4 resultados para Citrate Oxalate

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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It has been demonstrated previously that the mammalian heart cannot sustain physiologic levels of pressure-volume work if ketone bodies are the only substrates for respiration. In order to determine the metabolic derangement responsible for contractile failure in hearts utilizing ketone bodies, rat hearts were prefused at a near-physiologic workload in a working heart apparatus with acetoacetate and competing or alternate substrates including glucose, lactate, pyruvate, propionate, leucine, isoleucine, valine and acetate. While the pressure-volume work for hearts utilizing glucose was stable for 60 minutes of perfusion, performance fell by 30 minutes for hearts oxidizing acetoacetate as the sole substrate. The tissue content of 2-oxoglutarate and its transamination product, glutamate, were elevated in hearts utilizing acetoacetate while succinyl-CoA was decreased suggesting impaired flux through the citric acid cycle at the level of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase. Further studies indicated that the inhibition of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase developed prior to the onset of contractile failure and that the inhibition of the enzyme may be related to sequestration of the required cofactor, coenzyme A, as the thioesters acetoacetyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA. The contractile failure was not observed when glucose, lactate, pyruvate, propionate, valine or isoleucine were present together with acetoacetate, but the addition of acetate or leucine to acetoacetate did not improve performance indicating that improved performance is not mediated through the provision of additional acetyl-CoA. Furthermore, addition of competing substrates that improved function did not relieve the inhibition of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and actually resulted in the further accumulation of citric acid cycle intermediates "upstream" of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (2-oxoglutarate, glutamate, citrate and malate). Studies with (1-$\sp{14}$C) pyruvate indicate that the utilization of ketone bodies is associated with activation of NADP$\sp+$dependent malic enzyme and enrichment of the C4 pool of the citric acid cycle. The results suggest that contractile failure induced by ketone bodies in rat heart results from inhibition of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and that reversal of contractile failure is dissociated from relief of the inhibition, but rather is due to the entry of carbon units into the citric acid cycle as compounds other than acetyl-CoA. This mechanism of enrichment (anaplerosis) provides oxaloacetate for condensation with acetyl-CoA derived from ketone bodies allowing continued energy production by sustaining flux through a span of the citric acid cycle up to the point of inhibition at 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase for energy production thereby producing the reducing equivalents necessary to sustain oxidative phosphorylation. ^

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The mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) system is composed of two proteins, CPT-I and CPT-II, involved in the transport of fatty acids into the mitochondrial matrix to undergo $\beta$-oxidation. CPT-I is located outside the inner membrane and CPT-II is located on the inner aspect of the inner membrane. The CPT proteins are distinct with different molecular weights and activities. The malonyl-CoA sensitivity of CPT-I has been proposed as a regulatory step in $\beta$-oxidation. Using the neonatal rat cardiac myocyte, assays were designed to discriminate between these activities in situ using digitonin and Triton X-100. With this methodology, we are able to determine the involvement of the IGF-I pathway in the insulin-mediated increase in CPT activities. Concentrations of digitonin up to 25 $\mu$M fail to release citrate synthase from the mitochondrial matrix or alter the malonyl-CoA sensitivity of CPT-I. If the mitochondrial matrix was exposed, malonyl-CoA insensitive CPT-II would reduce malonyl-CoA sensitivity. In contrast to digitonin, Triton X-100 (0.15%) releases citrate synthase from the matrix and exposes CPT-II. CPT-II activity is confirmed by the absence of malonyl-CoA sensitivity. To examine the effects of various agents on the expression and/or activity of CPT, it is necessary to use serum-free medium to eliminate mitogenic effects of serum proteins. Comparison of different media to optimize CPT activity and cell viability resulted in the decision to use Dulbecco's Modified Eagle medium supplemented with transferrin. In three established models of cardiac hypertrophy using the neonatal rat cardiac myocyte there is a significant increase in CPT-I and CPT-II activity in the treated cells. Analogous to the situation seen in the hypertrophy model, insulin also significantly increases the activity of the mitochondrial proteins CPT-I, CPT-II and cytochrome oxidase with a coinciding increase the expression of CPT-II and cytochrome oxidase mRNA. The removal of serum increases the I$\sb{50}$ (concentration of inhibitor that halves enzyme activity) of CPT-I for malonyl-CoA by four-fold. Incubation with insulin returns I$\sb{50}$ values to serum levels. Incubation with insulin significantly increases malonyl-CoA and ATP levels in the cells with a resulting reduction in palmitate oxidation. Once malonyl-CoA inhibition of CPT-I is removed by permeabilizing the cells, insulin significantly increases the oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA in a manner which parallels the increase in CPT-I activity. Interestingly, CPT-II activity increases significantly only at the tissue culture concentration (1.7 $\mu$M) of insulin suggesting that the IGF-I pathway may be involved. Supporting a role for the IGF-I pathway in the insulin-induced increase in CPT activity is the significant increase in the synthesis of both cellular and mitochondrial proteins as well as increased synthesis of CPT-II. Consistent with an IGF-mediated pathway for the effect of insulin, IGF-I (10 ng/ml) significantly increases the activities of both CPT-I and -II. An IGF-I analogue which inhibits the autophosphorylation of the IGF-I receptor blunts the insulin-mediated increase in CPT-I and -II activity by greater than 70% and virtually eliminates the IGF-I response by greater than 90%. This is the first study to demonstrate the involvement of the IGF-I pathway in the regulation of mitochondrial protein expression, e.g. CPT. ^

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Osteopontin (OPN) is a highly-phosphorylated extracellular matrix protein localized in bone, kidney, placenta, T-lymphocytes, macrophages, smooth muscle of the vascular system, milk, urine, and plasma. In ROS 17/2.8 osteoblast-like osteosarcoma cells, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D 3] regulates OPN at the transcriptional level resulting in increased steady state mRNA levels and increased production of OPN protein, maximal at 48 hours. Using ROS 17/2.8 cells as an osteoblast model, OPN was purified from culture medium after three hour treatments of either vehicle (ethanol) or 1,25(OH)2D3 via barium citrate precipitation followed by immunoaffinity chromatography. ^ Here, further evidence of regulation of OPN by 1,25(OH)2D 3 at the posttranslational level is presented. Prior to the up-regulation of OPN at the transcriptional level, 1,25(OH)2D3 induces a shift in OPN isoelectric point (pI) detected on two-dimensional gels from pI 4.6 to pI 5.1. Loading equal amounts of [32P]-labeled OPN recovered from ROS 17/2.8 cells exposed to 1,25(OH)2D3 or vehicle alone for three hours reveals that the shift from pI 4.6 to 5.1 is the result of reduced phosphorylation. Using structural analogs to 1,25(OH) 2D3, analog AT [25-(OH)-16-ene-23-yne-D3], which triggers Ca2+ influx through voltage sensitive Ca2+ channels but does not bind to the vitamin D receptor, mimicked the OPN pI shift while analog BT [1,25(OH)2-22-ene-24-cyclopropyl-D 3], which binds to the vitamin D receptor but does not allow Ca 2+ influx, did not. Inclusion of the Ca2+ channel blocker nifedipine also blocks the charge shift conversion of OPN. Further analysis of the signaling pathway initiated by 1,25(OH)2D3 reveals that inhibition of the cyclic 3′,5′ -adenosine monophosphate-dependent kinase, protein kinase A, or inhibition of the cyclic 3′,5′-guanine monophosphate-dependent kinase, protein kinase G, also prevents the charge shift conversion. ^ Isolation of OPN from rat femurs and tibiae provides evidence for the existence of these two OPN charge forms in vivo, evidenced by differential migration on isoelectric focusing gels and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Peptide sequencing of rat long bone fractions revealed the presence of a presumed dentin specific protein, dentin matrix protein-1 (DMP-1). Western blot analysis confirmed the existence of DMP-1 in these fractions. ^ Using the OPN charge forms in functional assays, it was determined that the charge forms have differential roles in both cell surface and mineralization functions. In cell attachment assays and Ca2+ influx assays using PC-3 prostate cancer cells, the pI 5.1 charge form of OPN was found to permit binding and increase intracellular Ca2+ concentrations of PC-3 cells. The increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration was found to be integrin αvβ3-dependent. In mineralization assays, the pI 4.6 charge form of OPN promoted hydroxyapatite formation, while the pI 5.1 charge form had improved Ca2+ binding ability. ^ In conclusion, these findings suggest that 1,25(OH) 2D3 regulates OPN not only at the transcriptional level, but also plays a role in determination of the OPN phosphorylation state. The latter involves a short term (less than three hours) treatment and is associated with membrane-initiated Ca2+ influx. Functional assays utilizing the two OPN charge forms reveal the dependence of OPN post-translational state on its function. ^

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A population-based case-control study of risk factors for ectopic pregnancy has been conducted. The investigation includes 274 cases diagnosed in Rochester, Minnesota residents from 1935 through 1982, and 548 matched controls selected from live birth deliveries. Risk factor information documented prior to the last index menstrual period was obtained via medical record abstract for 22 potential risk factor variables.^ Univariate matched analyses revealed nine variables with significantly elevated odds ratios (ORs). Following conditional logistic regression for matched sets, four variables remained as significant risk factors for ectopic pregnancy. These risk factors with ORs and 95% confidence intervals (Cls) were: current intrauterine device use (OR = 13.7, Cl = 1.6 - 120.6), infertility (OR = 2.6, Cl = 1.6 - 4.2), pelvic inflammatory disease (OR = 3.3, Cl = 1.6 - 6.6), and tubal surgery (OR = 4.5, Cl = 1.5 - 13.9). After adjusting for these four major risk factors, the following variables did not have statistically significant ORs: abdominal/pelvic surgery (OR = 2.0), acute appendicitis (OR = 2.0), anovulation (OR = 1.2), clomiphene citrate use during the index conception (OR = 3.5), induced abortion (OR = 2.1), in utero exposure to diethylstilbestrol (OR = 1.6), myomas (OR = 0.7), ovarian cysts (OR = 1.0), and past intrauterine device use (OR = 1.2). ^