Guest guest Posted March 13, 2006 Report Share Posted March 13, 2006 I got results from BioLab's ATP tests and wanted to offer them to the list. Does anyone have a good understanding of these (like how Mg plays into this, what the [TL] measurements are, etc)? I know some can be affected by deconditioning (I am extremely deconditioned), but I assume not all. Pretty much all measurements are abnormal. In fact, the [TL]'in' % change required them to write in an extra description by hand, " very poor, " that was not on their original form. That can't be good news. ATP studies on neutrophils ATP whole cells: With excess magnesium added: 1.37 (1.6-2.9) Endogenous magnesium only: 0.85 (0.9-2.7) Ratio ATP/ATP(Mg): 0.62 (>0.65) => ATP low, ATP-related Mg low Conclusion: low ATP and poor ATP-related Mg availability ADP to ATP conversion efficiency (whole cells): ATP(Mg) (excess Mg): 1.37 (1.6-2.9) ATP(Mg) (inhibitor present): 0.79 (<0.3) ATP(Mg) (inhibitor removed): 0.94 (>1.4) ADP to ATP efficiency: 25.8% (>60%) è Inhibitor site partially blocked Conclusion: Partial block (58%) of active site leading to very poor reconversion of ADP to ATP. ADP-ATP translocator [TL] (mitochondria, not whole cell) Start: 282 (290-700) [TL] out: 347 (410-950) 23.1% (>35%) function poor [TL] in: 202 (140-330) 28.4% (>55%) function very poor Conclusion: very poor ATP production from the mitochondria, secondary to the chemical block at the TL] site Cell-free DNA in blood plasma: 20.6 (up to 9.5) Conclusion: significant increase in cell degradation Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 13, 2006 Report Share Posted March 13, 2006 Hi, Jim. ***Thanks for posting these results. I don't understand everything about the interpretation of this test panel yet, but I'll tell you what I think I do know. See comments at asterisks below. > > I got results from BioLab's ATP tests and wanted to offer them to the list. > > Does anyone have a good understanding of these (like how Mg plays into this, > what the [TL] measurements are, etc)? I know some can be affected by > deconditioning (I am extremely deconditioned), but I assume not all. Pretty much all > measurements are abnormal. In fact, the [TL]'in' % change required them to > write in an extra description by hand, " very poor, " that was not on their > original form. That can't be good news. > > ATP studies on neutrophils ***First, some introductory comments: This test panel is run on neutrophils, which are the most abundant type of white blood cells. It therefore reflects what's going on with the ATP in the neutrophils, which is probably more or less related to what's going on in other types of cells in the body. Neutrophils are chosen because it is easy to get them by taking a blood sample, and they have lots of mitochondria. ***The test panel analyzes several things related to ATP. ATP is the molecule that is produced by adding a phosphate group to an ADP molecule in the mitochondria, which are the power plants of the cell. The energy for this phosphorylation comes from burning food as fuel, and this conversion of energy is done in the mitochondria by the Krebs cycle and the respiratory chains. ***After the phosphorylation, the ATP is exported from the mitochondrion in order to be used to power a whole range of different biochemical reactions in the cell. In order to be used in this way, ATP must bind a magnesium ion. After it is used, it loses a phosphate group and becomes ADP. The ADP then has to be transported back into a mitochondrion to be phosphorylated again. ***The transport of ATP out of the mitochondria and the transport of ADP back into the mitochondria is accomplished by a protein molecule in the inner mitochondrial membrane that is called the ADP-ATP translocator. This is the most abundant protein in the inner mitochondrial membrane. During the transport, the ADP and ATP are not bound to magnesium ions. The phosphate is transported back into the mitochondria using another transporter, so that it can be reattached to the ADP inside the mitochondria, to make ATP again, using energy derived from oxidizing food. This overall process is called oxidative phosphorylation. ***O.K., now let's look at the test results. ***The first part evaluates the amount of ATP and the magnesium availability to the ATP in whole neutrophils: > ATP whole cells: ***The first measurement is done adding extra magnesium. This is done because they are using a reaction to evaluate how much ATP is there, and in order to evaluate total ATP, they don't want the reaction rate to be limited by whether or not the ATP molecules can find enough magnesium. Remember that they can't react unless they have bound magnesium. So they add extra so that they can just measure total ATP. Note that they find in your case that your neutrophils have less than the normal range of total ATP: > With excess magnesium added: 1.37 (1.6-2.9) ***(To find out why there isn't enough ATP, we will have to read further on in the test results.) ***The next measurement of ATP is made without adding extra magnesium. It will come out lower, but how much lower will depend on how scarce magnesium is in the neutrophils. Note that in your neutrophils this measurement also comes out lower than the normal range, meaning that your neutrophils do not have enough magnesium: > Endogenous magnesium only: 0.85 (0.9-2.7) ***(Why not? Well, that isn't explained by this test. We do know, however, that most PWCs are low in intracellular magnesium. It's probably a vicious circle. It takes ATP to pump magnesium into the cells, and it takes magnesium to signal the mitochondria to make more ATP. In my opinion, this magnesium issue may be one reason for the reported benefit of the Blasi protocol, because it makes magnesium more available to the cells.) ***So then they take the ratio of these two, and that clinches the argument that your neutrophils don't have enough magnesium: > Ratio ATP/ATP(Mg): 0.62 (>0.65) ***And then they give the conclusions from this part of the test panel: your total amount of ATP is lower than normal, and the amount of magnesium that is available to bind to ATP is also below normal: > => ATP low, ATP-related Mg low > > Conclusion: low ATP and poor ATP-related Mg availability > ***O.K., so now they go on to measure some parameters that will indicate how efficiently the mitochondria in your neutrophils are able to convert ADP to ATP: > ADP to ATP conversion efficiency (whole cells): ***The first number is just a repeat of the first thing they measured, i.e. the amount of ATP observed to be reacting when there is excess magnesium added: > > ATP(Mg) (excess Mg): 1.37 (1.6-2.9) ***Then they add an inhibitor that prevents the conversion of ADP to ATP. I think this inhibitor acts on the enzyme that does this conversion, which is called ATP synthase. This causes the ATP in the cells to drop in a short period of time, because it is being used by reactions, and thus converted to ADP, but the conversion back to ATP by oxidative phosphorylation is being prevented by the inhibitor. How much the ATP drops will depend on how well the inhibitor is able to shut off ATP synthase, and how well the reactions that use ATP are able to use it. In the case of your neutrophils, it didn't drop as much as is normal: > ATP(Mg) (inhibitor present): 0.79 (<0.3) ***Then they remove the inhibitor and measure how much the ATP comes back up. Yours didn't come up as far as is normal: > ATP(Mg) (inhibitor removed): 0.94 (>1.4 ***Then they calculate how much it rose as a percentage of how much it dropped from the original value. Yours rose only 25.8% of how much it dropped, compared to a normal value of at least 60%: > ADP to ATP efficiency: 25.8% (>60%) ***Based on this behavior, they conclude that the molecular site on the enzyme used by the inhibitor is partially blocked. I think that would explain why the drop was not as large as normal when the inhibitor was added: > è Inhibitor site partially blocked ***What would cause this blockage? This test doesn't tell that, but it is suggested on the Biolab website that it is a chemical toxin. ***The overall conclusion from this part of the test is that the active site of the enzyme used to convert ADP to ATP is partially blocked, and that there is consequently very poor reconversion of ADP to ATP: > > Conclusion: Partial block (58%) of active site leading to very poor > reconversion of ADP to ATP. ***Now at this point I think they are missing something, and that is that if there are partial blockades in the Krebs cycle and/or the respiratory chains, this could also contribute to a poor rate of reconversion of ADP to ATP, which is where I think the rise of superoxide as a result of depletion of glutathione comes into the picture. I'm continuing to discuss this with Dr. Myhill. ***Next, they take the mitochondria out of the neutrophils, and they study them separately in order to see how well the ADP-ATP translocators are working: > > ADP-ATP translocator [TL] (mitochondria, not whole cell) ***First, they evaluate how much total ATP there is in the mitochondria. Again, yours come out quite low: > > Start: 282 (290-700) ***Then, they bias the translocators so that it is easy for them to import ADP, but hard to export ATP. I'm not sure how they do this, but I think it is an electrical bias. Under this situation, the mitochondria should make ATP from the ADP. Yours didn't make as much as normal: > [TL] out: 347 (410-950) 23.1% (>35%) function poor ***Then they bias the translocators in the other direction, and the ATP should drop. In your case, it did not drop as much as normal: > [TL] in: 202 (140-330) 28.4% (>55%) function very poor ***From this, they conclude that that the mitochondria are not producing ATP very well, and they say that this is caused by a chemical block at the translocator site: > > Conclusion: very poor ATP production from the mitochondria, secondary to the > chemical block at the [TL] site ***What would cause such a block? The Biolab website suggests intracellular acidosis or excess intracellular calcium. It also suggests the possibility of a translocator defect. ***Again, here's a place I think they are missing something. I think the poor ATP production measured here does not necessarily have to be due to a chemical block at the translocator site. It seems to me that this result could be caused by problems in the oxidative phosphorylation system, including the Krebs cycle and the respiratory chains, such as by rise of superoxide secondary to glutathione depletion, as I mentioned above. ***Next, they measure how much DNA is floating around free in the blood plasma, outside cells. Yours came out higher than normal: > > Cell-free DNA in blood plasma: 20.6 (up to 9.5) ***Since DNA is normally supposed to be inside the nucleus of cells, if there is more than a normal amount of it floating around free, it means that the rate of death of cells (necrosis) is higher than normal: > > Conclusion: significant increase in cell degradation ***Why would that happen? Well, perhaps because of low cellular energy, owing to these ATP problems. ***So this test seems to be showing that your neutrophils have deficits in every aspect of the production and use of ATP that they measured. It's not clear from this test exactly why, but it does tell you that there definitely are problems with the mitochondria in your neutrophils, and presumably in other cell types as well, since they would be subject to the same issues of nutrition and toxicity that the neutrophils are. ***I guess that's the best I can do with this, Jim. Rich Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2006 Report Share Posted March 14, 2006 Rich, Thanks much for the interpretations! 2 follow-ups: 1) can a virus and/or immune system dysfunction (e.g. RNase L problems) be the cause of any of the results? 2) do you have a sense if any of these atp tests can be worse due to deconditioning? and why is one's aerobic capacity lower in deconditioning? is it the number of mitochondria is lower? o2 uptake is less? or perhaps lower levels of enzymes? I asked Biolab a few months ago, and got a vague answer deconditioning can affect atp levels, but it would not explain at least some of the test results. I ask because I am extremely deconditioned. However, ever since getting CFS, my anaerobic threshold was lower right from the get-go, even when I was in shape. I may send this to McCully. He looked at my data from the aerobic metabolism study, specifically using M.R.Spectroscopy on my calf muscle in the recovery phase of exercise. It was his opinion that my poor function was due to more than just deconditioning. But with M.R.S., it is difficult to discern what is going on inside the cells to cause such dysfunction, even differentiating between deconditioning and disease. Thanks again, Jim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2006 Report Share Posted March 14, 2006 Rich, since there is a partial block of both the ATP synthase inhibitor site and the ATP synthase active site (which are presumably distinct), perhaps some upregulated small chaperone could be interacting with both sites - just a wild speculation really. Some CFS PBMC proteomics would be a nice complement to Gow and Kerrs work, in case there might exist some proteins that are differentially regulated in CFS vs health, but differentially regulated thru channels other than mRNA abundance. Since I take a really comparative approach to CFS, I'm dying to know whether similar ATP findings exist in any other disease states. If anyone has such info please let me know. Rich wrote: ***Again, here's a place I think they are missing something. I think the poor ATP production measured here does not necessarily have to be due to a chemical block at the translocator site. It seems to me that this result could be caused by problems in the oxidative phosphorylation system, including the Krebs cycle and the respiratory chains, such as by rise of superoxide secondary to glutathione depletion, as I mentioned above. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 14, 2006 Report Share Posted March 14, 2006 Hi, Jim. > > Rich, > > Thanks much for the interpretations! > > 2 follow-ups: > > 1) can a virus and/or immune system dysfunction (e.g. RNase L problems) be > the cause of any of the results? I guess I would have to say that I think it could. The reason I say that is that RNase-L chops up messenger RNA, which is used to translate the genes into enzymes. Some of the enzymes coded for in the cell nucleus are needed by the mitochondria, so it seems to me that if this process is interfered with, it could have an impact on the ability of the mitochondria to do their job of making ATP. One thing I'm not sure of, though, is whether RNase-L is active in the neutrophils in PWCs. As far as I know, all the RNase-L studies have been done in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (lymphocytes and monocytes). Prof. Suhadolnik told me that all cells are capable of producing RNase-L, though. > > 2) do you have a sense if any of these atp tests can be worse due to > deconditioning? ***I doubt if deconditioning would affect the neutrophils, so I don't think so. If the test were run on muscle cells, it might be possible. and why is one's aerobic capacity lower in deconditioning? is it the > number of mitochondria is lower? o2 uptake is less? or perhaps lower levels > of enzymes? ***I'm not sure. That's a good question. The answer is probably known. I'll have to study that. > > I asked Biolab a few months ago, and got a vague answer deconditioning can > affect atp levels, but it would not explain at least some of the test results. ***I just gave you a vague answer, too, didn't I? Maybe I can do better if I dig around a little. > I ask because I am extremely deconditioned. However, ever since getting CFS, > my anaerobic threshold was lower right from the get-go, even when I was in > shape. ***As you probably recall, I don't think the issue in CFS is deconditioning. I think the cells demand less oxygen because their oxidative metabolism has partial blockades due to a rise in superoxide, secondary to glutathione depletion. I think that would give the rapid drop in anaerobic threshold that you experienced, though you were still in good shape in terms of your muscle size and recent use. > > I may send this to McCully. He looked at my data from the aerobic > metabolism study, specifically using M.R.Spectroscopy on my calf muscle in the > recovery phase of exercise. It was his opinion that my poor function was due to > more than just deconditioning. But with M.R.S., it is difficult to discern > what is going on inside the cells to cause such dysfunction, even > differentiating between deconditioning and disease. ***I think that if we were smart enough, we would be able to combine an ATP profile test (it would be better if done on cells from a muscle biopsy than on neutrophils) with a cardioexercise test, an MRS test of the muscle, and quantitative histology of the biopsied muscle, and run this on PWCs and on normals with various degrees of conditioning, and figure it all out. I don't think we're there yet, though, and it would take quite a team and a lot of bucks to do it, so maybe we will have to substitute some clever thinking. > > Thanks again, > > Jim ***You're welcome. ***Rich > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 Hi, . Thanks for the comments. I don't know the details of what is used as the inhibitor in this test or where it binds, so I can't go much further on that yet. I'm hopeful that McLaren will publish more about this test panel soon. I think he has something submitted to a journal. I agree with you on the need for looking at the proteomics, and I think things are moving that way. At the NIH workshop in June, 2003, Dr. Eleanor Hanna, who coordinates CFS work at the NIH, said to me as soon as I met her that the proteomics will be the key, before I had had a chance to say anything! Also, I think the CDC has this in their published research plan. Also, you may know that Jim Baraniuk et al from town published a paper a few months ago on proteomics of the spinal fluid in CFS, which revealed a problem with protein folding. He agreed with me that glutathione depletion is a possible explanation for that, and said they would follow up on that possibility. So I think we will be seeing more of proteomics in CFS soon. That's a really good question about ATP problems in other disease states. I'm going to guess that any disorder that involves fatigue is going to involve problems with ATP generation, but the causes may be different, and the detailed results of the ATP profile test will likely be different as well. I'll bet is trying out his test on a range of disorders right now! At the OHM meeting, I told Dr. Shallenberger about this test panel and suggested that he get in contact with and do some of the same patients. Shallenberger does a rather sophisticated analysis of oxygen and CO2 before and during use of an exercise bike. He calculates what fraction of the power is coming from carbs and how much from fat-burning, and a bunch of other parameters. I think it would be interesting to see a correlation, one looking at mitochondria, the other looking at energy production by the whole organism. Rich > > ***Again, here's a place I think they are missing something. I > think the poor ATP production measured here does not necessarily > have to be due to a chemical block at the translocator site. It > seems to me that this result could be caused by problems in the > oxidative phosphorylation system, including the Krebs cycle and the > respiratory chains, such as by rise of superoxide secondary to > glutathione depletion, as I mentioned above. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 18, 2006 Report Share Posted March 18, 2006 rich, i've tried to absorb all your comments about my atp profile, and i have a few follow-ups: 1) as for why the amount of atp measured is higher when excess magnesium is added, is it because the magnesium stimulates the mito to produce more atp i nthe cell, or is there already more atp in the cell, it's just not measured by their tests because there is not enough magnesium to link up with? 2) i'm a bit confused on the testing methods - when something is added or blocked, are tests run after some time until a new steady state has been established? i'm trying to understand, for example, after an atp synthase inhibitor is removed, why my atp levels don't, over time, go back to my (low) nominal state. i mean, what would be different in the long run in the cell after the addition and removal of the inhibitor? 3) it looks like when mg is added, my atp level reaches the normal range of a healthy person (who was not given mg); so can i simply say if i can get that much mg into my cells, i will have an acceptable level of atp? (or was this a 1-time snapshot, and my mito would not be able to keep up with the added magnesium's impetus to create more atp?) 4) are they suggesting a blocked site on atp synthase is responsible for not only a reduced ability to make atp, but also a reduced ability for the inhibitor to affect it? 5) i don't see how your theory of a blockade in the kreb's cycle can explain all my abnormalities. i take it it can explain these abnormalities: a) the low atp in the mito and cell, and the poor generation of atp after the [tl] bias is set to let adp in, and c) the poor recovery in atp after the atp synthase inhibitor is removed. but i don't see how it can explain: a) the smaller decrease in atp levels when an atp synthetase inhibitor was applied, nor the smaller decrease in atp level when the [tl] bias is set to promote atp exit of the mito c) possibly the low magnesium levels (though as you said, if there's low atp, that could potentially explain it as there is not enough atp to bring in enough mg). i guess if i was just " clogged up " everywhere (the kreb's cycle, atp synthase active sight, and [tl] receptors) it could explain it. or perhaps gene expression abnormalities in multiple metabolic areas? it seems tempting to think the lower than normal reduction in atp in 2 diferent tests should almost be related somehow at least, don't they? i guess it seems more reasonable to think there are only 1 or 2 root causes than many, independent ones. 6) does anaerobic metabolism not take place in neutrophil cells? sorry for all the questions, but this is quite fascinating. no rush. and thanks again! jim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2006 Report Share Posted March 19, 2006 Rich, Will try to track down some of this. If I get anywhere, will post. I asked about anaerobic contributions, because I wondered if my lower than expected drops in ATP levels could be because of a contribution from glycolysis, but I may be way off on that. And also if perhaps pH levels interfered at all. Forgot, there was still 1 answer you gave that I didn't quite get, and can't quite figure out from their website. It's the test where the [TL] is favored to block ADP out. My mito ATP level dropped to 202 (140-330), % drop was 28.4% (> 55% decrease). I thought this was a measurement of the working ability of the [TL] to shuffle ATP out of the mitochondria. But they say this measures the normal use of ATP. Not sure what they mean by " use, " and where (in the mito, or outside the mito). Thanks, Jim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2006 Report Share Posted March 19, 2006 Rich, I think I just found out what was meant regarding my ATP level not dropping as much as it should. They say it could reflect a problem in the hydrolysis (use) of ATP. Wow, so potentially a problem of creating ATP and a problem with using it? Sounds like my ATP just isn't popular. Anyway, perhaps the inhibitor-related abnormalities and the [TL]-related abnormalities (and the rest) could all be explained by poor oxidative metabolism AND poor hydrolysis. I wonder if those 2 processes have something in common which could cause a malfunction in both of them. Jim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2006 Report Share Posted March 19, 2006 Hi, Jim. ***You've given me some real posers here! These are the types of things I'm still trying to understand, too, so I will try to struggle along with you on them. I don't have the last word on this stuff yet. > > rich, > > i've tried to absorb all your comments about my atp profile, and i have a few > follow-ups: > > 1) as for why the amount of atp measured is higher when excess magnesium is > added, is it because the magnesium stimulates the mito to produce more atp i > nthe cell, or is there already more atp in the cell, it's just not measured by > their tests because there is not enough magnesium to link up with? ***Personally, I think it's the former, based on the relative values of the is constants for binding magnesium that are exhibited by ATP and the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase. However, I think Dr. believes it is the latter. I've been having a dialogue with Dr. Myhill about this, and Dr. is also commenting on her draft manuscript, so maybe we will get to a meeting of the minds. ***My argument goes like this: Different enzymes have different affinities for their cofactors, as evaluated by the is constant. The higher the affinity, the lower the is constant, and vice versa. In the case of magnesium, the enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase has about 5 orders of magnitude lower affinity for magnesium than ATP does. So when magnesium starts becoming scarce intracellularly, the shortage should become a problem for pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase before it does for ATP. Pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase is what activates the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex to convert pyruvate from glycolysis into acetyl CoA to be fed into the Krebs cycle. So this is a feedback mechanism in the mitochondrion. Normally, if there is a high charge of ATP, it will tie up magnesium ions, and that will lower the concentration of free magnesium ions, thus signalling pyruvate dehydrogenase to deactivate, and that will lower the flow of pyruvate into the Krebs cycle, because not as much flow is needed if there is already enough ATP. However, in CFS, I believe that intracellular magnesium is lowered for another reason, and this fools the feedback system and lowers the ATP production even though there isn't enough ATP. I suspect that there is a vicious circle lowering the intracellular magnesium in CFS. That is, the ATP is driven down by glutathione depletion, and that gives less energy to power the ion pumps that maintain the intracellular magnesium concentration, so it goes down. > 2) i'm a bit confused on the testing methods - when something is added or > blocked, are tests run after some time until a new steady state has been > established? i'm trying to understand, for example, after an atp synthase inhibitor > is removed, why my atp levels don't, over time, go back to my (low) nominal > state. i mean, what would be different in the long run in the cell after the > addition and removal of the inhibitor? ***I don't completely understand this, either. I suspect that the inhibitor might not be completely removed. But I think he has taken that into account by comparing you to the range for healthy, normal people. I think the reactions are pretty fast, so he doesn't have to wait very long, but I don't have the numbers for how long. > > 3) it looks like when mg is added, my atp level reaches the normal range of a > healthy person (who was not given mg); so can i simply say if i can get that > much mg into my cells, i will have an acceptable level of atp? (or was this a > 1-time snapshot, and my mito would not be able to keep up with the added > magnesium's impetus to create more atp?) ***I think that if you had more magnesium intracellularly, it would help the ATP production, but as I said above, I think this is part of a vicious circle. Until you fix the glutathione depletion, I don't think you will be able to raise intracellular magnesium much. > > 4) are they suggesting a blocked site on atp synthase is responsible for not > only a reduced ability to make atp, but also a reduced ability for the > inhibitor to affect it? ***That's how it seems to me from what they say in the writeup, but I'm not totally sure. > > 5) i don't see how your theory of a blockade in the kreb's cycle can explain > all my abnormalities. i take it it can explain these abnormalities: > > a) the low atp in the mito and cell, and > the poor generation of atp after the [tl] bias is set to let adp in, and > c) the poor recovery in atp after the atp synthase inhibitor is removed. > > but i don't see how it can explain: > > a) the smaller decrease in atp levels when an atp synthetase inhibitor was > applied, nor > the smaller decrease in atp level when the [tl] bias is set to promote atp > exit of the mito > c) possibly the low magnesium levels (though as you said, if there's low atp, > that could potentially explain it as there is not enough atp to bring in > enough mg). ***I don't totally understand all this yet, either, Jim, and I need to sit and think about it some more. I do think that glutathione depletion can put a monkey wrench into the Krebs cycle and the respiratory chain by allowing superoxide to rise. I believe that the resulting lower ATP production can lower the intracellular magnesium, as I described above. I also believe that glutathione depletion can allow the buildup of toxins in the body, and that perhaps one or more of these can bind to either the translocator or the ATP synthase enzyme, and may in that way account for problems with them, too. In other words, I do think that glutathione depletion can affect the mitochondria in several ways, and may account for all the deficits observed. But you have probably thought more than I have about this at this point! I need to find time to concentrate on this a little more. > > i guess if i was just " clogged up " everywhere (the kreb's cycle, atp > synthase active sight, and [tl] receptors) it could explain it. or perhaps gene > expression abnormalities in multiple metabolic areas? it seems tempting to think > the lower than normal reduction in atp in 2 diferent tests should almost be > related somehow at least, don't they? i guess it seems more reasonable to > think there are only 1 or 2 root causes than many, independent ones. ***Right. See above. > > 6) does anaerobic metabolism not take place in neutrophil cells? > > sorry for all the questions, but this is quite fascinating. > > no rush. and thanks again! ***I don't know for sure, but I would think that if the oxidative metabolism got jammed up enough, the neutrophils could stay alive by using anaerobic glycolysis. But I haven't studied this, so I'm only guessing here. If you go to PubMed and put in neutrophil and glycolysis, you might find some interesting abstracts. > > jim > ***Rich Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.