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THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS

Podophyllotoxin, 10(–3) (M), inhibits the respiration in vitro of rat lymph nodes, thymus, kidney, tumor, spleen, liver, brain, testis, and chicken embryo. Lymph node and spleen respiration are most sensitive, and the degree of inhibition increases with time. The injection of podophyllotoxin into tu...

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Autores principales: Miller, Zelma Baker, Davison, Clarke, Smith, Paul K.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1949
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2135928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15394071
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author Miller, Zelma Baker
Davison, Clarke
Smith, Paul K.
author_facet Miller, Zelma Baker
Davison, Clarke
Smith, Paul K.
author_sort Miller, Zelma Baker
collection PubMed
description Podophyllotoxin, 10(–3) (M), inhibits the respiration in vitro of rat lymph nodes, thymus, kidney, tumor, spleen, liver, brain, testis, and chicken embryo. Lymph node and spleen respiration are most sensitive, and the degree of inhibition increases with time. The injection of podophyllotoxin into tumor-bearing mice (20 mg. per kg.) causes a dramatic reduction in the respiration of tumor slices. Within 6 hours, the respiration approaches zero. Inhibition is evident 2 hours after injection of the drug. Spleen respiration is reduced 50 per cent within 6 hours. Kidney and liver respirations remain within normal limits. Marked reductions in the respiration of spleen, lymph nodes, and thymus glands of normal rats are produced by the injection of 15 mg. per kg. Thymus gland is the most sensitive of these three tissues, and its respiration is reduced 66 per cent 24 hours after injection of the drug. The injection of 0.8 microgram podophyllotoxin into the yolk sac of chicken eggs bearing 5 day embryos has no effect on the respiration of the embryo within 8 hours, although this is a sufficiently toxic dose to kill 80 per cent of the embryos (within 24 hours). Kidney respiration in the presence of acetate, glucose, alanine, and glutamate is inhibited to approximately the same degree as in the absence of added substrate. Succinate and pyruvate oxidation by rat kidney slices appear to be less sensitive. Oxidation of acetate and butyrate by rabbit kidney homogenate is more sensitive to podophyllotoxin than oxidation by rabbit kidney homogenate without added substrate. Glucose oxidation by this preparation is not inhibited by 10(–3) M podophyllotoxin. The anaerobic glycolysis of chicken embryo, rat brain, and rat testis is stimulated by 10(–5) and 10(–6) M podophyllotoxin, and is inhibited by 10(–3) M. The following enzymes are not inhibited by 10(–3) M podophyllotoxin: succinoxidase from pigeon breast muscle, choline, xanthine and tyrosine oxidase from rat liver homogenate, and leucine oxidase from Proteus vulgaris; alkaline and acid phosphatase from dog serum; adenosine triphosphatase from rat liver; choline esterase from rat brain homogenate; ribonucleodepolymerase from spleen mince and thymonucleodepolymerase from dog serum. High concentrations of podophyllotoxin do not influence the viscosity and degree of polymerization of thymonucleic acid.
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spelling pubmed-21359282008-04-17 THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS Miller, Zelma Baker Davison, Clarke Smith, Paul K. J Exp Med Article Podophyllotoxin, 10(–3) (M), inhibits the respiration in vitro of rat lymph nodes, thymus, kidney, tumor, spleen, liver, brain, testis, and chicken embryo. Lymph node and spleen respiration are most sensitive, and the degree of inhibition increases with time. The injection of podophyllotoxin into tumor-bearing mice (20 mg. per kg.) causes a dramatic reduction in the respiration of tumor slices. Within 6 hours, the respiration approaches zero. Inhibition is evident 2 hours after injection of the drug. Spleen respiration is reduced 50 per cent within 6 hours. Kidney and liver respirations remain within normal limits. Marked reductions in the respiration of spleen, lymph nodes, and thymus glands of normal rats are produced by the injection of 15 mg. per kg. Thymus gland is the most sensitive of these three tissues, and its respiration is reduced 66 per cent 24 hours after injection of the drug. The injection of 0.8 microgram podophyllotoxin into the yolk sac of chicken eggs bearing 5 day embryos has no effect on the respiration of the embryo within 8 hours, although this is a sufficiently toxic dose to kill 80 per cent of the embryos (within 24 hours). Kidney respiration in the presence of acetate, glucose, alanine, and glutamate is inhibited to approximately the same degree as in the absence of added substrate. Succinate and pyruvate oxidation by rat kidney slices appear to be less sensitive. Oxidation of acetate and butyrate by rabbit kidney homogenate is more sensitive to podophyllotoxin than oxidation by rabbit kidney homogenate without added substrate. Glucose oxidation by this preparation is not inhibited by 10(–3) M podophyllotoxin. The anaerobic glycolysis of chicken embryo, rat brain, and rat testis is stimulated by 10(–5) and 10(–6) M podophyllotoxin, and is inhibited by 10(–3) M. The following enzymes are not inhibited by 10(–3) M podophyllotoxin: succinoxidase from pigeon breast muscle, choline, xanthine and tyrosine oxidase from rat liver homogenate, and leucine oxidase from Proteus vulgaris; alkaline and acid phosphatase from dog serum; adenosine triphosphatase from rat liver; choline esterase from rat brain homogenate; ribonucleodepolymerase from spleen mince and thymonucleodepolymerase from dog serum. High concentrations of podophyllotoxin do not influence the viscosity and degree of polymerization of thymonucleic acid. The Rockefeller University Press 1949-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2135928/ /pubmed/15394071 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1949, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Miller, Zelma Baker
Davison, Clarke
Smith, Paul K.
THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS
title THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS
title_full THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS
title_fullStr THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS
title_full_unstemmed THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS
title_short THE EFFECT OF PODOPHYLLOTOXIN ON TISSUE METABOLISM AND ENZYME SYSTEMS
title_sort effect of podophyllotoxin on tissue metabolism and enzyme systems
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2135928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15394071
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