scholarly journals The activity of creatine kinase in frog skeletal muscle studied by saturation-transfer nuclear magnetic resonance

1981 ◽  
Vol 194 (1) ◽  
pp. 215-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
D G Gadian ◽  
G K Radda ◽  
T R Brown ◽  
E M Chance ◽  
M J Dawson ◽  
...  

1. The activity of creatine kinase in intact anaerobic frog muscle at 4 degrees C at rest and during contraction was investigated by using saturation-transfer 31P n.m.r. 2. At rest, the measured forward (phosphocreatine to ATP) reaction flux was 1.7 × 10(-3) M . s-1 and the backward flux was 1.2 × 10(-3) M . s-1. The large magnitude of both fluxes shows that creatine kinase is active in resting muscle, so the observed constancy of [phosphocreatine] demonstrates that the enzyme and its substrates are at equilibrium. 3. The apparent discrepancy between the fluxes must arise largely from an underestimation of the backward flux resulting from interaction of ATP with other systems, e.g. via adenylate kinase. For purposes of further calculation we have therefore adopted 1.6 × 10(-3) M . s-1 as an estimate of both fluxes. 4. During contraction, when the creatine kinase reaction is no longer at equilibrium, the net rate of phosphocreatine breakdown, estimated directly from the change in area of the inorganic phosphate peak, was 0.75 × 10(-3) M . s-1. Saturation transfer indicates that the forward reaction flux remains at approx. 1.6 × 10(-3) M . s-1 and the backward flux decreases to about 0.85 × 10(-3) M . s-1. 5. The activity of creatine kinase during contraction is large enough to account for the well-established observation that, during contraction, the concentration of ATP falls by less than 2-3%. The reaction catalysed by creatine kinase is driven forward during contraction by the large relative increase in the concentration of free ADP, which is more than doubled. 6. The observation that the forward flux does not increase during contraction and that the backward flux decreases can most simply be explained on the basis of competition of reactants for a limited amount of enzyme.

2002 ◽  
Vol 16 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 207-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harald E. Möller ◽  
Dirk Wiedermann

Phosphorus‒31 saturation‒transfer NMR spectroscopy provides an elegant means to study fluxes through the creatine kinase reaction in human skeletal muscle. To obtain reliable quantitative kinetic information, experimental imperfections, such as incomplete saturation and radiofrequency bleed over need to be addressed appropriately. In resting muscle, creatine kinase was near equilibrium both in normal controls and in a patient with impaired oxidative phosphorylation. Oral intake of high doses of creatine monohydrate for several days resulted in significantly increased concentrations of phosphocreatine but had no measurable effect on the phosphocreatine resynthesis rate in resting muscle.


2010 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 1493-1501 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Schär ◽  
AbdEl-Monem M. El-Sharkawy ◽  
Robert G. Weiss ◽  
Paul A. Bottomley

2002 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 850-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul A. Bottomley ◽  
Ronald Ouwerkerk ◽  
Ray F. Lee ◽  
Robert G. Weiss

1960 ◽  
Vol 198 (2) ◽  
pp. 300-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob Sacks ◽  
Mary G. Cleland

In a series of twitches of the gastrocnemius muscle of the cat at the rate of 3/sec. for 1 hour, beginning 5 minutes after the intravenous injection of tracer phosphate, the specific activities of the middle and terminal P groups of ATP, the terminal P group of ADP, and the P group of phosphocreatine were significantly different from each other to approximately the same extent as the specific activities of these P groups in the companion resting muscle. These findings indicate that the function of ATP in the contraction process does not involve any breakdown and resynthesis, and that the creatine kinase and adenylate kinase reactions which serve as means for the synthesis of ATP in isolated enzyme systems, do not play any significant part in muscular contraction.


1997 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 744-753 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-François Goudemant ◽  
Marc Francaux ◽  
Isabelle Mottet ◽  
Roger Demeure ◽  
Merence Sibomana ◽  
...  

1999 ◽  
Vol 77 (11) ◽  
pp. 1887-1891
Author(s):  
Richard Buist ◽  
Scott Kroeker ◽  
James Peeling

Creatine kinase (CK) catalyzes the reversible phosphorylation of MgADP by phosphocreatine and thus regulates cellular concentrations of ADP and ATP. The temperature dependence of this reaction has been determined in rat brain in vivo between 30 and 40°C using 31P NMR saturation transfer measurements. The pseudo-first-order rate constant for the forward CK reaction, kf, varies little with temperature over this range, with an apparent activation energy Ea = 14.2 ± 4.9 kJ/mol. This is considerably lower than the values of Ea for isolated CK enzymes. However, when changes in [MgADP] and [H+] with temperature are considered, a substrate concentration-independent value of Ea = 65.3 ± 9.7 kJ/mol is obtained for the maximum forward reaction velocity Vmax. This agrees well with literature values for the isolated brain-type isoform of CK.Key words: creatine kinase, activation energy, temperature, brain, rat.


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