Abstract

Anoxia tolerance, glycogen degradation, free amino acid pool, adenylate energy charge and the accumulation and excretion of end products were monitored inLumbriculus variegatus Muller throughout 48 h of anoxia. A transition period lasting about 4 h could be distinguished from subsequent events during which malate, present in high amounts in the resting animals, is utilized, probably by conversion to succinate. Up to the 12th hour of anoxia there is an increase in concentration of free amino acids, except aspartate. Glutamate increases rapidly during the first half hour but decreases thereafter. Beginning with the second hour of anoxia the alanine concentration increases at the same rate glutamate concentration decreases, but the source of nitrogen during the first hour is unknown. It is argued that the nitrogen required for the synthesis of some of the amino acids is ultimately derived from proteolysis. After about 3 h of anoxia propionate and acetate are synthesized. At first these acids accumulate in the tissues, but after 4–6 h they are excreted into the surrounding medium. Acetate is excreted over the whole experimental period at a constant rate, whereas the excretion rate of propionate decreases slowly with time. The propionate/acetate ratio is in excess of 2. Classic malate dismutation is by far the most important mechanism in the maintenance of redox balance. Depletion of glycogen stores appears to play an important role in determining anoxic survival time. Due to extremely low activity of PEPCK the ratio of the specific activities of PK and PEPCK is very high. Further, the kinetic properties of pyruvate kinase do not support the assumption of a shift of the glycolytic carbon flow at the PEP level.

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