Fiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova
February 1991
Under the effects of 0.7 MPa of oxygen leading to a convulsive state, AMP-deaminase activity increased significantly in the rat brain mitochondrial fraction with only a tendency to increase in cytoplasmic fraction. Stimulated effects of the enzyme allosteric activator ATP is more obvious in intact animals than in hyperoxic ones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActivity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) was increased in blood serum in hypoxic hypoxia, hypoxia and cooling stress. The degree of this alteration depended on duration of the action of the effectors and on oxygen pressure. Adaptation to cooling was characterized by stabilization of enzymatic activity at the new metabolic step.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFiziol Zh SSSR Im I M Sechenova
November 1981
One--day cold exposure decreases the monoamine oxidase type A activity by 52--54% (serotonin and noradrenaline substrates); the monoamine oxidase type B activity by 14%. Three--day cold exposure leaves the monoamine oxidase type B activity unchanged and decreases the monoamine oxidase type A activity by 29--32%; the enzyme of the latter type acquires the ability for deamination of glucosamine, putrescine and GABA. Under cold adaptation (45 days, 2 degrees C) the monoamine oxidase type A activity remains reduced as on the 3rd day, the type B activity decreases by 19%; enzyme substrate specificity does not change at all.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaintenance of animals for three days at 2 degrees C produces changes in the substrate specificity of type I monoamine oxidase (MAO). These changes manifest in serotonin and noradrenaline deamination and in a several-times increase in deamination of glucosamine, putrescine and gamma-aminobutyric acid. The cold-induced increase in AMP deamination is not related to MAE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContent of noradrenaline and the activity of mitochondrial monoamineoxidase (MAO) were studied in cerebral cortex, hypothalamus, mesencephalon, medulla oblongata and liver tissue after the oxygen treatment under pressure (4 atm) within 1 hr. Content of noradrenaline was decreased in all the brain and liver tissues studied. The most distinct decrease was found in hypothalamus and the less marked one -- in liver tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF