Abstract

During contractions, when the rate of ATP hydrolysis exceeds that of ADP phosphorylation, inosine 5'-monophosphate (IMP) accumulates in skeletal muscle. If the cellular energy balance is not promptly restored, subsequent purine degradation to inosine via 5'-nucleotidase can occur, a process that is most robust in the slow-twitch red, as compared to fast-twitch, skeletal muscle. We measured the distribution of 5'-nucleotidase activity among membrane-bound and soluble fractions of fiber specific skeletal muscle sections and found most (80-90%) of the total 5'-nucleotidase activity to be membrane-bound. The 5' IMP nucleotidase activity present in the soluble fraction of muscle extracts differs among fiber types with slow-twitch red > fast-twitch red > mixed fibered > fast-twitch white. Experiments testing the substrate dependence of IMP and AMP dephosphorylation by the soluble fraction of muscle extracts revealed a lower Km toward IMP (approximately 0.7-1.5 mM) than AMP (1.9-2.8 mM). Among skeletal muscle fiber sections, the soluble 5'-nucleotidase activity present in slow-twitch red muscle extracts had the highest substrate affinity, the highest activity with IMP as substrate, and an estimated catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km) that was > 3-fold higher than calculated for fast-twitch muscle extracts. This is likely due to the Mg2+ dependent cytosolic 5' IMP nucleotidase isoform, since immunoprecipitation experiments revealed 3-4 times more activity in slow-twitch red than in fast-twitch red or fast-twitch white fibers, respectively. These finding are consistent with the previously recognized in vivo pattern of nucleoside formation by muscle where the soleus demonstrated extensive inosine formation at a much lower IMP content than fast-twitch red or fast-twitch white muscle fiber sections.

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