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EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES

It has been shown that helium has the ability to affect variously the rates of certain metabolic reactions in vitro as compared to nitrogen. An attempt has been made to approximate the sites of action in mouse liver preparations. The following results have been obtained by the substitution of a mixt...

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Autores principales: South, Frank E., Cook, Sherburne F.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1953
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2147374/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13035067
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author South, Frank E.
Cook, Sherburne F.
author_facet South, Frank E.
Cook, Sherburne F.
author_sort South, Frank E.
collection PubMed
description It has been shown that helium has the ability to affect variously the rates of certain metabolic reactions in vitro as compared to nitrogen. An attempt has been made to approximate the sites of action in mouse liver preparations. The following results have been obtained by the substitution of a mixture of 80 per cent helium and 20 per cent oxygen for air: (a) An increase in the rate of oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production to the same degree, the respiratory quotient remaining unchanged. (b) A decrease in the magnitude of cyanide inhibition. The effectiveness of helium increases with the degree of the cyanide inhibition. (c) No effect on the activity of slices which have been poisoned with fluoride when either lactate or pyruvate has been added as a substrate. (d) A change in the rate, and the slope of the curve of oxygen consumption in liver homogenates which are utilizing pyruvate as a substrate. The use of helium relative to nitrogen under anaerobic conditions causes: (a) A depression of the glycolytic rates in both mouse liver slices and diaphragm. (b) An increase in the carbon dioxide evolution and lactic acid production of mouse liver homogenates oxidizing either glucose and hexose diphosphate, or hexose diphosphate alone. In neither slices nor homogenates does the addition of fluoride and the use of pyruvate as the hydrogen acceptor alter the fundamental response of the preparations. The following hypotheses have been advanced and discussed in order to explain the observed phenomena: 1. Helium does not alter the substrate utilized by the tissue. 2. The gas interferes in some way with the cyanide-cytochrome oxidase bond, but may not affect cytochrome oxidase in the absence of cyanide. 3. The citric acid cycle is not subject to the influence of helium in tissue slices, but is altered in an unexplained fashion in homogenates. It is postulated that a rearrangement of particulate surfaces may be the significant factor here. 4. The glycolytic cycle is the site of both an inhibitory and an acceleratory effect of helium. The locus of the inhibition lies above the aldolase reaction and that of the acceleration between the aldolase and enolase reactions.
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spelling pubmed-21473742008-04-23 EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES South, Frank E. Cook, Sherburne F. J Gen Physiol Article It has been shown that helium has the ability to affect variously the rates of certain metabolic reactions in vitro as compared to nitrogen. An attempt has been made to approximate the sites of action in mouse liver preparations. The following results have been obtained by the substitution of a mixture of 80 per cent helium and 20 per cent oxygen for air: (a) An increase in the rate of oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production to the same degree, the respiratory quotient remaining unchanged. (b) A decrease in the magnitude of cyanide inhibition. The effectiveness of helium increases with the degree of the cyanide inhibition. (c) No effect on the activity of slices which have been poisoned with fluoride when either lactate or pyruvate has been added as a substrate. (d) A change in the rate, and the slope of the curve of oxygen consumption in liver homogenates which are utilizing pyruvate as a substrate. The use of helium relative to nitrogen under anaerobic conditions causes: (a) A depression of the glycolytic rates in both mouse liver slices and diaphragm. (b) An increase in the carbon dioxide evolution and lactic acid production of mouse liver homogenates oxidizing either glucose and hexose diphosphate, or hexose diphosphate alone. In neither slices nor homogenates does the addition of fluoride and the use of pyruvate as the hydrogen acceptor alter the fundamental response of the preparations. The following hypotheses have been advanced and discussed in order to explain the observed phenomena: 1. Helium does not alter the substrate utilized by the tissue. 2. The gas interferes in some way with the cyanide-cytochrome oxidase bond, but may not affect cytochrome oxidase in the absence of cyanide. 3. The citric acid cycle is not subject to the influence of helium in tissue slices, but is altered in an unexplained fashion in homogenates. It is postulated that a rearrangement of particulate surfaces may be the significant factor here. 4. The glycolytic cycle is the site of both an inhibitory and an acceleratory effect of helium. The locus of the inhibition lies above the aldolase reaction and that of the acceleration between the aldolase and enolase reactions. The Rockefeller University Press 1953-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2147374/ /pubmed/13035067 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1953, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research 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
South, Frank E.
Cook, Sherburne F.
EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES
title EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES
title_full EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES
title_fullStr EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES
title_full_unstemmed EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES
title_short EFFECT OF HELIUM ON THE RESPIRATION AND GLYCOLYSIS OF MOUSE LIVER SLICES
title_sort effect of helium on the respiration and glycolysis of mouse liver slices
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2147374/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13035067
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