad or cell extracts are treated with Mg2+ and Ca2+ under conditions that also lead to dephosphorylation of the enzyme. 5. The results of this study represent convincing evidence that adrenaline inactivates acetyl-CoA carboxylase in adipose-tissue preparations by increasing the degree of phosphorylation of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Adrenaline and the regulation of acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase in rat epididymal adipose tissue. Inactivation of the enzyme is associated with phosphorylation and can be reversed on dephosphorylation. 4 40
When isolated rat
epididymal
fat cells were incubated with [125I]iodoinsulin for 5 min at 37 degrees, radioactivity accumulated in the plasma membrane fraction (Peak 1) and an unidentified particulate fraction (Peak 2) as reported previously (Kono, T., Robinson, F.W., and Sarver, J.A. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 7826-7835). This accumulation of radioactivity in Peak 2 (but not that in Peak 1) was greatly impaired when cells were incubated with iodoinsulin in the presence of a variety of metabolic inhibitors that reduce the cellular content of ATP. The reduction in the ATP level coincided with a disappearance of the stimulatory effects of insulin on sugar transport and the hormone-sensitive phosphodiesterase. In contrast, ATP depletion had no significant effects, at least during a 5-to 15-min incubation, on the intracellular water space and on the basal sugar transport and phosphodiesterase activities. When cells once depleted on ATP by treatment with 2,4-dinitrophenol (1 mM; 10 min) were washed and suspended in fresh buffer, the ATP level was recovered almost fully in 10 min. This recovery coincided with the restoration of responsiveness to insulin. When cells were incubated with [125I]iodoinsulin or insulin for 5 min at 15 degrees instead of 37 degrees, a negligible quantity of radioactivity accumulated in Peak 2 and insulin failed to activate sugar transport. In contrast, under the same conditions, radioactivity accumulated in Peak 1 and insulin stimulated phosphodiesterase considerably. These results suggest that ATP, or some other compound metabolically related to ATP, may be necessary for the actions of insulin on sugar transport and phosphodiesterase. ATP, or some other related compound, may also be necessary in the formation of the radioactive Peak 2, although the physiological function and cellular location of this peak are yet to be ascertained.
...
PMID:Actions of insulin in fat cells. Effects of low temperature, uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation, and respiratory inhibitors. 6 33
After separation of three
epididymal
acid phosphatases their biochemical properties were differently studied. With appropriate substrate and inhibitor selection the distribution of the enzymes in different segments as well as the subcellular fractions of the rat epididymis was also demonstrated. The same biochemical differences were also utilized in the histochemical localization of the enzymes. It was found that Enzyme I had a pH-optimum at 5.0, a molecular weight of 97 000 and Km-constant of 0.901 mM. It was highly sensitive to tartrate and fluoride and it was localized in lysosomes as well as in the
epididymal
spermatozoa. Enzyme II had an optimum at pH 5.7, a molecular weight of 67 000 and Km-constant of 0.806 mM. It was also inhibited by fluoride but more resistant to tartrate. Its subcellular site was also particulate, but it was also found in the
epididymal
fluid. Enzyme III had an optimum at pH 5.2, a molecular weight of 135 000 and Km-constant of 0.685 m. It was resistant to low concentrations of fluoride and tartrate but sensitive to heavy metal ions. The enzyme was soluble and it behaved incoherently in thermal inactivation. All enzymes revealed the highest activity in the thin middle segments of the epididymis. Histochemical naphthol substrates gave a diffuse reaction in the
epididymal
epithelial cells. With the lead salt methods glycerophosphates and p-nitrophenylphosphate gave somewhat different results depending on their specificity as substrates for the
epididymal
enzymes. Both substrates gave a strong reaction supranuclearly in the Golgi area of the chief cells. This activity was inhibited by tartrate and was most probably due to Enzyme I. The
epididymal
corpus and cauda showed additionally a very strong apical activity in the chief cells with p-nitrophenylphosphate. This activity was resitant to tartrate but sensitive to fluoride. It was concluded that this enzyme represents Enzyme II activity. Similar activity was also found in the dissolving "holocrine" cells of the corpus and the cauda. The activity of the soluble Enzyme III could not be revealed with the present methods and the spermatozoa in the tubular lumina remained unstained.
...
PMID:Acid phosphatases of the rat epididymis. II. Biochemical characteristics, subcellular distribution and histochemical localization. 7 Jan 77
Cells considered to be lymphocytes are reported in the epithelial lining of the excurrent ducts of the testis of normal and vasoligated domestic fowl. They resemble those already reported in the rat and monkey
epididymal
epithelium, the human intestinal mucosa, and in the bursa of Fabricius. The cytoplasm is usually less dense than that of adjacent epithelial cells, and contains only a few organelles. The nucleus is highly heterochromatic and with no definite nucleolus. Cytoplasmic processes are found to extend from the cell in between epithelial cells. The possible role of these cells in the reproductive tract of the cockerel is discussed.
...
PMID:Intraepithelial lymphocytes in the excurrent ducts of the testis of the domestic fowl (Gallus domesticus). 8 11
This report addresses the question whether two different types of binding exist for the reaction of H-Y antigen with the cell surface. Anti-H-Y antiserum in the presence of complement was cytotoxic only for gonadal cells expressing their own H-Y antigen, but not to ovarian cells loaded with H-Y antigen. H-Y antigen was co-redistributed with beta 2--microglobulin on newborn testicular cells, but some residual H-Y activity was found on similarly treated testis cells from 15 day old rats. After beta 2--microglobulin redistribution, testis cells maintained their binding capacity for exogenous H-Y antigen prepared from
epididymal
fluid or Daudi cell culture supernatants. This result suggests that exogenous H-Y antigen is bound via a gonad-specific receptor which is independent of beta 2--microglobulin and that this type of binding for H-Y antigen is different from the beta 2--m-associated expression of H-Y antigen on the cell surface.
...
PMID:Evidence for a gonad-specific receptor for H-Y antigen: binding of exogenous H-Y antigen to gonadal cells is independent of beta 2-microglobulin. 8 66
In this study the role of cyclic AMP in the antilpolytic effect of the alpha-adrenergic agents methoxamine and phenylephrine in hamster
epididymal
adipocytes was studied. Both methozamine and phenylephrine lowered the very high levels of cyclic AMP that were produced by high concentrations of isoproterenol (10 muM) or ACTH (100 MU/ml), and partially inhibited lipolysis. When lower concentrations of isoproterenol were used, the antilipolytic effect of phenylephrine and methoxamine was still evident. Under these conditions methoxamine produced a slight suppression of cyclic AMP levels while phenylephrine increased accumulation of cyclic AMP. It follows, therefore, that the inhibition of lipolysis by the alpha agents is most likely unrelated to changes in cyclic AMP levels; in contrast, phenylephrine promoted lipolysis and increased cyclic AMP levels. When the stimulus for lipolysis was provided by methylxanthines a different picture emerged. Methoxamine antagonized lipolysis and lowered cyclic AMP levels. In the presence of propranolol, phenylephrine lowered cyclic AMP levels and suppressed methylxanthine-accelerated lipolysis. It is suggested that when methy xanthines provide the stimulus for lipolysis the antilipolytic effect of methoxamine and phenylephrine (in the presence of propranolol) may be mediated by the suppression in cyclic AMP levels.
...
PMID:Inhibition of lipolysis in hamster epididymal adipocytes by selective alpha-adrenergic agents. Evidence for cyclic AMP-dependent and independent mechanisms. 9 May 27
Effects of protein malnutrition on adipose tissue development were studied in weanling male Sprague-Dawley rats fed isocaloric diets ad libitum containing either 22% (controls) or 8% (protein-malnourished rats) casein, and in rats pair-fed to the protein-malnourished rats with the 22% casein diet. After 32 days on the diet, protein-malnourished rats were 37% and pair-fed 67% the weight of the controls, while torso length was 37% and 73% of controls, respectively. Food consumption relative to body weight was greatest in protein-malnourished rats. Compared to control rats, the distal
epididymal
adipocyte number in the protein-malnourished rats was decreased in proportion to the decrease in body size and was more closely related to the protein intake than to the total calories consumed. After 32 days on diet, mean adipocyte number per 2 distal pads was 11.7 x 10(6) in controls and 4.3 x 10(6) in protein-malnourished rats. In pair-fed rats, cell number lagged behind controls at 4 and 11 days, but was normal at 32 days (11.4 x 10(6) cells). The distal
epididymal
pad adipocyte size and percent lipid were similar in all groups during the first 25 days of dietary treatment. Adipocyte size was increased significantly in controls at day 32 compared to the other two groups. At each time studied through day 25 on diet,
epididymal
pad weight was related to the adipose cell number rather than the cell size. It is concluded that severe restriction of dietary protein during the postweaning period of growth in rats results in decreased
epididymal
adipocyte proliferation and/or differentiation concomitant with generalized growth retardation, whereas isocaloric feeding of a diet of normal protein content is associated with only a transient delay in adipose tissue development.
...
PMID:Adipose tissue development, growth, and food consumption in protein-malnourished rats. 10 48
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>