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1.
Biochem J ; 348 Pt 3: 517-24, 2000 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10839981

ABSTRACT

E1/U17 small nucleolar RNA (snoRNA) is a box H/ACA snoRNA. To identify E1 RNA elements required for its assembly into a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) particle, we have made substitution mutations in evolutionarily conserved sequences and structures of frog E1 RNA. After E1 RNA was injected into the nucleus of frog oocytes, assembly of this exogenous RNA into an RNP was monitored by non-denaturing gel electrophoresis. Unexpectedly, nucleotide substitutions in many phylogenetically conserved segments of E1 RNA produced RNPs with abnormal gel-electrophoresis patterns. These RNA segments were at least nine conserved sequences and an apparently conserved structure. In another region needed for RNP formation, the requirement may be sequence(s) and/or structure. Base substitutions in each of these and in one additional conserved E1 RNA segment reduced the stability of this snoRNA in frog oocytes. Nucleolar localization was assayed by fluorescence microscopy after injection of fluorescein-labelled RNA. The H box (ANANNA) and the ACA box are both needed for efficient nucleolar localization of frog E1 RNA.


Subject(s)
RNA, Small Nucleolar/metabolism , Ribonucleoproteins/biosynthesis , Animals , Base Sequence , Molecular Sequence Data , Nucleic Acid Conformation , Oocytes/metabolism , RNA, Small Nucleolar/chemistry , RNA, Small Nucleolar/genetics , Xenopus laevis
2.
Medsurg Nurs ; 9(6): 284-95; quiz 296-7, 2000 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11904862

ABSTRACT

Malnutrition is common in older adults and is associated with poor outcomes. The causes and outcomes of malnutrition are discussed, and the TwoCal HN Med Pass program, designed to overcome poor dietary intake, is described. Benefits of the program, role of the pharmacist, identification of candidates for the TwoCal HN Med Pass program, and health care team roles and responsibilities are reviewed.


Subject(s)
Dietary Proteins/administration & dosage , Drug Therapy/nursing , Energy Intake , Food, Formulated , Protein-Energy Malnutrition/therapy , Aged , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Dietary Proteins/analysis , Dietary Proteins/economics , Food, Formulated/analysis , Food, Formulated/economics , Food-Drug Interactions , Humans , Medication Systems, Hospital , Nurse's Role , Nursing Assessment , Nutrition Assessment , Patient Care Team , Patient Selection , Pharmacists , Program Evaluation , Protein-Energy Malnutrition/complications , Protein-Energy Malnutrition/diagnosis , Protein-Energy Malnutrition/economics , Skilled Nursing Facilities
3.
Brain Res ; 755(2): 304-12, 1997 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9175897

ABSTRACT

Using 2-deoxyglucose phosphorylation as an index of glucose use and concentrations of selected intermediates to monitor metabolic pathways, responses of rat hippocampal slices to glutamate and K+ stimulation were examined. With glutamate, the glucose phosphorylation rate (GPR) increased, and the slices accumulated glutamate at a constant rate, for 10 min. The uptake rate at each glutamate level was matched, approximately, by the increase in GPR at that level, with 4 or 5 glutamate molecules accumulated for every glucose molecule phosphorylated. Phosphocreatine and ATP levels fell abruptly, and lactate rose, probably reflecting neuronal activity, found by others to be very brief in the presence of glutamate. K+ stimulation produced responses of phosphocreatine, ATP and lactate levels and of GPR similar to those due to glutamate. There were also prolonged changes in the levels of other metabolites: with both stimulants glucose 6-phosphate fell, and malate rose. The changes in malate may be the result of the participation of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase in both citrate cycle and malate shuttle. Citrate and alpha-ketoglutarate rose only with K+. When pyruvate was added to the medium, resting GPR was reduced, but for both stimulants the relative increases in GPR with stimulation were the same as without pyruvate. The changes in metabolic intermediates in response to K+ were like those with glucose alone. But with glutamate, the rise in lactate was greatly diminished, and malate fell instead of rising. Glutamate interference with the transfer of both 3-carbon as well as 4- and 5-carbon intermediates from glia to neurons may explain these results. If so, this interference is greater with pyruvate supplementation than with glucose alone.


Subject(s)
Glucose/metabolism , Glutamic Acid/pharmacology , Hippocampus/drug effects , Potassium/pharmacology , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Animals , Energy Metabolism/drug effects , Female , Hippocampus/metabolism , In Vitro Techniques , Phosphorylation , Rats , Stimulation, Chemical
4.
Cell Stress Chaperones ; 2(1): 25-30, 1997 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9250392

ABSTRACT

A previous report from our laboratory (Collier et al 1993) showed that the elongated tubules of mitochondria in the cytoplasm of cultured chicken embryo fibroblasts collapsed to irregularly shaped structures surrounding the nuclear membrane after a 1 h heat shock treatment. The normal mitochondrial morphology reappeared upon removal of the thermal stress. We have now determined that several changes occurred in mitochondrial-related metabolites under these same heat shock and recovery conditions. Among these were significant decreases in the levels of fumarate and malate and increases in the amounts of aspartate and glutamate. In contrast, other intermediates of the tri-carboxylic acid cycle were unaltered as were levels of ATP and phosphocreatine. The changes observed might result from heat shock-induced changes in enzyme activities of the mitochondria, from alterations in the membrane-embedded specialized carrier proteins that transport metabolites between cytosol and mitochondria or from a disorganization of the electron-transport system normally coupled to oxidative metabolism. The rapid recovery, however, suggested that these changes were transient and readily reversible.


Subject(s)
Energy Metabolism/physiology , Hot Temperature , Mitochondria/metabolism , Stress, Physiological/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Animals , Aspartic Acid/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Chick Embryo , Citric Acid/metabolism , Fibroblasts/chemistry , Fibroblasts/cytology , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Fumarates/metabolism , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Glycerophosphates/metabolism , Glycolysis/physiology , Ketoglutaric Acids/metabolism , Malates/metabolism , Phosphocreatine/metabolism , Pyruvates/metabolism
5.
Anal Biochem ; 209(2): 335-8, 1993 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8470806

ABSTRACT

Akabayashi et al. made a valuable modification of the enzymatic methods from our laboratory for measuring 2-deoxyglucose and 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate. Their modified procedure eliminates glucose and glucose 6-phosphate by conversion to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, thereby saving two analytical steps. However, the present report describes a limitation of this new elimination procedure which is due to its unexpected reversibility, and provides an easy way to circumvent this limitation, namely heating to destroy the reagent enzymes before proceeding. The final result is a more flexible analytical scheme that is capable of measuring 2-deoxyglucose and its phosphate down to extremely low levels in the presence of up to thousandfold higher glucose concentrations. The completeness of glucose elimination eliminates both the problem of contamination of available glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenases with 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, and also the effect of the presence in this same enzyme of a trace of glucose dehydrogenase activity, which is an apparent side reaction.


Subject(s)
Deoxyglucose/analysis , Glucosephosphates/analysis , Adenosine Diphosphate/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Fructosediphosphates/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Glucose-6-Phosphate , Glucosephosphates/metabolism , Kinetics , Phosphoenolpyruvate/metabolism , Phosphofructokinase-1/metabolism
6.
J Neurochem ; 59(5): 1915-24, 1992 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1357103

ABSTRACT

A new approach to the study of glucose phosphorylation in brain slices is described. It is based on timed incubation with nonradioactive 2-deoxyglucose (DG), after which the tissue levels of DG and 2-deoxyglucose-6-phosphate (DG6P) are measured separately with sensitive enzymatic methods applied to specific small subregions. The smallest samples had dry weights of approximately 0.5 microgram. Direct measurements in different regions of hippocampal slices showed that within 6 min after exposure to DG, the ratios of DG to glucose in the tissue were almost the same as in the incubation medium, which simplifies the calculation of glucose phosphorylation rates and increases their reliability. Data are given for ATP, phosphocreatine, sucrose space, and K+ in specific subregions of the slices. DG6P accumulation proceeded at a constant rate for at least 10 min, even when stimulated by 10 mM glutamate in the medium. The calculated control rate of glucose phosphorylation was 2 mmol/kg (dry weight)/min. In the presence of 10 mM glutamate it was twice as great. The response to 10 mM glutamate of different regions of the slice was not uniform, ranging from 164% of control values in the molecular layer of CA1 to 256% in the stratum radiatum of CA1. There was a profound fall in phosphocreatine levels (75%) in response to 10 mM glutamate despite a 2.4-fold increase in glucose phosphorylation. Even in the presence of 1 mM glutamate, the increase in glucose phosphorylation (50%) was not great enough to prevent a significant drop in phosphocreatine content.


Subject(s)
Deoxyglucose/metabolism , Glucose-6-Phosphate/analogs & derivatives , Glucose/metabolism , Glutamates/pharmacology , Hippocampus/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Animals , Brain Edema/metabolism , Female , Glucosephosphates/metabolism , Glutamic Acid , Hippocampus/chemistry , Hippocampus/drug effects , Phosphocreatine/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism , Rats
7.
Neurochem Res ; 16(9): 991-9, 1991 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1784341

ABSTRACT

Data are presented for 16 enzymes from 8 metabolic systems in cell cultures consisting of approximately 95% astrocytes and 5% oligodendrocytes. Nine of these enzymes were also measured in cultures of oligodendrocytes, Schwann cells, and neurons prepared from both cerebral cortex and superior cervical ganglia. Activities, in mature astrocyte cultures, expressed as percentage of their activity in brain, ranged from 9% for glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase to over 300% for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Creatine phosphokinase activity in astrocytes was about the same as in brain, half as high in oligodendrocytes, but 7% or less of the brain level in Schwann cells and superior cervical ganglion neurons and only 16% of brain in cortical neurons. Three enzymes which generate NADPH, the dehydrogenases for glucose-6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate, and the NADP-requiring isocitrate dehydrogenase, were present in astrocytes at levels at least twice that of brain. Oligodendrocytes had enzyme levels only 30% to 70% of those of astrocytes. Schwann cells had much higher lactate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activities than oligodendrocytes, but showed a remarkable similarity in enzyme pattern to those of cortical and superior cervical ganglion neurons.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/enzymology , Ganglia, Sympathetic/enzymology , Neurons/enzymology , Animals , Astrocytes/enzymology , Cells, Cultured , Cerebral Cortex/cytology , Ganglia, Sympathetic/cytology , Oligodendroglia/enzymology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Schwann Cells/enzymology
8.
Neurochem Res ; 16(6): 629-35, 1991 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1686472

ABSTRACT

Eleven regions of mouse brain and twelve layers of monkey retina were assayed for choline acetyl transferase (ChAT), acetylcholine esterase (AChE), and 4 enzymes that synthesize acetyl CoA. The purpose was to seek evidence concerning the source of acetyl CoA for acetylcholine generation. In brain ATP citrate lyase was strongly correlated with ChAT as well as AChE (r = 0.914 in both cases). Weak, but statistically significant correlation, was observed between ChAT and both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial thiolase, whereas there was a significant negative correlation between ChAT and acetyl thiokinase. In retina ChAT was essentially limited to the inner plexiform and ganglion cell layers, whereas substantial AChE activity extended as well into inner nuclear, outer plexiform and fiber layers, but no further. ATP citrate lyase activity was also highest in the inner four retinal layers, but was not strongly correlated with either ChAT or AChE (r = 0.724 and 0.761, respectively). Correlation between ChAT and acetyl thiokinase was at least as strong (r = 0.757), and in the six inner layers of retina, the correlation between ChAT and acetylthiokinase was very strong (r = 0.932).


Subject(s)
Acetyl Coenzyme A/biosynthesis , Acetylcholinesterase/metabolism , Brain/enzymology , Choline O-Acetyltransferase/metabolism , Retina/enzymology , Acetate-CoA Ligase/metabolism , Acetyl-CoA C-Acetyltransferase/metabolism , Animals , Macaca mulatta , Male , Mice
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 87(4): 1357-61, 1990 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2304903

ABSTRACT

A method is presented for measuring rapid changes in the rate of glucose phosphorylation in mouse brain with nonradioactive 2-deoxyglucose (DG). After times as short as 1 min after DG injection, the mouse is frozen rapidly, and selected brain regions are analyzed enzymatically for DG, 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate (DG6P), and glucose. The rate of glucose phosphorylation can be directly calculated from the rate of change in DG6P, the average levels of DG and glucose, and a constant derived from direct comparison of the rate of changes in glucose and DG6P after decapitation. Experiments with large brain samples provided evidence for a 2% per min loss of DG6P and at least two compartments differing in their rates of glucose metabolism, one rapidly entered by DG with glucose phosphorylation almost double that of average brain and another more slowly entered with a much lower phosphorylation rate. The method is illustrated by changes in phosphorylation within 2 min after injection of a convulsant or an anesthetic and over a 48-min time course with and without anesthesia. The sensitivity of the analytical methods can be amplified as much as desired by enzymatic cycling. Consequently, the method is applicable to very small brain samples. Examples are given for regions with volumes of 5 x 10(-4) microliters, but studies with samples as small as single large cell bodies are feasible.


Subject(s)
Brain/metabolism , Deoxy Sugars/metabolism , Deoxyglucose/metabolism , Glucose-6-Phosphate/analogs & derivatives , Glucose/metabolism , Anesthesia, General , Animals , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Blood-Brain Barrier , Brain/drug effects , Chloral Hydrate/pharmacology , Female , Glucosephosphates/metabolism , Kinetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred Strains , Organ Specificity , Phosphorylation , Reference Values
10.
Anal Biochem ; 185(1): 118-24, 1990 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2188524

ABSTRACT

The enzymatic methods previously described for 2-deoxyglucose (DG) and 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate have been refined and adapted to measurements of brain samples ranging from 50 mg wet weight to less than a microgram dry weight. Procedures for preparing such samples for assay are described. Analytical properties of the enzymes employed are given together with means for overcoming their possible short comings. Emphasis is placed on information useful for employing DG to assess rapid changes in glucose metabolism.


Subject(s)
Brain Chemistry , Deoxy Sugars/analysis , Deoxyglucose/analysis , Glucose-6-Phosphate/analogs & derivatives , Glucosephosphates/analysis , Animals , Blood Glucose/analysis , Deoxyglucose/blood , Freeze Drying , Glucose/analysis , Hexokinase/metabolism , Kinetics , Leuconostoc/enzymology , Methods , Mice , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzymology
11.
J Neurochem ; 50(2): 594-602, 1988 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2826701

ABSTRACT

The distribution of glucose-1,6-bisphosphate (G16P2) synthase was measured in more than 70 regions of mouse brain, and nine layers of monkey retina. Activities in gray areas varied as much as 10-fold, in a hierarchical manner, from highest in telencephalon, especially the limbic system, to lowest in cerebellum, medulla, and spinal cord. The synthase levels were significantly correlated among different regions with G16P2 itself, as well as with previously published levels of a brain specific IMP-dependent G16P2 phosphatase. In contrast, neither G16P2 nor either its synthase or phosphatase correlated positively with phosphoglucomutase, and in all regions the G16P2 levels greatly exceeded requirements for activation of this mutase. This strengthens the view that G16P2 has some function besides serving as coenzyme for phosphoglucomutase. However, attempts to correlate the "G16P2 system," as defined by the three coordinately related elements, synthase, phosphatase, and G16P2, with other enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism, or with regional data of Sokoloff et al. [J. Neurochem. 28, 897-916 (1977)] for glucose consumption, were unsuccessful. This leaves open the possibility that brain G16P2 might serve as a phosphate donor for specific nonmetabolic effector proteins.


Subject(s)
Brain Chemistry , Glucose-6-Phosphate/analogs & derivatives , Glucosephosphates/analysis , Retina/analysis , Animals , Haplorhini , Hippocampus/analysis , Male , Mice , Nerve Fibers/analysis , Phosphoglucomutase/analysis , Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases/analysis , Phosphotransferases/analysis , Phosphotransferases/metabolism , Spinal Cord/analysis , Tissue Distribution , Zinc/metabolism
12.
Anal Biochem ; 161(2): 508-13, 1987 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3555157

ABSTRACT

Methods for 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) and 2-deoxyglucose 6-phosphate (DG6P) are described which are based on the fact that DG6P is oxidized by glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), but at a rate 1000-fold slower than for glucose 6-phosphate, whereas hexokinase phosphorylates 2DG and glucose at comparable rates. Therefore, by adding the two enzymes in a suitable order, and in appropriate concentrations, 2DG, glucose, DG6P, and glucose 6-P can all be separately measured. To avoid a side reaction from the use of a high level of G6PDH, when measuring DG6P, glucose is first removed with glucose oxidase plus aldose reductase.


Subject(s)
Deoxy Sugars/analysis , Deoxyglucose/analysis , Glucose-6-Phosphate/analogs & derivatives , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase , Glucosephosphates/analysis , Hexokinase , Brain Chemistry , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase/analysis , Hexokinase/analysis , Kinetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzymology
13.
J Neurochem ; 42(5): 1269-72, 1984 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6707630

ABSTRACT

The distributions of glutamate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.15), gamma-aminobutyric acid transaminase (EC 2.6.1.19), and succinate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.24) were determined in monkey retina. The decarboxylase was almost restricted to the inner plexiform layer. The transaminase was also highest in this layer, but activities were 40% as high in the adjacent third of the inner nuclear layer and in the ganglion cell and fiber layers. Succinate semialdehyde dehydrogenase was distributed very differently. Although it also showed a peak of activity in the inner plexiform layer, there was a second equal peak in the photoreceptor inner segment layer and a smaller peak in the outer plexiform layer, regions where both gamma-aminobutyric acid transaminase and glutamate decarboxylase were essentially absent.


Subject(s)
4-Aminobutyrate Transaminase/metabolism , Aldehyde Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Glutamate Decarboxylase/metabolism , Retina/enzymology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism , Animals , Kinetics , Macaca fascicularis , Succinate-Semialdehyde Dehydrogenase , Tissue Distribution
14.
J Neurochem ; 42(3): 740-4, 1984 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6693901

ABSTRACT

Adult mice were treated intraperitoneally with aspartate (Asp) at one of several doses (0.47-3.75 mmol/kg) and 30 min later given a subcutaneous Asp injection at the same dose. This treatment regimen resulted in steady state blood Asp elevations, a given dose producing the same degree of elevation at both 30 and 60 min. The lowest and highest doses, respectively, produced four-fold and 55-fold elevations of serum Asp. In selected circumventricular organ (CVO) regions of brain which lack blood brain barriers, tissue Asp levels rose 1.5 and 3 times above control values following the lowest and highest doses, respectively, whereas tissue Asp remained unchanged in non-CVO brain regions. Thus, even very moderate Asp dosing causes marked increases in CVO Asp. In order to analyze the pattern of Asp uptake into CVO, Asp was assayed in numerous subdivisions of each CVO, and maps were constructed which reflected microregional concentration differences. The pattern of Asp distribution suggests that Asp enters brain via fenestrated capillaries serving certain portions of CVO and then spreads into adjacent brain tissue. In separate experiments, we administered a single high dose of Asp (15 mmol/kg) to both adult and infant mice and measured Asp in serum and select brain regions 60 min later. Asp concentrations in serum and CVO (but not other brain regions) rose markedly at both ages but the increases were greater in serum and therefore also in CVO of infants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Aspartic Acid/metabolism , Brain/metabolism , Aging , Animals , Aspartic Acid/blood , Biological Transport , Brain/growth & development , Hypothalamus/metabolism , Kinetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred Strains , Organ Specificity
15.
J Neurochem ; 41(4): 994-1010, 1983 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6619861

ABSTRACT

Biopsies from 15 human gliomas, five meningiomas, four Schwannomas, one medulloblastoma, and four normal brain areas were analyzed for 12 enzymes of energy metabolism and 12 related metabolites and cofactors. Samples, 0.01-0.25 microgram dry weight, were dissected from freeze-dried microtome sections to permit all the assays on a given specimen to be made, as far as possible, on nonnecrotic pure tumor tissue from the same region. Great diversity was found with regard to both enzyme activities and metabolite levels among individual tumors, but the following generalities can be made. Activities of hexokinase, phosphorylase, phosphofructokinase, glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, and malate dehydrogenase levels were usually lower than in brain; glycogen synthase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were usually higher; and the averages for pyruvate kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, and beta-hydroxyacyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase were not greatly different from brain. Levels of eight of the 12 enzymes were distinctly lower among the Schwannomas than in the other two groups. Average levels of glucose-6-phosphate, lactate, pyruvate, and uridine diphosphoglucose were more than twice those of brain; 6-phosphogluconate and citrate were about 70% higher than in brain; glucose, glycogen, glycerol-1-phosphate, and malate averages ranged from 104% to 127% of brain; and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate and glucose-1,6-bisphosphate levels were on the average 50% and 70% those of brain, respectively.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/enzymology , Energy Metabolism , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Brain/enzymology , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Glioma/enzymology , Glycogen/metabolism , Glycolysis , Humans , Male , Medulloblastoma/enzymology , Meningioma/enzymology , Middle Aged , Mitochondria/enzymology , Neurilemmoma/enzymology , Oxidative Phosphorylation
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