Search results for "Rana temporaria"
showing 10 items of 12 documents
Hydroxylation and conjugation of phenol by the frog Rana temporaria.
1985
1. Frogs injected with phenol excrete 67–95% of dose in 15h; 32–87% of dose are metabolites.2. Metabolites identified were phenyl sulphate (15–44% of dose), phenyl glucuronide (10–25% of dose), catechol sulphate (up to 7% of dose), quinol sulphate (1–25% of dose), resorcinol and catechol (traces).
Kāda līdz šim nepazīta cikliska amfībiju dzimumpazīme: vardes priekškāju skeleta sezonu variācijas
1924
Atsevišķs iespiedums no: Latvijas Universitātes Raksti, XI. 1924. Kopsavilkums franču valodā.
Exercise and recovery in frog muscle: metabolism of PCr, adenine nucleotides, and related compounds
1996
The effects of exercise (swimming), fatigue, and recovery on the intracellular pH (pHi), energy-rich phosphates, and related metabolites were studied in the gastrocnemius muscle of common frogs (Rana temporaria) at 20 degrees C. Exercise caused a rapid decrease in the content of phosphocreatine (PCr) and a corresponding increase in that of Pi. The ATP level remained virtually constant for 1 min; its precipitous decrease during the following minute was associated with a rise in the contents of inosine 5'-monophosphate (IMP) and NH4+, indicating a marked activation of AMP deaminase. Five minutes of swimming caused severe fatigue, which was correlated with decreases in muscle PCr (-85%), ATP …
Control of glycolysis in vertebrate skeletal muscle during exercise
1996
The gastrocnemius muscle of the frog (Rana temporaria) has a high capacity for anaerobic glycolysis from glycogen. Glycolytic metabolites and effectors of phosphofructokinase, particularly the hexose bisphosphates, were followed in muscle during exercise (swimming between 5 s and 5 min), recovery (rest for up to 2 h after 5 min of swimming), and repeated exercise (swimming for up to 60 s after 2 h of recovery). Glycogen phosphorylase and phosphofructokinase were swiftly activated with exercise. The hexose bisphosphates followed markedly different time courses. Fructose 1,6-bisphosphate was transiently increased in both exercise and repeated exercise. This appears to be an effect rather tha…
Metabolic changes in skeletal muscle of frog during exercise and recovery.
1991
Elimination and distribution of different substituted phenols by frog (Rana temporaria) and crayfish (Astacus leptodactylus)
1981
Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate and glycolytic flux in skeletal muscle of swimming frog
1990
AbstractGlycolytic flux in skeletal muscle is controlled by 6-phosphofructokinase but how this is achieved is controversial. Brief exercise (swimming) in frogs caused a dramatic increase in the phosphofructokinase activator, fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, in working muscle. The kinetics of phosphofructokinase suggest that in resting muscle, the enzyme is inhibited by ATP plus citrate and that the increase in fructose 2,6-bisphosphate is part of the mechanism to activate phosphofructokinase when exercise begins. When exercise was sustained, fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in muscle was decreased as was the rate of lactate accumulation. Glycolytic flux and the content of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate appea…
Some pharmacological properties of the false cholinergic transmitter acetylpyrrolidinecholine and its precursor pyrrolidinecholine
1976
The acetylchline analogue acetylpyrrolidinecholine as well as the choline analogue pyrrolidinecholine were synthesized and the cholinergic properties of both substances were investigated on the guinea-pig ileum, rat blood pressure and frog rectus abdominis muscle. Acetylpyrrolidinecholine was 3-5 times less potent than acetylcholine on the three preparations tested. The dose-response curves to acetylpyrrolidinecholine were shifted to the right in a parallel manner by atropine and (+)-tubocurarine. The dissociation constants for atropine and (+)-tubocurarine obtained with acetylpyrrolidinecholine as agonist were not different from those obtained with acetylcholine. This indicates that acetyl…
6-Phosphofructokinase from frog skeletal muscle: purification and properties
1990
Humic acid reduces gonadotropin activity and hormonal sensitivity of frog oocytes
2005
The specific stimulatory effect of sturgeon Acipenser güldenstädti Br. gonadotropic hormone (GTH) on frog Rana temporaria L. oocyte maturation in vitro was investigated in relation to humic acid (HA) concentrations from 12.5 to 50 mg/l. HA was observed to bind to both the follicular membrane of the oocytes and the GTH molecule, reducing the oocytes' hormone sensitivity and maturation ability. It was also shown that HA inactivated GTH, lowering its specific ability to stimulate oocyte maturation.