HARRY VAN HOOF’s research while affiliated with Catholic University of Louvain and other places

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Publications (2)


The Effects of Electric Currents on ATP Generation, Protein Synthesis, and Membrane Transport in Rat Skin
  • Article

November 1982

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362 Reads

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244 Citations

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research

NGOK CHENG

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HARRY VAN HOOF

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EMMANUEL BOCKX

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[...]

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WILLIAM DE LOECKER

Direct electric currents ranging from 10 microA to 1000 microA increase ATP concentrations in the tissue and stimulate amino acid incorporation into the proteins of rat skin. The amino acid transport through the cell membrane, followed by the alpha-aminoisobutyric acid uptake, is stimulated between 100 microA and 750 microA. The stimulatory effects on ATP production and on amino acid transport, apparently mediated by different mechanisms, contribute to the final increased protein synthesizing activity. DNA metabolism followed by thymidine incorporation remains unaffected during the course of current application. The effects on AtP production can be explained by proton movements on the basis of the chemiosmotic theory of Mitchell, while the transport functions are controlled by modification in the electrical gradients across the membranes.


Citations (1)


... These findings suggest that piezoelectric stimulation bolsters the energy yield in neurons, potentially driving a cascade of biological responses. Electrical stimulation may enhance transmembrane biosynthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) by activating membrane-bound ATPase activity [43]. The hydrolysis energy released from ATP drives conformational transitions and polymerization of monomeric globular actin (G-actin) into filamentous actin (F-actin), thereby enabling energy-dependent regulation of cytoskeletal dynamic remodeling [44]. ...

Reference:

Biomimetic piezoelectric hydrogel system for energy metabolism reprogramming in spinal cord injury repair
The Effects of Electric Currents on ATP Generation, Protein Synthesis, and Membrane Transport in Rat Skin
  • Citing Article
  • November 1982

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research