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Showing papers by "Ana Maria Oliveira Battastini published in 1990"


Journal Article
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that ATP and ADP hydrolyzing activities increase in parallel from birth until the second postnatal week (about 4-fold), followed by a slight and statistically insignificant increase until the animal reaches adulthood, and the parallel development of both activities strongly suggest that a single enzyme, an ATP diphosphohydrolase, is involved in ATP and adp hydrolysis by the synaptosomal fraction.
Abstract: In the present study, we examined the ontogeny of ATP and ADP hydrolysis by cerebral cortex synaptosomes from rats of various ages (0-, 7-, 14-, 21- and 60 to 90-day-old rats) in order to learn whether hydrolytic activity increases during the period of intense brain growth, as has been reported for other enzymes involved in neurotransmitter metabolism. The results demonstrate that ATP and ADP hydrolyzing activities increase in parallel from birth until the second postnatal week (about 4-fold), followed by a slight and statistically insignificant increase until the animal reaches adulthood. The maximum increase in nucleotide hydrolysis coincided with maximum brain growth, which may indicate a role for the enzyme in neurotransmission. Furthermore, the parallel development of both activities (ATPase and ADPase) strongly suggest that a single enzyme, an ATP diphosphohydrolase, is involved in ATP and ADP hydrolysis by the synaptosomal fraction.

15 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: The parallelism between the effects of chlorpromazine on ATP and ADP hydrolysis suggests the participation of a single enzyme (ATP diphosphohydrolase) in nucleotide Hydrolysis.
Abstract: Several studies have indicated that chlorpromazine and its metabolites affect ATP hydrolysis by brain and liver plasma membranes in vitro. The present report examines whether chronic treatment (12 days) with high doses of chlorpromazine (10 and 40 mg/kg) could affect ATP and ADP hydrolysis by synaptosomal fractions from the rat caudate nucleus. Both doses of chlorpromazine caused significant and parallel decreases (23 to 31%) in the ATP and ADP hydrolysis. The parallelism between the effects of chlorpromazine on ATP and ADP hydrolysis suggests the participation of a single enzyme (ATP diphosphohydrolase) in nucleotide hydrolysis.

7 citations