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Survival in the frozen state depends on biochemical adaptations that deal with multiple stresses on cells including long-term ischaemia and tissue dehydration. We investigated whether the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) could play a regulatory role in the metabolic re-sculpting that occurs during freezing. AMPK activity and the phosphorylation state of translation factors were measured in liver and skeletal muscle of wood frogs (Rana sylvatica) subjected to anoxia, dehydration, freezing, and thawing after freezing. AMPK activity was increased 2-fold in livers of frozen frogs compared with the controls whereas in skeletal muscle, AMPK activity increased 2.5-, 4.5- and 3-fold in dehydrated, frozen and frozen/thawed animals, respectively. Immunoblotting with phospho-specific antibodies revealed an increase in the phosphorylation state of eukaryotic elongation factor-2 at the inactivating Thr56 site in livers from frozen frogs and in skeletal muscles of anoxic frogs. No change in phosphorylation state of eukaryotic initiation factor-2alpha at the inactivating Ser51 site was seen in the tissues under any of the stress conditions. Surprisingly, ribosomal protein S6 phosphorylation was increased 2-fold in livers from frozen frogs and 10-fold in skeletal muscle from frozen/thawed animals. However, no change in translation capacity was detected in cell-free translation assays with skeletal muscle extracts under any of the experimental conditions. The changes in phosphorylation state of translation factors are discussed in relation to the control of protein synthesis and stress-induced AMPK activation.  相似文献   

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We investigated the restoration of peripheral nerve function and simple neurobehavioral reflexes in the freeze-tolerant wood frog (Rana sylvatica). Thirty-two specimens, allowed to freeze for 39 h and ultimately cooled to-2.2°C, were sampled at various time intervals up to 60 h after thawing at 5°C was initiated. The sciatic nerves of treated frogs were initially unresponsive to stimulation, but usually regained excitability within 5 h. Except for a slight reduction in nerve excitability characteristics of the compound action potentials of treated frogs were indistinguishable from those of control frogs. Recovery times for the hindlimb retraction and righting reflexes were 8 h and 14 h, respectively. Concentrations of the cryoprotectant glucose increased 8.2-fold in the sciatic nerve and 10.5-fold in the underlying semimembranosis muscle of treated frogs, and remained elevated for at least 60 h after thawing was initiated. These organs lost 47.2% and 15.9%, respectively, of their water during freezing, but were rehydrated within 2 h of the onset of thawing. The accumulation of glucose and the withdrawal of tissue water apparently are cryoprotective responses which enable this species to survive freezing.  相似文献   

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The wood frog, Rana sylvatica, survives weeks of whole body freezing during winter hibernation, expressing numerous metabolic adaptations that deal not only with freezing but with its consequences including organ ischemia and cellular dehydration. The present study analyzes the 20s multicatalytic proteinase (MCP) complex from skeletal muscle to determine how protein degradation is managed in the ischemic frozen state. MCP was partially purified and assayed fluorometrically using three AMC-labeled substrates to compare multiple states: control (5 degrees C acclimated), 24 h frozen at -2.5 degrees C, 4 or 8 h thawed at 5 degrees C, 8 h anoxia, and 40% dehydration. MCP from frozen frogs showed significantly different K(m) and V(max) values compared with controls; e.g., K(m) Z-LLE-AMC increased by 45% during freezing and 52% under anoxia whereas V(max) decreased by 40%. After thawing, K(m) was restored and V(max) rose by 2.2-fold. Incubations promoting protein kinase or phosphatase action on MCP showed that phosphatase treatment strongly increased V(max) implicating reversible phosphorylation in MCP regulation during freeze-thaw. Western blotting showed a 36% decrease in MCP protein in muscle from frozen frogs. The 20s MCP preferentially degrades oxidatively-damaged proteins and evidence of impaired function during freezing came from a 1.4-fold increase in protein carbonyl content in muscle and liver during freezing. Ubiquitin and ubiquitin conjugate levels were unchanged in muscle but changed markedly in liver during freeze-thaw.  相似文献   

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This study documents post-thaw recovery of jump distance and cryoprotectant mobilization in the freeze-tolerant frog Hyla versicolor over two successive years. Cold acclimated frogs had plasma glycerol levels near 1.0 mM in 2004 but it was nearly 70× higher during 2005. Freezing of frogs induced nearly identical levels of plasma glycerol (ca. 177 mM) during 2004 and 2005. Plasma glucose was only mobilized upon somatic freezing, with averages ranging between 21 and 36 mM. Control jump distance showed no difference between the two years of the study. The post-thaw jump response was identical during the first 2 years despite large differences in glycerol mobilization between these 2 years. Recovery proceeded much faster in 2005 when frogs mobilized glycerol prior to freeze exposure. Frogs were more impaired in their locomotion performance during the initial stages of recovery period when they were frozen at a lower temperature (−3 vs. −1.5°C) but they eventually recovered. Moderate lengthening of the freeze duration (3 vs. 7 days) with the 2004 collection group did not affect recovery of jump distance when frogs were frozen at −1.5°C. Hence, postfreeze impairment of locomotion is dependent of the intensity of the freeze temperature but it is a reversible process that is mitigated when glycerol is more freely distributed to body tissues.  相似文献   

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Summary Wood frogs (Rana sylvatica) were frozen to-2.5°C under five distinct cooling regimes to investigate the effect of cooling rate on survival. Frogs survived freezing when cooled at -0.16°C · h-1 or -0.18°C · h-1, but mortality resulted at higher rates (-0.30°C · h-1,-1.03°C · h-1, and -1.17°C · h-1). Surviving frogs in the latter groups required longer periods to recover, and transient injury to the neuromuscular system was evident. Some of the frogs that died had patches of discolored, apparently necrotic skin; vascular damage, as indicated by hematoma, also occurred. It is concluded that slow cooling may be critical to the freeze tolerance of wood frogs. Additional studies examined the effect of cooling rate on physiological responses promoting freeze tolerance. Mean glucose concentrations measured in plasma (15–16 mol · ml-1) and liver (42–45 mol · g-1) following a 2-h thaw did not differ between slowly- and rapidly-cooled frogs but in both groups were elevated relative to unfrozen controls. Thus freezing injury to rapidly-cooled frogs apparently was not mitigated by the presence of elevated glucose. Water contents of liver tissue, measured 2 h post-thawing, did not differ between slowly-cooled (mean = 77.6%) and rapidly-cooled (mean = 78.5%) frogs. However, the mean hematocrit of slowly-cooled frogs (48%) was significantly higher than that (37%) of frogs cooled rapidly, possibly owing to differences in the dynamics of tissue water during freezing.  相似文献   

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Freeze tolerance and changes in metabolism during freezing were investigated in the moor frog (Rana arvalis) under laboratory conditions. The data show for the first time a well-developed freeze tolerance in juveniles of a European frog capable of surviving a freezing exposure of about 72 h with a final body temperature of −3°C. A biochemical analysis showed an increase in liver and muscle glucose in response to freezing (respectively, 14-fold and 4-fold between 4 and −1°C). Lactate accumulation was only observed in the liver (4.1 ± 0.8 against 16.6 ± 2.4 μmol g−1 fresh weight (FW) between 4 and −1°C). The quantification of the respiratory metabolism of frozen frogs showed that the aerobic metabolism persists under freezing conditions (1.4 ± 0.7 μl O2 g−1 FW h−1 at −4°C) and decreases with body temperature. After thawing, the oxygen consumption rose rapidly during the first hour (6-fold to 16-fold) and continued to increase for 24 h, but at a lower rate. In early winter, juvenile R. arvalis held in an outdoor enclosure were observed to emerge from ponds and hibernate in the upper soil and litter layers. Temperature recordings in the substratum of the enclosure suggested that the hibernacula of these juvenile frogs provided sheltering from sub-zero air temperatures and reduced the time spent in a frozen state corresponding well with the observed freeze tolerance of the juveniles. This study strongly suggests that freeze tolerance of R. arvalis is an adaptive trait necessary for winter survival.  相似文献   

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To investigate the roles that gene expression and new protein synthesis play in freezing survival by the wood frog, Rana sylvatica, we compared the in vitro translation products made from mRNA isolated from six tissues (liver, brain, heart, muscle, kidney, gut) of control (5 degrees C), frozen (24 h at -2.5 degrees C), and thawed (24 h at 5 degrees C after 24 h frozen) frogs. [(35)S]Methionine-labeled proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and located by fluorography. Results indicated specific changes in the translatable populations of mRNA in tissues of freezing-exposed frogs that were largely reversed upon thawing. Differential protein expression was greatest in the comparison of liver from control versus frozen frogs with proteins ranging from 45 to 14.8 kDa identified as enhanced or unique to the frozen state. One unique protein appeared in skeletal muscle (116 kDa) of freeze-exposed frogs while another (52.5 kDa) was enhanced. Analysis of brain and heart each revealed the presence of one protein unique to the frozen state in each (58.9 and 5.9 kDa, respectively) whereas no change in the pattern of in vitro translation products was seen in gut (stomach + intestine combined) or kidney between the three experimental states. These freeze-induced alterations in the populations of translatable mRNA suggest that changes in the complement of specific proteins underlie various adaptive responses that contribute to the freezing survival of this amphibian.  相似文献   

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BackgroundThe North American wood frog, Rana sylvatica, endures whole body freezing while wintering on land and has developed multiple biochemical adaptations to elude cell/tissue damage and optimize its freeze tolerance. Blood flow is halted in the frozen state, imparting both ischemic and oxidative stress on cells. A potential build-up of H2O2 may occur due to increased superoxide dismutase activity previously discovered. The effect of freezing on catalase (CAT), which catalyzes the breakdown of H2O2 into molecular oxygen and water, was investigated as a result.MethodsThe present study investigated the purification and kinetic profile of CAT in relation to the phosphorylation state of CAT from the skeletal muscle of control and frozen R. sylvatica.ResultsCatalase from skeletal muscle of frozen wood frogs showed a significantly higher Vmax (1.48 fold) and significantly lower Km for H2O2 (0.64 fold) in comparison to CAT from control frogs (5 °C acclimated). CAT from frozen frogs also showed higher overall phosphorylation (1.73 fold) and significantly higher levels of phosphoserine (1.60 fold) and phosphotyrosine (1.27 fold) compared to control animals. Phosphorylation via protein kinase A or the AMP-activated protein kinase significantly decreased the Km for H2O2 of CAT, whereas protein phosphatase 2B or 2C action significantly increased the Km.ConclusionThe physiological consequence of freeze-induced CAT phosphorylation appears to improve CAT function to alleviate H2O2 build-up in freezing frogs.General significanceAugmented CAT activity via reversible phosphorylation may increase the ability of R. sylvatica to overcome oxidative stress associated with ischemia.  相似文献   

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Wood frogs (Rana sylvatica) exhibit marked geographic variation in freeze tolerance, with subarctic populations tolerating experimental freezing to temperatures at least 10-13 degrees Celsius below the lethal limits for conspecifics from more temperate locales. We determined how seasonal responses enhance the cryoprotectant system in these northern frogs, and also investigated their physiological responses to somatic freezing at extreme temperatures. Alaskan frogs collected in late summer had plasma urea levels near 10 μmol ml-1, but this level rose during preparation for winter to 85.5 ± 2.9 μmol ml-1 (mean ± SEM) in frogs that remained fully hydrated, and to 186.9 ± 12.4 μmol ml-1 in frogs held under a restricted moisture regime. An osmolality gap indicated that the plasma of winter-conditioned frogs contained an as yet unidentified osmolyte(s) that contributed about 75 mOsmol kg-1 to total osmotic pressure. Experimental freezing to –8°C, either directly or following three cycles of freezing/thawing between –4 and 0°C, or –16°C increased the liver’s synthesis of glucose and, to a lesser extent, urea. Concomitantly, organs shed up to one-half (skeletal muscle) or two-thirds (liver) of their water, with cryoprotectant in the remaining fluid reaching concentrations as high as 0.2 and 2.1 M, respectively. Freeze/thaw cycling, which was readily survived by winter-conditioned frogs, greatly increased hepatic glycogenolysis and delivery of glucose (but not urea) to skeletal muscle. We conclude that cryoprotectant accrual in anticipation of and in response to freezing have been greatly enhanced and contribute to extreme freeze tolerance in northern R. sylvatica.  相似文献   

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Creatine kinase (CK) was analyzed from skeletal muscle of wood frogs, Rana sylvatica, a species that survives natural whole body freezing during the winter months. Muscle CK activity increased by 35% and apparent Km creatine decreased by 29% when frogs froze. Immunoblotting analysis showed that this activity increase was not due to a change in total CK protein. Frog muscle CK was regulated by reversible protein phosphorylation; in vitro incubations with 32P-ATP under conditions that facilitated the actions of various protein kinases (PKA, PKG, PKC, CaMK or AMPK) resulted in immunoprecipitation of 32P-labeled CK. Furthermore, incubations that stimulated CaMK or AMPK altered CK kinetics. Incubation under conditions that facilitated protein phosphatases (PP2B or PP2C) reversed these effects. Phosphorylation of CK increased activity, whereas dephosphorylation decreased activity. Ion-exchange chromatography revealed that two forms of CK with different phosphorylation states were present in muscle; low versus high phosphate forms dominated in muscle of control versus frozen frogs, respectively. However, CK from control versus frozen frogs showed no differences in susceptibility to urea denaturation or sensitivity to limited proteolysis by thermolysin. The increased activity, increased substrate affinity and altered phosphorylation state of CK in skeletal muscle from frozen frogs argues for altered regulation of CK under energy stress in ischemic frozen muscle.  相似文献   

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Cao  Yu  Xiong  Da  Kong  Ruize  Dai  Guolin  Zhong  Minghua  Li  Li  Zhang  Jinping  Jiang  Lihong  Li  Hongrong 《Molecular and cellular biochemistry》2019,455(1-2):29-39

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase I (CPS1) represents an important regulatory enzyme of the urea cycle that mediates the ATP-driven reaction ligating ammonium, carbonate, and phosphate to form carbamoyl phosphate. The freeze-tolerant wood frog (Rana sylvatica or Lithobates sylvaticus) accumulates high concentrations of urea during bouts of freezing to detoxify any ammonia generated and to contribute as a cryoprotectant thereby helping to avoid freeze damage to cells. Purification of CPS1 to homogeneity from wood frog liver was performed in control and frozen wood frogs by a three-step chromatographic process. The affinity of CPS1 for its three substrates was tested in the purified control and freeze-exposed enzyme under a variety of conditions including the presence and absence of the natural cryoprotectants urea and glucose. The results demonstrated that affinity for ammonium was higher in the freeze-exposed CPS1 (1.26-fold) and that with the addition of 400 mM glucose it displayed higher affinity for ATP (1.30-fold) and the obligate activator N-acetylglutamate (1.24-fold). Denaturation studies demonstrated the freeze-exposed enzyme was less thermally stable than the control with an unfolding temperature approximately 1.5 °C lower (52.9 °C for frozen and 54.4 °C for control). The control form of CPS1 had a significantly higher degree of glutarylated lysine residues (1.42-fold increase) relative to the frozen. The results suggest that CPS1 activation and maintenance of urea cycle activity despite the hypometabolic conditions associated with freezing are important aspects in the metabolic survival strategies of the wood frog.

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Hatchling painted turtles (Chrysemys picta) were placed individually into artificial nests constructed in jars of damp soil and then were cooled slowly to temperatures between-7.7 and-12.7 °C. Distinct exotherms were recorded in all jars when water in the soil began to freeze at temperatures between-0.9 and-2.4 °C. A second (animal) exotherm was subsequently detected in some of the jars when water in hatchlings also began to freeze. An animal exotherm occurred in the temperature records for all 23 hatchlings that died in tests terminating at temperatures between-7.7 and-10.8 °C, but no such exotherm was apparent in the temperature records for the 23 turtles that survived these treatments. Moreover, the 4 hatchlings that produced exotherms in tests terminating between-11.5 and-12.7 °C failed to survive, but 5 of 7 hatchlings that produced no exotherm in these tests also died. Thus, turtles that die at subzero temperatures above-11 °C apparently succumb to freezing when ice propagates across their integument from the frozen soil, but animals that die at temperatures below-11 °C generally perish from some other cause. These findings indicate that hatchling painted turtles overwintering inside their shallow, subterranean nests survive exposure to subzero temperatures by avoiding freezing instead of by tolerating freezing.  相似文献   

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Summary The triggering of cryoprotectant synthesis was examined in the freeze tolerant wood frog,Rana sylvatica. A slow decrease in ambient temperature (1°C every 2 days) from 3° to –2.1 °C was used to search for a specific trigger temperature. None was found. Instead it was found that, despite subzero temperature, animals which remained in a supercooled unfrozen state had low blood glucose (1.66±0.44 mol/ml) while those which had frozen had high blood glucose (181±16 mol/ml). These results indicate that it is the initiation of ice nucleation, rather than a specific subzero temperature, which triggers cryoprotectant glucose synthesis. This was confirmed by monitoring the freezing curves for individual frogs with sampling of blood and tissues at various times relative to the initiation of nucleation (detected as an instantaneous temperature jump from –3 to –1°C). Animals sampled before nucleation had low blood and liver glucose contents and a low percentage of liver phosphorylase in thea form. Within 4 min of the initiation of freezing, however, blood glucose had jumped to 16 mol/ml and liver glucose to 39.5 mol/g wet weight. Glucose in both compartments continued to increase as the time of freezing increased correlated with an increase in liver phosphorylasea content from 47% before nucleation to 100% after 50 min of freezing. The results clearly demonstrate that freeze tolerant frogs have no anticipatory synthesis of cryoprotectant as a preparation for winter but rather can translate the initiation of extracellular ice formation into a signal which rapidly activates cryoprotectant production by liver.  相似文献   

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Increases in liver glycogen phosphorylase activity, along with inhibition of glycogen synthetase and phosphofructokinase-1, are associated with elevated cryoprotectant (glucose) levels during freezing in some freeze-tolerant anurans. In contrast, freeze-tolerant chorus frogs, Pseudacris triseriata, accumulate glucose during freezing but exhibit no increase in phosphorylase activity following 24-h freezing bouts. In the present study, chorus frogs were frozen for 5- and 30-min and 2- and 24-h durations. After freezing, glucose, glycogen, and glycogen phosphorylase and synthetase activities were measured in leg muscle and liver to determine if enzyme activities varied over shorter freezing durations, along with glucose accumulation. Liver and muscle glucose levels rose significantly (5-12-fold) during freezing. Glycogen showed no significant temporal variation in liver, but in muscle, glycogen was significantly elevated after 24 h of freezing relative to 5 and 30 min-frozen treatments. Hepatic phosphorylase a and total phosphorylase activities, as well as the percent of the enzyme in the active form, showed no significant temporal variation following freezing. Muscle phosphorylase a activity and percent active form increased significantly after 24 h of freezing, suggesting some enhancement of enzyme function following freezing in muscle. However, the significance of this enhanced activity is uncertain because of the concurrent increase in muscle glycogen with freezing. Neither glucose 6-phosphate independent (I) nor total glycogen synthetase activities were reduced in liver or muscle during freezing. Thus, chorus frogs displayed typical cryoprotectant accumulation compared with other freeze-tolerant anurans, but freezing did not significantly alter activities of hepatic enzymes associated with glycogen metabolism.  相似文献   

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We have previously reported that when garter snakesThamnophis sirtalis parietalis, a freeze tolerant species, were exposed to 5 h freezing at –2.5° C organs showed increases in the activities of anti-oxidant enzymes, especially catalase in skeletal muscle. This was interpreted to be an adaptation to deal with the potentially injurious postischemic situation of thawing. The present work analyzesin vitro oxidative inactivation of a possible target of postischemic-induced free radical damage, the secondary anti-oxidant defense glutathione-S transferase, and the protective role of endogenous catalase. Approximately 50% of GST activity from snake muscle homogenates was lost within 2 min after addition of H2O2 plus Fe(II) (0.4–2 mM) in media containing azide whereas addition of iron alone resulted in no damaging effects. The opposing effects of dimethyl sulfoxide and EDTA in modifying this process strongly suggested the involvement of ·OH radicals in the GST inactivation. A partial recovery of the activity was promoted by mercaptoethanol, indicating that sulphydryl groups oxidation participate in the mechanism of GST inactivation. Pre-incubation of the reaction media containing H2O2 caused protection of the GST activity only in the absence of azide, indicating that endogenous catalase modulates the extent of oxyradical damage. The protective pre-incubation effect was more efficacious when employing homogenates from lung and liver, organs that have higher catalase activities, as well as homogenates from freezing-exposed muscle (that show an 80% increase in catalase activity, compared with control). The protection against GST inactivation observed in muscle from frozen snakes demonstrates that increased anti-oxidant defenses during freezing exposure can be a key factor in controllingin vitro oxyradical damage. The implications for natural freeze tolerance are discussed.  相似文献   

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