Artículos de revistas
Gluconeogenic pathway does not display metabolic cold adaptation in liver of Antarctic notothenioid fish
Fecha
2013-05Registro en:
Magnoni, Leonardo Julián; Scarlato, Norberto A.; Ojeda, F. Patricio; Wöhler, Otto C.; Gluconeogenic pathway does not display metabolic cold adaptation in liver of Antarctic notothenioid fish; Springer; Polar Biology; 36; 5; 5-2013; 661-671
0722-4060
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Magnoni, Leonardo Julián
Scarlato, Norberto A.
Ojeda, F. Patricio
Wöhler, Otto C.
Resumen
Antarctic notothenioid fish display specializations related to cope with their chronically cold environment, such as high triacylglycerol (TAG) content in tissues. The metabolic fate of glycerol, a product of TAG mobilization, has not been studied in Antarctic fish. To assess the importance of glycerol as a substrate for gluconeogenesis and to determine whether this pathway is metabolically cold adapted (MCA), key hepatic enzyme activities were measured in Antarctic (Notothenia coriiceps, Gobionotothen gibberifrons, and Chionodraco rastrospinosus) and nonAntarctic (Dissostichus eleginoides, Patagonotothen ramsayi, and Eleginops maclovinus) notothenioid fish. Fructose 1,6-biphosphatase (FBP), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), and glycerol kinase (GK) activities were similar in both groups at common temperatures (1, 6, 11, or 21 C). In particular, thermal sensitivity for the reactions catalyzed by FBP and PEPCK was analogous between Antarctic and non-Antarctic species, reflected by similar values for Arrhenius energy of activation (Ea) and Q10. Additionally, hepatic glycerol, glucose, and glycogen contents together with plasma glycerol and glucose concentrations were similar for all of the species studied. Our results do not support the concept of MCA in hepatic gluconeogenesis and may indicate that the use of glycerol as a precursor for glucose synthesis by this pathway is of low physiological importance in Antarctic fish.