Abstract

Arginine kinase and creatine kinase that catalyze the transfer of a phosphate group between ATP and arginine and creatine, respectively, play an important role in cellular energetics. In contrast to most animals which exhibit a single phosphagen kinase activity (creatine kinase in chordates and arginine kinase in protostomians), echinoderms exhibit both arginine kinase and creatine kinase activities, sometimes in the same tissue. In contrast to chordates in which creatine kinases are dimers (consisting of two subunits of 40 kDa) and protostomians in which arginine kinases are usually monomers (40 kDa), echinoids contain specific phosphagen kinases: a dimeric arginine kinase (consisting of two subunits of 42 kDa) in eggs and a monomeric creatine kinase (145 kDa) in sperm. We have examined echinoderms from the five existing classes (echinoids, asteroids, ophiuroids, holothurians and crinoids) for the expression of these specific phosphagen kinases in different tissues. Gel filtration was used to determine the molecular masses of the native enzymes. Antibodies specific for arginine kinase or for creatine kinase were used to characterize the subunit composition of arginine kinase and creatine kinase after SDS/PAGE and transfer. In all echinoderms analyzed, arginine kinase always occurred as an enzyme of about 81 kDa consisting of two subunits of 42 kDa and creatine kinase as a monomeric enzyme of 140-155 kDa. The occurrence in echinoderms of both phosphagen kinases with distinct specificities and specific molecular structures is discussed from both a developmental and evolutionary point of view.

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