On the role of arginine kinase in insect flight muscle |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Veterinary Parasitology, Madras Veterinary College, Tamil Nadu Veterinary and Animal Sciences University, Chennai 600007, India;2. Translational Research Platform for Veterinary Biologicals (TRPVB), TANUVAS, II Floor, Central University Laboratory Building, Madhavaram Milk Colony, Chennai 600051, India |
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Abstract: | In the flight muscle of Locusta migratoria L., arginine kinase activity increased 10-fold when 5th instar larvae and adult animals were compared. During the onset of flight, ATP decreased slightly with the amount of phospho-l-arginine remaining constant. Thus, high arginine kinase activity characterizes the adult muscle, giving rise to the speculation that the phospho-l-arginine/l-arginine kinase system does not act only as a buffer system for high-energy phosphate but also as a shuttle mechanism for high-energy phosphate between mitochondria and myofibrils. Judged from electrophoretic mobility, only one isoenzyme exists that is not bound to subcellular structures. Calculations of the diffusive fluxes of ATP, ADP, phosphate, phospho-l-arginine and l-arginine between the sites of ATP-consumption and production, respectively, can be interpreted in such a way, that the low concentration of ADPfree might limit ATP-turnover during flight. Judging from the high arginine kinase activity, the major acceptor for high-energy phosphate at the mitochondria could be l-arginine, while phospho-l-arginine is transphosphorylated to ATP at the myofibrils, thus presumably serving as an energy shuttle. |
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