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    Proc Soc Exp Biol Med. 1983 Mar;172(3):334-9.

    Biochemical changes in rat liver after 18.5 days of spaceflight.

    Abstract

    The effect of "weightlessness" on liver metabolism was examined using tissue from rats flown in earth orbit for 18.5 days aboard the Soviet Cosmos 936 biosatellite. Changes in the activities of certain carbohydrate and lipid enzymes were noted. Of the 28 hepatic enzyme activities assayed, two, palmitoyl-CoA desaturase and lactate dehydrogenase, increased, whereas five, glycogen phosphorylase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, both acyltransferases which act on alpha-glycerolphosphate and diglycerides, and aconitate hydratase decreased. The remaining enzyme activities measured were unchanged. In addition, increased levels of liver glycogen and palmitoleate were noted which probably resulted from the lowered glycogen phosphorylase and increased palmitoyl-CoA desaturase activities, respectively, in those animals that experienced weightlessness. These changes caused by weightlessness were transient since all of the aforementioned alterations returned to normal values when measured in the livers of other rats which had flown in the biosatellite 25 days after recovery.

    PMID:
    6844339
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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