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CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS

1. Iron spicules found in the brains of general paretic patients are formed from endogenous brain iron normally present in another form. This supports our earlier view that the µ value of 16,000 obtained in advanced paretics for alpha brain wave frequencies as a measure of cortical respiration comes...

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Autores principales: Hadidian, Zareh, Hoagland, Hudson
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1939
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2237910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19873142
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author Hadidian, Zareh
Hoagland, Hudson
author_facet Hadidian, Zareh
Hoagland, Hudson
author_sort Hadidian, Zareh
collection PubMed
description 1. Iron spicules found in the brains of general paretic patients are formed from endogenous brain iron normally present in another form. This supports our earlier view that the µ value of 16,000 obtained in advanced paretics for alpha brain wave frequencies as a measure of cortical respiration comes about from the slowing of an iron catalyzed link in cortical respiration such as would result from the reduction of available cytochrome and its oxidase, thus making this step a chemical pacemaker. 2. To test the basic theory of chemical pacemakers, a study was made of the succinate-fumarate enzyme system containing succino-dehydrogenase and cytochrome-cytochrome oxidase acting sequentially. 3. The µ value for the unpoisoned system is 11,200 ± 200 calories. 4. According to theory, the addition of a critical amount of cyanide known to be a specific poison of the cytochrome-cytochrome oxidase system (and not of the dehydrogenase) should shift the µ cleanly to 16,000 calories, and it does. 5. According to theory, selenite, a specific poison for the dehydrogenase, should stop all respiration without shifting the µ. This also is found to be the case. 6. The theory also predicts that if the µ is shifted from 11,000 ± to 16,000 ± by cyanide, the subsequent addition of a critical amount of selenite should shift the µ back again to 11,000 ± calories, and this is found to occur. 7. It is concluded that approximately 11,000 calories is the energy of activation of the succino-dehydrogenase-catalyzed step and 16,000 calories is that for the cytochrome-cytochrome oxidase-catalyzed step. These two values are encountered more frequently than any others in physiological systems. It is to be recalled that a shift of µ for alpha brain wave frequencies from 11,000 to 16,000 calories occurs in the course of advancing syphilitic brain infection and is accompanied by a change in form of brain iron.
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spelling pubmed-22379102008-04-23 CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS Hadidian, Zareh Hoagland, Hudson J Gen Physiol Article 1. Iron spicules found in the brains of general paretic patients are formed from endogenous brain iron normally present in another form. This supports our earlier view that the µ value of 16,000 obtained in advanced paretics for alpha brain wave frequencies as a measure of cortical respiration comes about from the slowing of an iron catalyzed link in cortical respiration such as would result from the reduction of available cytochrome and its oxidase, thus making this step a chemical pacemaker. 2. To test the basic theory of chemical pacemakers, a study was made of the succinate-fumarate enzyme system containing succino-dehydrogenase and cytochrome-cytochrome oxidase acting sequentially. 3. The µ value for the unpoisoned system is 11,200 ± 200 calories. 4. According to theory, the addition of a critical amount of cyanide known to be a specific poison of the cytochrome-cytochrome oxidase system (and not of the dehydrogenase) should shift the µ cleanly to 16,000 calories, and it does. 5. According to theory, selenite, a specific poison for the dehydrogenase, should stop all respiration without shifting the µ. This also is found to be the case. 6. The theory also predicts that if the µ is shifted from 11,000 ± to 16,000 ± by cyanide, the subsequent addition of a critical amount of selenite should shift the µ back again to 11,000 ± calories, and this is found to occur. 7. It is concluded that approximately 11,000 calories is the energy of activation of the succino-dehydrogenase-catalyzed step and 16,000 calories is that for the cytochrome-cytochrome oxidase-catalyzed step. These two values are encountered more frequently than any others in physiological systems. It is to be recalled that a shift of µ for alpha brain wave frequencies from 11,000 to 16,000 calories occurs in the course of advancing syphilitic brain infection and is accompanied by a change in form of brain iron. The Rockefeller University Press 1939-09-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2237910/ /pubmed/19873142 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1939, 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
Hadidian, Zareh
Hoagland, Hudson
CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS
title CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS
title_full CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS
title_fullStr CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS
title_full_unstemmed CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS
title_short CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS : PART I. CATALYTIC BRAIN IRON. PART II. ACTIVATION ENERGIES OF CHEMICAL PACEMAKERS
title_sort chemical pacemakers : part i. catalytic brain iron. part ii. activation energies of chemical pacemakers
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2237910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19873142
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