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1.
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   

2.
We compared liver glycogen stores and glucose mobilization during freezing among winters in chorus frogs, Pseudacris triseriata, where populations varied in freezing survival. We also characterized tissue glycogen levels across the annual cycle. Frogs with low liver glycogen stores mobilized low amounts of glucose during freezing, and these were correlated with population variation in freezing survival. Moreover, liver glycogen stores were significantly and positively related to body mass. These data suggest that chorus frogs store liver glycogen in preparation for hibernation and that body size and glycogen stores must reach threshold levels for successful survival of freezing bouts during the winter.  相似文献   

3.
It has been hypothesized that freeze-tolerance in anurans evolved from a predisposition for dehydration tolerance. To test this hypothesis, we dehydrated summer/fall-collected and winter acclimated freeze-tolerant chorus frogs and dehydration-tolerant, but freeze-intolerant, Woodhouse's and Great Plains toads to 25% and 50% body water loss (BWL). Following treatments, we measured glucose, glycogen, and glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthetase (summer/fall only) activities in liver and leg muscle. Hepatic glucose levels were not significantly altered by dehydration in either summer/fall-collected frogs or toads. Conversely, winter acclimated frogs did show an increment (2.9-fold) in hepatic glucose with dehydration, accompanied by a reduction in hepatic glycogen levels. Winter acclimated toads did not mobilize hepatic glucose in response to dehydration. Further, hepatic glycogen and phosphorylase activities did not vary in any consistent manner with dehydration in winter toads. Mean leg muscle glucose values were elevated at 50% BWL relative to other treatments, significantly so compared to 25% BWL for summer/fall-collected frogs. The pattern of hepatic glucose mobilization with dehydration in winter frogs is consistent with that in other freeze-tolerant frog species, and provides additional support for the hypothesis that freezing tolerance evolved from a capacity for dehydration tolerance. However, the lack of hepatic glucose mobilization in response to dehydration in fall frogs suggests that a seasonal component to dehydration-induced regulation of glucose metabolism exists in chorus frogs. Furthermore, the absence of a dehydration-induced mobilization of hepatic glucose at both seasons in toads suggests that this dehydration response is not universal for terrestrial anurans.  相似文献   

4.
ORTMEYER HK. Relationship of glycogen synthase and glycogen phosphorylase to protein phosphatase 2C and cAMP-dependent protein kinase in liver of obese rhesus monkeys. The regulation of glycogen synthase (GS) and glycogen phosphorylase (GP) activity by phosphorylation/ dephosphorylation has been proposed to be via changes in activities of several different protein (serine/ threonine) phosphatases and kinases, including protein phosphatase (PP) 1/2A, PP2C, and cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). In order to determine whether PP1/2A, PP2C, and/or PKA activities are related to GS and/or GP activities, these enzymes were measured in freeze-clamped liver biopsies obtained under basal fasting conditions from 16 obese monkeys. Four monkeys were normoglycemic and normoinsulinemic, five were hyperinsulinemic, and seven had type 2 diabetes (NIDDM). Liver glycogen and glucose 6-phosphate (G6P) contents were also determined. Basal enzyme activities and basal substrate concentrations were not significantly different between the three groups of obese monkeys; however, there were several significant linear relationships observed when the monkeys were treated as one group. Therefore, multiple regression was used to determine the correlation between key variables. GS fractional activity was correlated to GP fractional activity (p<0. 05) and to PP2C activity (p=0. 005) (adjusted R2,53%). GP independent activity was correlated to GS independent activity (p<0. 07) and to PKA fractional activity (p=0. 005) (adjusted R2,64%). PP2C activity was correlated to GS fractional activity (p<0. 0005) and to PP1/2A activity G7<0. 0001) (adjusted R2,83%). PKA fractional activity was correlated to GP total activity (p<0. 0005) and to age (p=0. 001) (adjusted R282%). G6P content was correlated to glycogen content (p<0. 05) and to PP2C activity (p=0. 0005) (adjusted R2,73%). In conclusion, PP2C and PKA are involved in the regulation of GS and GP activity in the basal state in liver of obese monkeys with a wide range of glucose tolerance.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Wood frogs,Rana sylvatica, were sampled after freezing at –4°C (a short time course from 2 to 70 min after the appearance of the freezing exotherm) and thawing (20 h at 3°C after 70 min of freezing) and the regulation of liver glycolysis with respect to cryoprotectant glucose synthesis was examined. Within 5 min of the initiation of freezing, cryoprotectant concentrations in blood and liver had begun to increase. This was correlated with a rapid rise in the levels of hexose monophosphates in liver, including a 2.5 fold increase in glucose-6-P and 10 fold rise in fructose-6-P contents within the first 5 min post-exotherm. Contents of fructose-1,6-P2, fructose-2,6-P2, triose phosphates, P-enolpyruvate, and pyruvate did not significantly change over the course of freezing. Thawing sharply reduced the levels of hexose monophosphates in liver but raised P-enolpyruvate content by 2.3 fold. Changes in the contents of glycolytic intermediates over the freeze/thaw course are consistent with an inhibitory block of glycolysis at phosphofructokinase during freezing in order to facilitate a rapid glycogenolysis and production of cryoprotectant; during thawing, however, glycolysis appears to be inhibited at the level of pyruvate kinase.Possible regulatory control of cryoprotectant synthesis by covalent modification of liver glycolytic enzymes was examined. Glycogenolysis during freezing was facilitated by an increase in the percentage of glycogen phosphorylase in the activea (phosphorylated) form and also by an increase in the total amount (a+b) of enzyme expressed. For phosphofructokinase, kinetic changes as a result of freezing included a 40% reduction inK m for fructose-6-P, a 60% decrease inK a for fructose-2,6-P2, and a 2 fold increase in I50 for ATP. These changes imply a freezing-induced covalent modification of the enzyme but are not, apparently, the factors responsible for inhibition of glycolytic flux at the phosphofructokinase locus during glucose synthesis. Kinetic parameters of pyruvate kinase were not altered over the freeze/thaw course.  相似文献   

6.
Type 2 diabetes is characterised by elevated blood glucose concentrations, which potentially could be normalised by stimulation of hepatic glycogen synthesis. Under glycogenolytic conditions, the interaction of hepatic glycogen-associated protein phosphatase-1 (PP1–GL) with glycogen phosphorylase a is believed to inhibit the dephosphorylation and activation of glycogen synthase (GS) by the PP1–GL complex, suppressing glycogen synthesis. Consequently, the interaction of GL with phosphorylase a has emerged as an attractive anti-diabetic target, pharmacological disruption of which could provide a novel mechanism to lower blood glucose levels by increasing hepatic glycogen synthesis. Here we report for the first time the in vivo consequences of disrupting the GL–phosphorylase a interaction, using a mouse model containing a Tyr284Phe substitution in the phosphorylase a-binding region of the GL protein. The resulting GLY284F/Y284F mice display hepatic PP1–GL activity that is no longer sensitive to allosteric inhibition by phosphorylase a, resulting in increased GS activity under glycogenolytic conditions, demonstrating that regulation of GL by phosphorylase a operates in vivo. GLY284F/Y284F and GLY284F/+ mice display improved glucose tolerance compared with GL+/+ littermates, without significant accumulation of hepatic glycogen. The data provide the first in vivo evidence in support of targeting the GL–phosphorylase a interaction for treatment of hyperglycaemia. During prolonged fasting the GLY284F/Y284F mice lose more body weight and display decreased blood glucose levels in comparison with their GL+/+ littermates. These results suggest that, during periods of food deprivation, the phosphorylase a regulation of GL may prevent futile glucose–glycogen cycling, preserving energy and thus providing a selective biological advantage that may explain the observed conservation of the allosteric regulation of PP1–GL by phosphorylase a in mammals.  相似文献   

7.
The hyperthyroid state is associated with low hepatic glycogen levels, but paradoxically with a high activity of glycogen synthase and low activity of glycogen phosphorylase. We determined the effects of triiodo-L-thyronine (T3) on glycogen synthesis and glycogen synthase activity in rat hepatocytesin vitro. Culture of rat hepatocytes with T3 (100 nM–1 M) for 16 h–40 h increases glycogen synthesis from glucose and gluconeogenic precursors. The stimulation of glycogen synthesis by T3 was associated with an increase in the activity of glycogen synthase and was additive with the long-term effects of insulin but not with the short-term stimulation of glycogen synthesis by insulin. Culture of hepatocytes with T3 (at concentrations up to 1 M) did not affect the responsiveness of glycogen synthesis to short-term stimulation by insulin but culture with 10 M-T3 decreased the responsiveness to insulin without affecting the basal rate. It is suggested that the high activity of glycogen synthase in the hyperthyroid state is due to a direct effect of T3 on the hepatocyte, but the low hepatic glycogen content is probably due to either secondary metabolite and/or endocrine changes or to impaired responsiveness to insulin. T3 may have an anabolic role in the control of hepatic glycogen storage in the euthyroid postprandial state. (Mol Cell Biol120: 151–158, 1993)Abbreviations T3 triiodo-L-thyronine  相似文献   

8.
Experimental ponds were used as a model system of habitat patches to study the effect of habitat size on the relative growth performance of tadpoles of Bufo americanus and Pseudacris triseriata, and on colonization by predatory insects. Three pond depths and surface areas were habitat size treatments in a replicated, factorial experiment. Tadpoles of both species were astablished together at a single density and ponds were left open to natural colonization by aquatic insects. Pond area had a significant effect on the multivariate response of P. triseriata larval period, survival, and metamorphic mass. P. triseriata survived better relative to B. americanus in larger ponds. However, increasing pond area led to greater incidence of predacious beetle larvae (Dytiscus, Coleoptera: Dytiscidae). Dytiscus larvae had a significant negative effect on the survival of P. triseriata and led to reduced P. triseriata survival relative to B. americanus in colonized ponds. The results suggest that habitat size can influence community structure by altering the distribution of predation among habitat patches.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Glycogen phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1) has been demonstrated in sections of liver from rats starved for 24 h. The method is based on the measurement of the amount of glycogen formed after incubation in a gelled medium containing glucose 1-phosphate as substrate, using the semipermeable membrane technique. Glycogen was demonstrated with the periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) reaction.Phosphorylase activity appeared to be highest in periportal areas. The optimum substrate concentration for revealing activity of the enzyme was 60–120mm. After incubation in the absence of substrate, the staining intensity, as measured cytophotometrically as the mean integrated absorbance at 560 nm, was similar to that of an unincubated section.p-Chloromercuribenzoate, a non-specific inhibitor of glycogen phosphorylase activity, reduced the formation of final reaction product attributable to phosphorylase activity completely. The Michaelis constants (K m ) of the enzyme in periportal and pericentral areas differed. This was probably due to the presence of thea form only in periportal areas and of thea andb forms in pericentral areas. The mean integrated absorbances in both the periportal and pericentral areas increased linearly with incubation time (4–16 min). A linear relationship was also found with section thickness (4–10 µm). The total activity of glycogen phosphorylase in the periportal areas was double the pericentral activity.It is concluded that the semipermeable membrane technique, combined with the PAS reaction for glycogen, can be used as a valid method for the demonstration and quantification of glycogen phosphorylase activity in livers from starved rats.  相似文献   

10.
During starvation, muscle glycogen in Boleophthalmus boddaerti was utilized preferentially over liver glycogen. In the first 10 days of fasting, the ratio of the active‘a’form of glycogen phosphorylase to total phosphorylase present in the liver was small. During this period, the active‘I’form of glycogen synthetase increased in the same tissue. In the muscle, the phosphorylase‘a’activity declined during the first 7 days and increased thereafter while the total glycogen synthetase activity showed a drastic decline during the first 13 days of fasting. The glycogen level in the liver and muscle of mudskippers starved for 21 days increased after refeeding. After 6 and 12 h refeeding, liver glycogen level was 8·5 ± 2·3 and 6·9 ± 4·5 mg·g wet wt 1, respectively, as compared to 5·8 ± l·6mg·g wet wt 1 in unfed fish. Muscle glycogen level after 6 and 12 h refeeding was 0·96±0·76 and 0·82 ± 0·50 mg·g wet wt 1, respectively, as opposed to 0·21 ± 0·12 mg·g wet wt 1 in the 21-days fasted fish. At the same time, activities of glycogen phosphorylase in the muscle and liver increased while the active‘I’form of glycogen synthetase showed higher activity in the liver. Since glycogen was resynthesized upon refeeding, this eliminated the possibility that glycogen depletion during starvation was due to stress or physical exhaustion after handling by the investigator. Throughout the experimental starvation period, the body weight of the mudskipper decreased, with a maximum of 12% weight loss after 21 days. Liver lipid reserves were utilized at the onset of fasting but were thereafter resynthesized. Muscle proteins were also metabolized as the fish were visibly thinner. However, no apparent change in protein content expressed as per gram wet weight was detected as the tissue hydration state was maintained constant. The increased degradation of liver and muscle reserves was coupled to an increase in the activities of key gluconeogenic enzymes in the liver (G6Pase, FDPase, PEPCK, MDH and PC). The increase in glucose synthesis was possibly necessary to counteract hypoglycemia brought about by starvation in B. boddaerti.  相似文献   

11.
Two whitefly species, Trialeurodes vaporariorum and Bemisia tabaci biotype B were shown to have different temperature tolerance and seasonal dynamics. To determine whether this variation in thermal tolerance is related to different expression patterns of heat shock protein (hsp) genes during temperature stress, we obtained complete cDNA sequences for hsp90, hsp70 and hsp20, and analysed their expression profiles across temperature gradients by real‐time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Six full‐length cDNAs were cloned and sequenced from these two species. The full‐length cDNAs of hsp90s contain 2166 and 2157 bp open‐reading frames (ORF) which encode proteins with calculated molecular weights of 83 013 and 82 857 Da in T. vaporariorum and B. tabaci, respectively. The 1947 and 1959 bp ORFs of whitefly hsp70s comprise 649 and 653 amino acids with the calculated masses of 70 885 and 71 008 Da in T. vaporariorum and B. tabaci, respectively. Both complete cDNAs of hsp20 of T. vaporariorum and B. tabaci contain 585 bp ORFs and deduced amino acid sequences had molecular weights of 21 559 and 21 539 Da, respectively. The hsp expression profile results showed that temperatures for onset (Ton) or maximal (Tmax) induction of hsp expression in T. vaporariorum were generally 2–6°C lower than those in B. tabaci. These results suggest that the Ton (or Tmax) of hsps can represent the differences in temperature tolerance of these two whitefly species, and may be used to determine their natural geographical distribution and natural population seasonal dynamics. Significant upregulation of most hsps were observed when temperature stress was lifted, except that hsp70 and hsp20 of B. tabaci did not respond to the cold stress, indicating that response to heat and cold stress may have a different genetic and physiological basis in two whitefly species. These results highlight the importance of understanding the complexity of the heat shock response across multiple isoforms while attempting to link them to whole‐organism traits such as thermal tolerance.  相似文献   

12.
Species differences in tolerance to environmental stressors can contribute to differences in species distribution and abundance along river gradients. Climate change and intensive agriculture are likely to have major effects on fish populations in temperate zones, yet understanding of the interactions between temperature and chemical stressors on fish physiology is limited. The objective of this study was to compare the stress responses of the Mountain Whitefish, (Prosopium williamsoni, a cold-water fish) and White Sucker (Catostomus commersoni, a cool-water fish), along a temperature and pesticide gradient in the Oldman River, Southern Alberta in spring and summer. Fish were seined, placed into an enclosure, and plasma cortisol, glucose, liver glycogen, and condition factor were measured. Plasma acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity was used as an indicator of exposure to organophosphate and carbamates pesticides. Whitefish had lower plasma AChE activity and lower liver glycogen reserves compared to suckers at all sites and all sampling times but the differences in plasma cortisol were not species-specific and there were no differences in plasma glucose levels, except at one site. Plasma cortisol increased, and plasma glucose decreased along a downstream river gradient in whitefish in both spring and summer; in sucker only plasma cortisol fluctuated and only in the summer. Liver glycogen decreased along the river gradient in both species at both seasons. Our study detected important species-specific differences in AChE activities and responses of the physiological stress axis, suggesting that whitefish are more sensitive to temperature and pesticide stress than suckers.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of anoxia (N2 atmosphere at 5 °C) or freezing (at-8 °C) exposure in vivo on the activities of five enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism were assessed in foot muscle and hepatopancreases of the marine periwinkle Littorina littorea. Changes in glycogen phosphorylase, glycogen synthetase, pyruvate kinase and pyruvate dehydrogenase under either stress were generally consistent with covalent modification of the enzymes to decrease enzyme activity and/or convert the enzyme to a less active form. However, no evidence for a similar covalent modification of phosphofructokinase was found. The metabolic effects of freezing and anoxia were generally similar, suggesting that a primary contributor to freezing survival is the implementation of anaerobic metabolism and metabolic arrest mechanisms that also promote anoxia survival in marine molluses. However, in hepatopancreas phosphorylase was activated and pyruvate kinase remained in two enzyme forms in freezing-exposed snails, contrary to the results for anoxic animals. Ion exchange chromatography on DE-52 Sephadex revealed the presence of two forms of pyruvate kinase in both tissues of control L. littorea, eluting at 30–50 mmol·1-1 KCl (peak I) or 90–110 mmol·1-1 KCl (peak II). Anoxia exposure converted pyruvate kinase in both tissues to the peak I form, as did freezing for foot muscle pyruvate kinase. Kinetic analysis showed that peak I pyruvate kinase had lower affinities for substrates, phosphoenolpyruvate and ADP, and was very strongly inhibited by l-alanine compared with the peak II enzyme. Peak I pyruvate kinase had an I 50 value for l-alanine of 0.38 mmol·1-1, whereas peak II pyruvate kinase was unaffected by l-alanine evenat 40 mmol·1-1. In vitro incubation of extracts from control foot muscle under conditions promoting phosphorylation or dephosphorylation identified the peak I and II forms as the low and high phosphate forms, respectively. This result for L. littorea pyruvate kinase was highly unusual and contrary to the typical effect of anoxia on pyruvate kinase in marine molluscs which is to stimulate the phosphorylation of pyruvate kinase and, thereby, convert the enzyme to a less active form.Abbreviations AABS p-(p-aminophenylazo)benzene sulphonic acid - F2, 6P fructose-2,6-bisphosphate - F6P fructose-6-phosphate - G6P glucose-6-phosphate - GP glycogen phosphorylase - GS glycogen synthase - I 50 inhibitor concentration reducing enzyme velocity by 50% - MR metabolic rate - PDH pyruvate dehydrogenase - PEP phosphoenopyruvate - PFK phosphofructokinase - PK pyruvate kinase - SW sea water - F a air temperature - TCA trichloroacetic acid - UDPG uridine-diphosphate glucose - WW wet weight  相似文献   

14.
This study, using 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed enrichment of glycogen carbon (C1) from 13C-labelled (C1) glucose indicating a direct pathway for glycogen synthesis from glucose in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) hepatocytes. There was a direct relationship between hepatocyte glycogen content and total glycogen synthase, total glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen phosphorylase a activities, whereas the relationship was inverse between glycogen content and % glycogen synthase a and glycogen synthase a/glycogen phosphorylase a ratio. Incubation of hepatocytes with glucose (3 or 10 mmol·1-1) did not modify either glycogen synthase or glycogen phosphorylase activities. Insulin (porcine, 10-8 mol·1-1) in the medium significantly decreased total glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen phosphorylase a activities, but had no significant effect on glycogen synthase activities when compared to the controls (absence of insulin). In the presence of 10 mmol·1-1 glucose, insulin increased % glycogen synthase a and decreased % glycogen phosphorylase a activities in trout hepatocytes. Also, the effect of insulin on the activities of % glycogen synthase a and glycogen synthase a/glycogen phosphorylase a ratio were more pronounced at low than at high hepatocyte glycogen content. The results indicate that in trout hepatocytes both the glycogen synthetic and breakdown pathways are active concurrently in vitro and any subtle alterations in the phosphorylase to synthase ratio may determine the hepatic glycogen content. Insulin plays an important role in the regulation of glycogen metabolism in rainbow trout hepatocytes. The effect of insulin on hepatocyte glycogen content may be under the control of several factors, including plasma glucose concentration and hepatocyte glycogen content.  相似文献   

15.
(1) Changes in the activity of hepatic glycogen phosphorylase a+b and a (GPh-ase a+b and a), liver glycogen content and blood glucose level during acclimation to moderate high environmental temperature (35±1 °C) were studied. (2) Experiments were carried out on adult fed Wistar rats of both sexes, previously given either short-term (1, 4 and 7 days) or long-term (14, 21, 30 and 60 days) exposure to high environmental temperature. The controls were continuously kept at room temperature (20±2 °C). (3) The results obtained showed that in the period of short-term exposure the liver glycogen content was decreased significantly (after the first and fourth days in male rats and after first day in female rats) and the GPh-ase a activity increased (after first day in male rats and after first, fourth and seventh day in female rats). Long-term exposure caused significant increased liver glycogen content (beginning from the 14th day in male rats and the 21st day in female rats) until the end of the acclimation period (60 days). The elevated activity of GPh-ase a persists after 14th day of exposure only in female rats while there are no significant changes over the rest of the acclimation period in both sexes. There were no significant changes in total GPh-ase activity during the whole period of exposure. Blood glucose level was significantly decreased throughout the whole period of acclimation to high environmental temperature, in both sexes (except in the 1 day exposed groups). (4) The increased activity of hepatic GPh-ase a and decreased glycogen content suggested that the short-term exposure to heat stimulates the glycogenolytical processes. Decreased blood glucose level, and elevated liver glycogen content (r=-0.7467 in male and r=-0.6548 in female rats) suggested that prolonged exposure to high environmental temperature stimulated glycogenogenesis, without changes in the GPh-ase activity.  相似文献   

16.
In this paper we present the results of physiological responses to winter acclimation and tissue freezing in a freeze-tolerant Siberian earthworm, Eisenia nordenskioeldi, and two freeze-intolerant, temperate earthworm species, Lumbricus rubellus and Aporrectodea caliginosa. By analysing the physiological responses to freezing of both types we sought to identify some key factors promoting freeze tolerance in earthworms. Winter acclimation was followed by a significant increase in osmolality of body fluids in E. nordenskioeldi, from 197 mosmol kg−1 in 10 °C-acclimated animals to 365 mosmol kg−1 in animals acclimated to 0 °C. Cold acclimation did not cause any change in body fluid osmolality in the two freeze-intolerant species. As a response to ice formation in the body, the freeze-intolerant species produced copious amounts of slime and expulsion of coelomic fluids, and thereby lost 10–30% of their total water content. Contrary to this, the freeze-tolerant species did not lose water upon freezing. At temperatures down to −6.5 °C, the ice content in the freeze-tolerant E. nordenskioeldi was significantly lower than in L. rubellus. At lower temperatures there were no differences in ice content between the two species. Cold acclimated, but unfrozen, specimens of all three species had low levels of ammonia, urea, lactate, glycerol and glucose. As a response to ice formation, glucose levels significantly increased within the first 24 h of freezing. This was most pronounced in E. nordenskioeldi where a 153-fold increase of glucose was seen (94 mmol · l−1). In L. rubellus and A. caliginosa a 19-fold and 17-fold increase in glucose was seen. This is the first study on physiological mechanisms promoting freeze tolerance in E. nordenskioeldi, or any other oligochaete. Our results suggest that the cryoprotective system of this species more closely resembles that of freeze-tolerant anurans, which synthesize cryoprotectants only after tissues begin to freeze, than that of cold-hardy invertebrates which exhibit a preparatory accumulation of cryoprotectants during seasonal exposure to low temperature. Accepted: 10 February 1999  相似文献   

17.
The active a and inactive b forms of glycogen phosphorylase from cold-hardy larvae of the gall moth, Epiblema scudderiana, were purified using DEAE+ ion exchange and 3-5-AMP-agarose affinity chromatography. Maximum activities for glycogen phosphorylases a and b were 6.3±0.74 and 2.7±0.87 mol glucose-1-P·min-1·g wet weight-1, respectively, in -4°C-acclimated larvae. Final specific activities of the purified enzymes were 396 and 82 units·mg protein-1, respectively. Both enzymes were dimers with native molecular weights of 215000±18000 for glycogen phosphorylase a and 209000±15000 for glycogen phosphorylase b; the subunit molecular weight of both forms was 87000±2000. Both enzymes showed pH optima of 7.5 at 22°C and a break in the Arrhenius relationship with a two- to four-fold increase in activation energy below 10°C. Michaelis constant values for glycogen at 22°C were 0.12±0.004 mg·ml-1 for glycogen phosphorylase a and 0.87±0.034 mg·ml-1 for glycogen phosphorylase b; the Michaelis constant for inorganic phosphate was 6.5±0.07 mmol·l-1 for glycogen phosphorylase a and 23.6 mmol·l-1 for glycogen phosphorylase b. Glycogen phosphorylase b was activated by adenosine monophosphate with a K a of 0.176±0.004 mmol·l-1. Michaelis constant and K a values decreased by two- to fivefold at 5°C compared with 22°C. Glycerol had a positive effect on the Michaelis constant for glycogen for glycogen phosphorylase a at intermediate concentrations (0.5 mol·l-1) but was inhibitory to both enzyme forms at high concentrations (2 mol·l-1). Glycerol production as a cryoprotectant in E. scudderiana larvae is facilitated by the low temperature-simulated glycogen phosphorylase b to glycogen phosphorylase a conversion and by positive effects of low temperature on the kinetic properties of glycogen phosphorylase a. Enzyme shut-down when polyol synthesis is complete appears to be aided by strong inhibitory effects of glycerol and KCl on glycogen phosphorylase b.Abbreviations E a activation energy - GPa glycogen phosphorylase a - GPb glycogen phosphorylase b - h Hill coefficient - I 50 concentration of inhibitor that reduces enzymes velocity by 50% - K a concentration of activator that produces half-maximal activation of enzyme activity - K m Michaelis-Menten substrate affinity constant - MW molecular weight - PEG polyethylene glycol - Pi morganic phosphate - SDS PAGE sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - V max enzyme maximal velocity  相似文献   

18.
The correlation between blood glucose levels, the concentration of glycogen, the activities of glycogen sythase and phosphorylase and their respective kinases and phosphatases was examined in liver of rat fetuses between day 18 of gestation and one day after birth. Between day 18 and 21 there is a rapid increase in the concentration of glycogen and in the activity of synthase a and a much slower increase in the activity of phosphorylase a. The activity of the respective kinases increased rapidly during this period and reached maximun on day 21. The activity of synthase phosphatase and phosphorylase phosphatase increased after day 18, to reach a maximum on day 19 and 20, respectively, but decreased again towards day 21. The possibility that the changes in glycogen concentration and enzyme activities were related to an effect of glucose of AMP on the respective phosphatases was considered. It was found that the Km of phosphatase for glucose in the prenatal period was 5–7 mM, as in the adult. Since the level of blood glucose during this period was constant (2.8 mM), an effect of glucose on phosphatase activity seems unlikely. AMP concentration increased between day 18 and 21 from 6–15 nmol/g. In view of the low level of phosphorylase a activity during this period, the increase in AMP concentration is not considered to be important in the regulation of glycogen breakdown at this time.Immediately after birth blood glucose levels dropped to 5 mg/dl. This was accompanied by a rapid decrease in glycogen concentration and in the activity of glycogen synthase and a rise in phosphorylase activity. Blood glucose levels returned to the initial level within 1 h after birth, whereas the changes in glycogen concentration and enzyme activities continued for at least 3 h after birth. On day 22 all parameters examined had reached the level found in adult rat liver.It is suggested that the rapid changes observed immediately after birth are due to an effect of hypoglycemia mediated by hormones and cannot be ascribed to direct effects of metabolites on the enzyme systems involved.  相似文献   

19.
Skeletal muscle phosphorylase b has been purified from lamprey, Entosphenus japonicus, to a state of homogeneity as judged by the criterion of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme was completely dependent on AMP for activity and converted into the a form by rabbit muscle phosphorylase kinase in the presence of ATP and Mg2+. The subunit molecular weight determined by SDS-gel electrophoresis was 94,000 ± 1,600 (SE). The enzyme activity was stimulated by Na2SO4, but was not affected by mercaptoethanol. The Km values of the a form for glucose 1-phosphate and glycogen were 3.5 mm and 0.13%, respectively, and those of the b form for glucose 1-phosphate, glycogen, and AMP were 15 mm, 0.4%, and 0.1 mm, respectively. These values were smaller than those reported with lobster phosphorylase and greater than those reported with mammalian skeletal muscle phosphorylases. Electrophoretic and immunological studies have indicated that lamprey phosphorylase b exists as a single molecular form in skeletal muscle, heart, brain, and kidney. Rabbit antibody against lamprey phosphorylase cross-reacted with phosphorylases from skate and shark livers more intensely than with those from skeletal muscles.  相似文献   

20.
The European common lizard (Lacerta vivipara) is widely distributed throughout Eurasia and is one of the few Palaearctic reptiles occurring above the Arctic Circle. We investigated the cold-hardiness of L. vivipara from France which routinely encounter subzero temperatures within their shallow hibernation burrows. In the laboratory, cold-acclimated lizards exposed to subfreezing temperatures as low as -3.5°C could remain unfrozen (supercooled) for at least 3 weeks so long as their microenvironment was dry. In contrast, specimens cooled in contact with ambient ice crystals began to freeze within several hours. However, such susceptibility to inoculative freezing was not necessarily deleterious since L. vivipara readily tolerated the freezing of its tissues, with body surface temperatures as low as -3.0°C during trials lasting up to 3 days. Freezing survival was promoted by relatively low post-nucleation cooling rates (0.1°C·h-1) and apparently was associated with an accumulation of the putative cryoprotectant, glucose. The cold-hardiness strategy of L. vivipara may depend on both supercooling and freeze tolerance capacities, since this combination would afford the greatest likelihood of surviving winter in its dynamic thermal and hydric microenvironment.Abbreviations bm body mass - SVL snout-vent length - Tb body surface temperature - T c crystallization temperature  相似文献   

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