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:Q8NEX9 (
reductase
)
26,410
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Topical 20% benzocaine (Hurricaine, Beutlich, Inc., Niles,
Ill
.) spray is frequently used for oral anesthesia before upper endoscopy. Side effects attributed to this agent are exceedingly rare. The author reports one of these rare complications, drug-induced methemoglobinemia, in a patient with methemoglobin
reductase
deficiency. The mechanisms for the development of methemoglobinemia and its treatment are reviewed.
...
PMID:Methemoglobinemia as a complication of 20% benzocaine spray for endoscopy. 229 80
Androgen ablation therapy is the treatment of choice for the palliation of patients with advanced prostate cancer. In addition to palliation, maximal androgen ablation (MAA), with a combination of medical or surgical castration and an antiandrogen, has been shown to increase the survival of patients with metastatic prostate cancer in at least three large well-conducted trials. A subgroup analysis of these trials has suggested that patients, particularly those with low volumes of metastatic disease, fared much better when treated with MAA than with castration alone. This observation has prompted many clinicians to begin androgen ablation earlier in men with advanced but not necessarily metastatic prostate cancer, thus exposing them to prolonged periods of androgen ablation and its side effects. These include impotence, loss of libido, loss of muscle mass,
malaise
, and psychological disturbances. In order to offer the putative advantages of early hormone therapy but to mitigate its side effects a number of innovative methods of androgen ablation are under investigation. These include 'sequential androgen blockade' and 'intermittent androgen suppression'. Sequential androgen blockade uses a 5 alpha-
reductase
inhibitor to reduce the conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone in conjunction with an antiandrogen or androgen-receptor blocker to prevent residual androgen from reaching the androgen receptor. Circulating testosterone levels are not reduced thus minimizing side effects. Intermittent androgen suppression uses combined therapy to rapidly reduce serum testosterone and induce tumor regression. From time to time treatment is stopped and androgen concentrations rise. This method reduces the total time of exposure to castrate levels of androgen and, although prostate-specific antigen levels rise during the second phase of therapy suggesting tumor growth, proponents of this cycling method suggest that this should prolong the time to androgen independence of the tumor. Early results with both methods suggest that the time to progression is long and side effects are minimized as compared to MAA. Large scale trials will be needed to determine the exact risks and benefits of these novel methods of androgen ablation.
...
PMID:Innovative approaches to the hormonal treatment of advanced prostate cancer. 926 90
Deibel, R. H. (American Meat Institute Foundation, Chicago,
Ill
.), and M. J. Kvetkas. Fumarate reduction and its role in the diversion of glucose fermentation by Streptococcus faecalis. J. Bacteriol. 88:858-864. 1964.-Fumarate diverts the normal fermentation of glucose by Streptococcus faecalis FB82, as shown by the production of increased amounts of CO(2), formate, acetate, and acetoin, and decreased formation of lactate and ethanol. Experiments with d-glucose-1-C(14), in which low levels of labeled CO(2) were recovered, indicated that C-1 cleavage of the glucose molecule was not involved. The presence of fumarate afforded consistently larger cell crops in growth studies with glucose and other energy sources. On a molar growth-yield basis, anaerobically grown, glucose-fumarate cultures were equivalent to aerobically grown, glucose cultures. The reduction of fumarate by cell suspensions indicated that glucose, gluconate, and, to a lesser extent, glycerol and mannitol could serve as hydrogen donors. Several common metabolic inhibitors had no effect upon the fumarate reductase system in cell suspensions, although some sensitivity to acidic pH was noted. Significant levels of succinate oxidation activity were not detected. Fumarate
reductase
activity was demonstrated in all five S. faecalis strains tested. Distribution of this ability in S. faecium strains was variable, ranging from activity comparable with that of S. faecalis to total inactivity. The observations support the conclusion that fumarate functions as an alternate hydrogen acceptor, thus allowing pyruvate to participate in the energy-yielding phosphoroclastic and dismutation pathways.
...
PMID:FUMARATE REDUCTION AND ITS ROLE IN THE DIVERSION OF GLUCOSE FERMENTATION BY STREPTOCOCCUS FAECALIS. 1421 47
Arsenic pollution seriously threatens human health and environment safety, being a very prominent environmental issue to be urgently solved in the world. In natural environment and soil systems, arsenic exists in complicated forms, but the plant arsenic poisoning is mainly from As(V) and As (III) exposure. As(V) can be absorbed by plant roots through Pi channel, and reduced rapidly to As(III) by arsenate
reductase
. As( III) can be transported into plants through NIP channel, and subsequently either transformed into methylated arsenic by arsenic methyltransferase or chelated with the thiol of GSH and PCs. These arsenic compounds can be sequestrated in root cell vacuoles or transported to plant aerial parts. Meanwhile, a part of absorbed arsenic can be discharged to external media. All of these can help to detoxify the arsenic in plants. This paper reviewed the latest research progress on the arsenic- resistance of crops, especially rice, with the focus on the mechanisms of As(V) and As(
Ill
) absorption and excretion, As(V) reduction, and As (II) methylation and chelation. The major topics of future research on arsenic toxicity were proposed.
...
PMID:[Absorption and metabolism mechanisms of inorganic arsenic in plants: a review]. 2272 Jun 34