General Pharmacology: The Vascular System 1981-01-01

Decrease in glucose oxidation in isolated brown fat cells from rats due to tropolone and dimethoxybenzene.

J W Rosenthal

Index: Gen. Pharmacol. 12(1) , 47-50, (1981)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

1. 1. Glucose conversion to carbon dioxide in control and insulin treated brown fat cells is reduced in the presence of tropolone and dimethoxybenzene. 2. 2. The effects of ortho-, meta- and para-dimethoxybenzene are similar to each other; all are more potent than monomethoxybenzene. 3. 3. The reduction in glucose oxidation with tropolone plus trimethoxybenzene is greater than that due to colchicine or to either agent alone. 4. 4. Since the methoxybenzenes and tropolone resemble the “A” and “C” rings of colchicine, their ability to reduce glucose oxidation is discussed in relationship to both the structure of the colchicine molecule and its effects on glucose oxidation.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Rotamers of o- and m-dimethoxybenzenes studied by mass-analyzed threshold ionization spectroscopy and theoretical calculations.

2010-10-28

[J. Phys. Chem. A 114(42) , 11144-52, (2010)]

Stereoselective glycosylations using oxathiane spiroketal glycosyl donors.

2012-02-01

[Carbohydr. Res. 348 , 6-13, (2012)]

Solvation of dichlorocarbene: complexation with aryl ethers.

2010-01-14

[J. Phys. Chem. A 114(1) , 209-17, (2010)]

C-terminal N-alkylated peptide amides resulting from the linker decomposition of the Rink amide resin: a new cleavage mixture prevents their formation.

2006-03-01

[J. Pept. Sci. 12(3) , 227-32, (2006)]

Optimization of the solid-phase microextraction method in the determination of Ixodes ricinus (L.) volatiles.

2006-02-01

[J. Sep. Sci. 29(2) , 236-41, (2006)]

More Articles...