|
- <html>
- <head><title></title></head>
- <body>
- <h1></h1>
-
- <p></p>
- <p><strong>Mitonchondria and mortality:</strong></p>
- <p>Diet, exercise, and medicine, damaging or repairing respiratory metabolism</p>
- <p><strong><em>MAIN IDEAS AND CONTEXTS</em></strong></p>
- <strong><em>Lactic acid and carbon dioxide</em></strong>
- <em> have opposing effects.</em>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Intense exercise damages cells</em></strong>
- <em>
- in ways that cumulatively impair metabolism. There is clear evidence that glycolysis, producing lactic
- acid from glucose, has toxic effects, suppressing respiration and killing cells. Within five
- minutes, exercise lowers the activity of enzymes that oxidize glucose. Diabetes, Alzheimer's disease,
- and general aging involve increased lactic acid production and
- accumulated metabolic (mitochondrial) damage.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>The products of glycolysis,</em></strong>
- <em> lactic acid and pyruvic acid, suppress oxidation of glucose.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <em> </em>
- <strong><em>Adaptation</em></strong>
- <em>
- to hypoxia or increased carbon dioxide limits the formation of lactic acid. Muscles are 50% more
- efficient in the adapted state; glucose, which forms more carbon dioxide than fat does when oxidized,,
- is metabolized more efficiently than fats, requiring less oxygen.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Lactic acidosis,</em></strong>
- <em>
- by suppressing oxidation of glucose, increases oxidation of fats, further suppressing glucose
- oxidation. </em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Estrogen</em></strong>
- <em> is harmful to mitochondria,</em>
- <strong><em> progesterone</em></strong>
- <em> is beneficial.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Progesterone's brain-protective</em></strong>
- <em> and restorative effects involve mitochondrial actions.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Thyroid hormone, palmitic acid, and light </em></strong>
- <em>activate a crucial respiratory enzyme, suppressing the formation of lactic acid. Palmitic acid occurs in
- coconut oit, and is formed naturally in animal tissues. Unsaturated oils have the opposite effect.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Heart failure, shock,</em></strong>
- <em>
- and other problems involving excess lactic acid can be treated "successfully" by poisoning glycolysis
- with dichloroacetic acid, reducing the production of lactic acid, increasing the oxidation of glucose,
- and increasing cellular ATP concentration. Thyroid, vitamin B1, biotin, etc., do the same.</em>
- </p>
- <p><strong><em>SOME DEFINITIONS</em></strong></p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Glycolysis:</em></strong>
- <em>
- The conversion of glucose to lactic acid, providing some usable energy, but many times less than
- oxidation provides.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Lactic acid,</em></strong>
- <em>
- produced by splitting glucose to pyruvic acid followed by its reduction, is associated with calcium
- uptake and nitric oxide production, depletes energy, contributing to cell death. </em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Crabtree effect:</em></strong>
- <em>
- Inhibition of cellular respiration by an excess of glucose; excess of glucose promotes calcium uptake by
- cells.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Pasteur effect:</em></strong>
- <em> Inhibition of glycolysis (fermentation) by oxygen.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Randle effect:</em></strong>
- <em>
- The inhibition of the oxidation of glucose by an excess of fatty acids. This lowers metabolic
- efficiency. Estrogen promotes this effect.</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <em> </em>
- <strong><em>Lactated Ringer's solution:</em></strong>
- <em>
- A salt solution that has\ been used to increase blood volume in treating shock; the lactate was
- apparently chosen as a buffer in place of bicarbonate, as a matter of convenience rather than
- physiology. This solution is toxic, partly because it contains the form of lactate produced by bacteria,
- but our own lactate, at higher concentrations, produces the same sorts of toxic effect, damaging
- mitochondria,</em>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><em>Estrogenic phytotoxins</em></strong>
- <em> damage mitochondria, kill brain cells; tofu is associated with dementia.</em>
- </p>
- <p><em><hr /></em></p>
- <p>
- Since reading Warburg's publications in the late 1960s and early 70s, and doing my own research on tissue
- respiration, I have been convinced that Warbug was on the right track in seeing mitochondrial respiration as
- the controlling influence in cell differentiation, and in seeing cancer as a reversion to a primitive form
- of life based on a "respiratory defect." Harry Rubin's studies of cells in culture have expanded Warburg's
- picture of the process of cancerization, showing that genetic changes occur only after the cells have been
- transformed into cancer.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is now well recognized that defective mitochondrial respiration is a central factor in diseases of
- muscles, brain, liver, kidneys, and other organs. The common view has been that the mitochondrial defects
- are produced by genetic defects, that are either inherited or acquired, and are irreversible.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mitochondria depend on some genes in the nuclear chromosomes, but they also contain some genes, and
- mutations in these specific mitochondrial genes have been associated with various diseases, and with aging.
- Although these aren't the genes that the cancer establishment has focussed on as "the cause" of cancer, for
- people interested in the achievements of Warburg and Rubin, it is important to know whether mutations in
- these mitochondrial genes are the <em>cause</em> of respiratory defects, or whether a respiratory defect
- causes the mutations. Recent research seems to show that physiological problems precede and cause the
- mutations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Warburg believed that mitochondria supported specialized cell functions by concentrating themselves in the
- places where energy is needed. This idea has some interesting implications. For example, when the amount of
- thyroid hormone is increased, or when the organism adapts to a high altitude, the number of mitochondria
- increases. But in energy deficient states such as diabetes, they don't. How are these crucial organelles
- called into existence by the hormone that increases respiration and energy, and also by the hypoxic
- conditions of high altitudes? In both of these conditions, the availability of oxygen is limiting the
- ability to produce energy. In both conditions, carbon dioxide concentration in tissue is higher, in
- one case, because thyroid stimulates its production, in the other, because
- the Haldane effect limits its loss from the lungs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Could carbon dioxide, a major product of mitochondria, help to call mitochondria into existence? My answer
- to this is "yes," and it will help to briefly explain how I see mitochondria. Although I have no hesitancy
- in accepting that organelles can be exchanged between species, and that it is conceivable that mitochondria
- might have been derived from symbiotic bacteria, I am reluctant to believe that something happens just
- because it <em>could</em> happen. For example, Francis Crick proposed that life on earth originated
- when genes arrived here on space dust from some other world. That's a theoretical possibility, but what's
- the point? It just avoids explaining how the highly organized material came into existence somewhere
- else, and it probably seriously interfered with the consideration of the ways life could arise here.
- Similarly, some people like to think that mitochondria and chloroplasts were originally bacteria, that came
- into symbiosis with another kind of living material, consisting of nucleus and cytoplasm. Like Crick's
- "space germs," it can be argued that it's possible, but the problem is that this explanation can stop people
- from thinking freshly about the nature of the various organelles, and how they came to exist. (How did cells
- originate? How did mitochondria originate? "Germs.")
- </p>
- <p>
- Since I have a view of how cells came to exist, under conditions that exist on earth, I should consider
- whether that view doesn't also reasonably account for their various components. Sidney Fox's proteinoid
- microspheres provide a good model for the spontaneous formation of primitive cells; variations of that idea
- can account for the formation of organelles (such as mitochondria and nuclei within cells, and chromosomes
- within nuclei). The value of this idea, of a self-stimulating process in mitochondrial generation, is that
- it suggests many ways to test the idea experimentally, and it suggests explanations for developmental and
- pathological processes that otherwise would have no coherent explanation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Proteinoid microspheres and coacervates form by acquiring molecules from solution, condensing them into a
- separate phase, with its own physical properties. At every phase boundary, there are numerous physical
- forces, especially electronic properties, that make each kind of interface different from other kinds.
- Small changes of pH, temperature, of salts and other solutes can alter the interfacial forces,
- causing particles to dissolve, or grow, or fragment, or to move. In the way that carbon dioxide alters the
- shapes and electrical affinities of hemoglobin and other proteins, I propose that it increases the stability
- of the mitochondrial coacervate, causing it to "recruit" additional proteins from its external environment,
- as well as from its own synthetic machinery, to enlarge both its structure and its functions.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the relative absence of carbon dioxide, or excess of alternative solutes and adsorbents, such as lactic
- acid, the stability of the mitochondrial phase would be decreased, and the mitochondria would be degraded in
- both structure and function. As the back side of the idea that carbon dioxide stabilizes and activates
- mitochondria, the idea that lactic acid is involved in the degrading of mitochondria can also be tested
- experimentally, and it is already supported by a considerable amount of circumstantial evidence.
- </p>
- <p>
- This combination of sensitivity to the environment, with a kind of positive feedback or inertia either
- upward or downward, corresponds to what we actually see in mitochondrial physiology and pathology.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Crabtree effect, which is the suppression of respiration by glycolysis, is often described as the simple
- opposite of the Pasteur effect, in which respiration limits glycolysis to the rate that allows its product
- to be consumed oxidatively. But the Pasteur effect is a normal sort of control system; when the Pasteur
- effect fails, as in cancer, there is glycolysis which is relatively independent of respiration, causing
- sugar to be consumed inefficiently. Embryonic tissues sometimes behave in this manner, leading to the
- suggestion that glycolysis is closely related to growth. Unlike the logical Pasteur effect, the
- Crabtree effect tends to lower cellular energy and adaptability. Looking at many situations in which
- increasing the glucose supply increases lactic acid production and suppresses respiration, leading to
- maladaptive decrease in cellular energy, I have begun thinking of lactic acid as a toxin. The use of
- Ringer's lactate solution in medicine has led many people to assume that lactate must be beneficial, or they
- wouldn't put it in the salt solution that is often used in emergiencies; however, I think its use here, as a
- buffer, is simply a convenience, because of the instability of some bicarbonate solutions.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the organismic level, it is clear that lactic acid is "the essence of hyperventilation," and that it
- produces edema and malfunction on a grand scale: The panic reaction, shock lung, vascular leakiness, brain
- swelling, and finally multiple organ failure, all can be traced to an excess of lactic acid, and the related
- features of hyperventilated physiology.
- </p>
- <p>
- Otto Warburg apparently thought of lactate as simply a sign of the respiratory defect that characterizes
- cancer. V. S. Shapot at least hinted at its possible role in turning on the catabolic reactions leading to
- cancer cachexia (wasting). I think a good case can be made for lactate as the <em>cause</em> of the
- respiratory defect in cancer, just as it is usually the immediate cause of the respiratory derangement of
- hyperventilation on the organismic level.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Crabtree effect is usually thought of as just something that happens in tumors, and some tissues that
- are very active glycolytically, and some bacteria, when they are given large amounts of glucose. But when we
- consider lactate, which is produced by normal tissues when they are deprived of oxygen or are disturbed by a
- stress reaction, the Crabtree effect becomes a very general thing. The "respiratory defect" that we can see
- on the organismic level during hyperventilation, is very similar to the "systemic Crabtree effect" that
- happens during stress, in which respiration is shut down while glycolysis is activated. Since oxidative
- metabolism is many times more efficient for producing energy than glycolysis is, it is maladaptive to shut
- it down during stress.
- </p>
- <p>
- Since the presence of lactate is so commonly considered to be a normal and adaptive response to stress, the
- shut-down of respiration in the presence of lactate is generally considered to be caused by something else,
- with lactate being seen as an effect rather than a cause. Nitric oxide and calcium excess have been
- identified as the main endogenous antirespiratory factors in stress, though free unsaturated fatty acids are
- clearly involved, too. However, glycolysis, and the products of glycolysis, lactate and pyruvate,
- have been found to have a causal role in the suppression of respiration; it is both a cause and a
- consequence of the respiratory shutdown, though nitric oxide, calcium, and fatty acids are closely involved,
- </p>
- <p>
- Since lactic acid is produced by the breakdown of glucose, a high level of lactate in the blood means that a
- large amount of sugar is being consumed; in response, the body mobilizes free fatty acids as an additional
- source of energy. An increase of free fatty acids suppresses the oxidation of glucose. (This is called the
- Randle effect, glucose-fatty acid cycle, substrate-competition cycle, etc.) Women, with higher estrogen and
- growth hormone, usually have more free fatty acids than men, and during exercise oxidize a higher proportion
- of fatty acids than men do. This fatty acid exposure "decreases glucose tolerance," and undoubtedly
- explains women's higher incidence of diabetes. While most fatty acids inhibit the
- oxidation of glucose without immediately inhibiting glycolysis, palmitic acid is unusual, in its inhibition
- of glycolysis and lactate production without inhibitng oxidation. I assume that this largely has to do with
- its important function in cardiolipin and cytochrome oxidase.
- </p>
- <p>
- Exercise, like aging, obesity, and diabetes, increases the levels of circulating free fatty acids and
- lactate. But ordinary activity of an integral sort, activates the systems in an organized way, increasing
- carbon dioxide and circulation and efficiency. Different types of exercise have been identified as
- destructive or reparative to the mitochondria; "concentric" muscular work is said to be restorative to the
- mitochondria. As I understand it, this means contraction with a load, and relaxation without a load. The
- heart's contraction follows this principle, and this could explain the observation that heart mitochondria
- don't change in the course of ordinary aging.
- </p>
- <p>
- When a person has an accident, or surgery, and goes into shock, the degree of lactic acidema is recognized
- as an indicator of the severity of the problem. Lactated Ringer's solution has been commonly used to
- treat these people, to restore their blood pressure. But when prompt treatment with lactated Ringer's
- solution has been compared with no early treatment at all, the patients who are not "rescuscitated" do
- better than those who got the early treatment. And when Ringer's lactate has been compared with various
- other solutions, synthetic starch solutions, synthetic hemoglobin polymer solution, or simply a concentrated
- solution of sodium chloride, those who received the lactate solution did least well. For example, of 8
- animals treated with another solution, 8 survived, while among 8 treated with Ringer's lactate, 6 died.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mitochondrial metabolism is now being seen as the basic problem in aging and several degenerative diseases.
- The tendency has been to see random genetic deterioration as the driving force behind mitochondrial
- aging. Genetic repair in mitochondria was assumed not to occur. However, recently two kinds of genetic
- repair have been demonstrated. One in which the DNA strand is repaired, and another, in which sound
- mitochondria are "recruited" to replace the defective, mutated, "old" mitochondria.
- </p>
- <p>
- In ordinary nuclear chromosomal genes, DNA repair is well known. The other kind of repair, in which
- unmutated cells replace the. genetically damaged cells, has been commonly observed in the skin of the face:
- During intense sun exposure, mutant cells accumulate; but after a period in which the skin hasn't been
- exposed to the damaging radiation, the skin is made up of healthy "young" cells.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the way that the skin can be seen to recover from genetic damage, that had been considered to be
- permanent and cumulative, simply by avoiding the damaging factor, mitochondrial aging is coming to be seen
- as both avoidable and repairable.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stressful conditions that physiologically harm mitochondria are now being seen as the probable cause for
- the mitochondrial genetic defects that accumulate with aging. Stressful exercise, which has been
- known to cause breakage of the nuclear chromosomes, is now seen to damage mitochondrial genes, too.
- Providing energy, while reducing stress, seems to be all it takes to reverse the accumulated mitochondrial
- genetic damage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fewer mitochondrial problems will be considered to be inherited, as we develop an integral view of the ways
- in which mitochondrial physiology is disrupted. Palmitic acid, which is a major component of the cardiolipin
- which regulates the main respiratory enzyme, becomes displaced by polyunsaturated fats as aging progresses.
- Copper tends to be lost from this same enzyme system, and the state of the water is altered as the energetic
- processes change.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the flow of carbon dioxide moves from the mitochondrion to the cytoplasm and beyond, tending to remove
- calcium from the mitochondrion and cell, the flow of lactate and other organic ions into the mitochondrion
- can produce calcium accumulation in the mitochondrion, during conditions in which carbon dioxide
- synthesis, and consequently urea synthesis, are depressed, and other synthetic processes are
- changed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Glycolysis produces both pyruvate and lactate, and excessive pyruvate produces almost the same inhibitory
- effect as lactate; since the Crabtree effect involves nitric oxide and fatty acids as well as calcium, I
- think it is reasonable to look for the simplest sort of explanation, instead of trying to experimentally
- trace all the possible interactions of these substances; a simple physical competition between the products
- of glycolysis and carbon dioxide, for the binding sites, such as lysine, that would amount to a phase change
- in the mitochondrion. Glucose, and apparently glycolysis, are required for the production of nitric
- oxide, as for the accumulation of calcium, at least in some types of cell, and these coordinated changes,
- which lower energy production, could be produced by a reduction in carbon dioxide, in a physical
- change even more basic than the energy level represented by ATP. The use of Krebs cycle substances in the
- synthesis of amino acids, and other products, would decrease the formation of C02, creating a situation in
- which the system would have two possible states, one, the glycolytic stress state, and the other, the carbon
- dioxide producing energy-efficient state.
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides the frequently discussed interactions of excessively accumulated iron with the unsaturated fatty
- acids, producing lipid peroxides and other toxins, the accumulated calcium very probably forms some
- insoluble soaps with the free fatty acids which are released even from intracellular fats during stress.
- The growth of new mitochondria probably occasionally leaves behind such useless materials,
- combining soaps, iron, and porphyrins remaining from damaged respiratory enzymes.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the background of carbon dioxide is high, circulation and oxygenation tend to prevent the anaerobic
- glycolysis that produces toxic lactic acid, so that a given level of activity will be harmful or helpful,
- depending on the level of carbon dioxide being produced at rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- Preventively, avoiding foods containing lactic acid, such as yogurt and sauerkraut, would be helpful, since
- bacterial lactic acid is much more toxic than the type that we form under stress. Avoiding the
- stress-promoting antithyroid unsaturated oils is extremely important. Their role in diabetes, cancer, and
- other age-related and degenerative diseases (and I think this includes the estrogen-promoted autoimmune
- diseases) is well established. Avoiding phytoestrogens and other things that increase estrogen exposure,
- such as protein deficiency, is important, because estrogen causes increased levels of free fatty acids,
- increases the tendency to metabolize them at the expense of glucose metabolism, increases the tissue content
- of unsaturated fatty acids, and inhibits thyroid functions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Light promotes glucose oxidation, and is known to activate the key respiratory enzyme. Winter sickness
- (including lethargy and weight gain), and night stress, have to be included within the idea of the
- "respiratory defect," shifting to the antirespiratory production of lactic acid, and damaging the
- mitochondria.
- </p>
- <p>
- Therapeutically, even powerful toxins that block the glycolytic enzymes can improve functions in a variety
- of organic disturbances "associated with" (caused by) excessive production of lactic acid. Unfortunately,
- the toxin that has become standard treatment for lactic acidosis—dichloroacetic acid—is a carcinogen, and
- eventually produces liver damage and acidosis. But several nontoxic therapies can do the same things:<strong
- >
- Palmitate (formed from sugar under the influence of thyroid hormone, and found in coconut oil), vitamin
- Bl, biotin, lipoic acid, carbon dioxide, thyroid, naloxone, acetazolamide, for example.</strong>
- Progesterone, by blocking estrogen's disruptive effects on the mitochondria, ranks along with thyroid and a
- diet free of polyunsaturate fats, for importance in mitochondrial maintenance.
- </p>
- <p> </p>
- <p> </p>
- <p><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></p>
- <p>
- Biochim Biophys Acta 1999 Feb 9;1410(2):171-82 <strong>Mitochondrial involvement
- in Alzheimer's
- </strong>disease.Bonilla E, Tanji K, Hirano M, Vu TH, DiMauro S, Schon EA.
- </p>
- <p>
- Rev Pneumol Clin 1986;42(5):238-41.<strong>
- Acid-base balance and blood lactate and pyruvate levels in albino rats bred under normobaric hypoxia or
- normoxia, after muscular work in a hypoxic or hypoxic-hypercapnic environment.
- </strong>Quatrini U, Licciardi A.
- </p>
- <p>
- Muscle Nerve 1999 Feb;22(2):258-61.<strong>
- Acute exercise causes mitochondrial DNA deletion in rat skeletal muscle.</strong> Sakai Y, Iwamura Y,
- Hayashi J, Yamamoto N, Ohkoshi N, Nagata H.
- </p>
- <p>
- HumMol Genet 1999 Jun;8(6): 1047-52.<strong> Gene shifting:</strong>
- <strong>a novel therapy for mitochondrial myopathy.</strong> Taivassalo T, Fu K<em>,</em> Johns T, Arnold D,
- Karpati G, Shoubridge EA.
- </p>
- <p>
- Brain Dev 1989;11(3):195-7.<strong> Effect of sodium dichloroacetate on human pyruvate metabolism.</strong>
- Naito E, Kuroda Y, Toshima K, Takeda E, Saijo T, Kobashi H, Yokota I, Ito M.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mech Ageing Dev 1987 Aug;39(3):281-8.<strong>
- Lack of age-dependent changes in rat heart mitochondria.
- </strong>Manzelmann MS, Harmon HJ.
- </p>
- <p>
- Adv Shock Res 1978,1:105-16.<strong>
- The effect of mitochondrial dysfunction on glucose metabolism during shock.</strong> Rhodes RS.
- </p>
- <p>
- Biochem J 1982 Dec 15;208(3):695-701<strong> Exercise-induced alterations of hepatic mitochondrial
- function.
- </strong>Tate CA, Wolkowicz PE, McMillin-Wood, J.
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Physiol 1997 Dec;273(6 Pt 2):F869-76. <strong>Neurosteroid inhibition of cell death.</strong> Waters
- SL, Miller GW, Aleo MD, Schnellmann RG.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Pharmacol Exp Ther 1990. May;253(2):628-35. <strong>Protection against hypoxic injury in isolated-perfused
- rat heart by ruthenium red.</strong> Park Y, Bowles DK, Kehrer JP.
- </p>
- <p>
- Environ Health Perspect 1984, Aug;57:281-7.<strong> Cell calcium, cell injury and cell death.</strong> Trump
- BF, Berezesky IK, Sato T, Laiho KU, Phelps PC, DeClaris N.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anesth Analg 1996 Oct;83(4):782-8.<strong>
- Small-volume resuscitation using hypertonic saline improves organ perfusion in burned rats.</strong>
- Kien ND, Antognini JF, Reilly DA, Moore PG.
- </p>
- <p>
- Respir Physiol 1977 Dec;31(3):387-95.<strong>
- Post-hypercapnia recovery in the dog: arterial blood acid-base equilibrium and
- glycolysis.</strong> Saunier C, Horsky P, Hannhart B, Garcia-Carmona T, Hartemann D.
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Physiol 1997 Nov;273(5 Pt 1):C1732-8<strong>
- Glycolysis inhibition by palmitate in renal cells cultured in a two-chamber system.</strong> Bolon C;
- Gauthier C; Simonnet H.
- </p>
- <p>
- Can J Appi Physiol 1998 Dec;23(6):558-69.<strong>
- The role of glucose in the regulation of substrate interaction during exercise.</strong> Sidossis LS.
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Clin Nutr 1998 Mar;67(3 Suppl):527S-530S. <strong>Effect of lipid oxidation on glucose utilization in
- humans.</strong> JequierE.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ann N Y Acad Sci 1998 Nov 20;854:224-38. <strong>Mitochondrial free radical production and aging in mammals
- and birds.</strong> Barja G.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Science 1999 Aug</strong> 27;285(5432): 1390-3.<strong>
- Gene expression profile of aging and its retardation by caloric restriction.</strong> Lee CK, Klopp RG,
- Weindruch R, Prolla TA.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nucleic Acids Res 1999 Nov 15;27(22):4510-6.<strong>
- Nitric oxide-induced damage to mtDNA and its subsequent repair.</strong> Grishko VI, Druzhyna N, LeDoux
- SP, Wilson GL.
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Physiol 1998 Jun;274(6 Pt 1):G978-83.<strong>
- Neural injury, repair and adaptation in the GI tract. I. New insights into neuronal injury:
- </strong>a cautionary tale. Hall KE, Wiley JW.
- </p>
- <p>
- Proc Nati Acad Sci U S A 1999 Dec 21;96(26): 14706-14711.<strong>
- Structural details of an interaction between cardiolipin and an integral membrane protein.</strong>
- McAuley KE, Fyfe PK, Ridge JP, Isaacs NW, Cogdell RJ, Jones MR.
- </p>
- <p>
- J. Appi Physiol 1991 Apr;70(4): 1720-30..<strong>
- .Metabolic and work efficiencies during exercise in Andean natives.
- </strong>Hochachka PW, Stanley C, Matheson GO, McKenzie DC, Allen PS, Parkhouse WS.
- </p>
- <p>
- JDev Physiol 1990 Sep;14(3): 139-46.<strong>
- Effect of lactate and beta-hydroxybutyrate infusions on brain metabolism in the fetal sheep.</strong>
- Harding JE, Charlton VE.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Trauma 1999 Feb;46(2):286-91,<strong>
- The effects of diaspirin cross-linked hemoglobin on hemodynamics, metabolic acidosis, and survival in
- burned rats.:</strong> Soltero RG; Hansbrough JF.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Trauma 1999 Apr;46(4):582-8; discussion 588-9, <strong>Resuscitation with lactated Ringer's solution in
- rats with hemorrhagic shock induces immediate apoptosis.</strong> Deb S; Martin B; Sun L; Ruff P; Burris
- D; Rich N; DeBreux S; Austin B; Rhee P.
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Physiol 1996 Oct;271(4 Pt 1):C1244-9,<strong>
- Glucose and pyruvate regulate cytokine-induced nitric oxide production by cardiac myocytes.</strong>
- Oddis CV; Finkel MS.
- </p>
- <p>
- Biochim Biophys Acta 1999 Feb 9;1410(2):171-82. <strong>Mitochondrial involvement in Alzheimer's disease.
- </strong>Bonilla E, Tanji K, Hirano M, Vu TH, DiMauro S, Schon EA.
- </p>
- <p>
- Adv Exp Med Biol 1995,384:185-94.<strong>
- Metabolic correlates of fatigue from different types of exercise in man.</strong> Vollestad NK.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Biol Chem 1995 Jun 23;270(25): 14855-8. <strong>Nitric oxide activates the glucose-dependent mobilization
- of arachidonic acid in a macrophage-like cell line (RAW 264.7) that is largely mediated by
- calcium-independent phospholipase A2.
- </strong>GrossRW<strong>;</strong> Rudolph AE; Wang<strong> J;</strong> Sommers CD; Wolf MJ.
- </p>
-
- © Ray Peat Ph.D. 2016. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
- </body>
- </html>
|