Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties

1. Pyruvate kinase of Alaskan king-crab leg muscle exists in two kinetically distinct forms, each of which displays a different temperature-dependence in the Km for phosphoenolpyruvate. 2. A ‘cold’ variant of the enzyme has hyperbolic kinetics and exhibits a minimal Km for substrate at 5°. At physio...

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Published in:Biochemical Journal
Main Author: Somero, George N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Portland Press Ltd. 1969
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj1140237
https://portlandpress.com/biochemj/article-pdf/114/2/237/764755/bj1140237.pdf
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spelling crportlandpress:10.1042/bj1140237 2024-06-09T07:37:57+00:00 Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties Somero, George N. 1969 http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj1140237 https://portlandpress.com/biochemj/article-pdf/114/2/237/764755/bj1140237.pdf en eng Portland Press Ltd. Biochemical Journal volume 114, issue 2, page 237-241 ISSN 0306-3283 journal-article 1969 crportlandpress https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1140237 2024-05-16T14:10:08Z 1. Pyruvate kinase of Alaskan king-crab leg muscle exists in two kinetically distinct forms, each of which displays a different temperature-dependence in the Km for phosphoenolpyruvate. 2. A ‘cold’ variant of the enzyme has hyperbolic kinetics and exhibits a minimal Km for substrate at 5°. At physiological concentrations of phosphoenolpyruvate the ‘cold’ enzyme is active only below 10°. A ‘warm’ pyruvate kinase has a minimal Km for substrate at about 12°. This enzyme displays sigmoidal kinetics and is likely to be inactive, at physiological substrate concentrations, at temperatures below 9°. 3. The combined activities of these two pyruvate kinases yield highly temperature-independent rates of catalysis, at physiological substrate concentrations, over the range of habitat temperatures encountered by the organism, namely 4–12°. 4. The two variants of pyruvate kinase do not appear to be isoenzymes in the conventional sense. Electrophoretic and electrofocus analyses revealed only single peaks of activity. 5. The results suggest that the ‘warm’ pyruvate kinase and the ‘cold’ pyruvate kinase are formed by a temperature-dependent interconversion of one protein species. This interconversion has major adaptive significance: as the temperature is lowered the ‘warm’ enzyme is converted into the ‘cold’ enzyme; the opposite situation obtains when the temperature is raised. Temperature changes thus mimic the effects noted for fructose 1,6-diphosphate on certain mammalian pyruvate kinases. Article in Journal/Newspaper Alaskan king crab Portland Press Biochemical Journal 114 2 237 241
institution Open Polar
collection Portland Press
op_collection_id crportlandpress
language English
description 1. Pyruvate kinase of Alaskan king-crab leg muscle exists in two kinetically distinct forms, each of which displays a different temperature-dependence in the Km for phosphoenolpyruvate. 2. A ‘cold’ variant of the enzyme has hyperbolic kinetics and exhibits a minimal Km for substrate at 5°. At physiological concentrations of phosphoenolpyruvate the ‘cold’ enzyme is active only below 10°. A ‘warm’ pyruvate kinase has a minimal Km for substrate at about 12°. This enzyme displays sigmoidal kinetics and is likely to be inactive, at physiological substrate concentrations, at temperatures below 9°. 3. The combined activities of these two pyruvate kinases yield highly temperature-independent rates of catalysis, at physiological substrate concentrations, over the range of habitat temperatures encountered by the organism, namely 4–12°. 4. The two variants of pyruvate kinase do not appear to be isoenzymes in the conventional sense. Electrophoretic and electrofocus analyses revealed only single peaks of activity. 5. The results suggest that the ‘warm’ pyruvate kinase and the ‘cold’ pyruvate kinase are formed by a temperature-dependent interconversion of one protein species. This interconversion has major adaptive significance: as the temperature is lowered the ‘warm’ enzyme is converted into the ‘cold’ enzyme; the opposite situation obtains when the temperature is raised. Temperature changes thus mimic the effects noted for fructose 1,6-diphosphate on certain mammalian pyruvate kinases.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Somero, George N.
spellingShingle Somero, George N.
Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties
author_facet Somero, George N.
author_sort Somero, George N.
title Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties
title_short Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties
title_full Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties
title_fullStr Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties
title_full_unstemmed Pyruvate kinase variants of the Alaskan king-crab. Evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties
title_sort pyruvate kinase variants of the alaskan king-crab. evidence for a temperature-dependent interconversion between two forms having distinct and adaptive kinetic properties
publisher Portland Press Ltd.
publishDate 1969
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj1140237
https://portlandpress.com/biochemj/article-pdf/114/2/237/764755/bj1140237.pdf
genre Alaskan king crab
genre_facet Alaskan king crab
op_source Biochemical Journal
volume 114, issue 2, page 237-241
ISSN 0306-3283
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1140237
container_title Biochemical Journal
container_volume 114
container_issue 2
container_start_page 237
op_container_end_page 241
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