학술논문

Differential regulation of AMP-activated kinase and AKT kinase in response to oxygen availability in crucian carp (Carassius carassius)
protein kinase B
adenosine monophosphate
Document Type
Author abstract
Source
American Journal of Physiology (Consolidated). Dec 2008, Vol. 295 Issue 6, pR1803, 12 p.
Subject
United States
Language
English
ISSN
0002-9513
Abstract
We investigated whether two kinases critical for survival during periods of energy deficiency in anoxia-intolerant mammalian species, AMP-activated kinase (AMPK), and protein kinase B (AKT), are equally important for hypoxic/anoxic survival in the extremely anoxia-tolerant crucian carp (Carassius carassius). We report that phosphorylation of AMPK and AKT in heart and brain showed small changes after 10 days of severe hypoxia (0.3 mg [O.sub.2]/l at 9[degrees]C). In contrast, anoxia exposure (0.01 mg [O.sub.2]/l at 8[degrees]C) substantially increased AMPK phosphorylation but decreased AKT phosphorylation in carp heart and brain, indicating activation of AMPK and deactivation of AKT. In agreement, blocking the activity of AMPK in anoxic fish in vivo with 20 mg/kg Compound C resulted in an elevated metabolic rate (as indicated by increased ethanol production) and tended to reduce energy charge. This is the first in vivo experiment with Compound C in a nonmammalian vertebrate, and it appears that AMPK plays a role in mediating anoxic metabolic depression in crucian carp. Real-time RT-PCR analysis of the investigated AMPK subunit revealed that the most likely composition of subunits in the carp heart is [[alpha].sub.2], [[beta].sub.1B], [[gamma].sub.2a], whereas a more even expression of subunits was found in the brain. In the heart, expression of the regulatory [[gamma].sub.2]-subunit increased in the heart during anoxia. In the brain, expression of the [[alpha].sub.1]-, [[alpha].sub.2]- and [[gamma].sub.1]-subunits decreased with anoxia exposure, but expression of the [[gamma].sub.2]-subunit remained constant. Combined, our findings suggest that AMPK and AKT may play important, but opposing roles for hypoxic/anoxic survival in the anoxia-tolerant crucian carp. metabolism; hypoxia; ATP; ADP; ethanol

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