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Journal ArticleDOI

A simple analysis of the "phosphocreatine shuttle"

TLDR
Experimental results demonstrating the transport aspects of the CK reaction emphasize only one feature of a more general notion of facilitated diffusion by near-equilibrium metabolic reactions and do not per se establish the existence of any physical or functional compartmentation of ATP, ADP, PCr, or creatine.
Abstract
The diffusive mobility of solutes chemically connected by reversible reactions in cells is analyzed as a problem of facilitated diffusion. By this term we mean that the diffusive flux of any substance, X, which is in one metabolic pathway, is effectively increased when it participates in a second and equilibrium reaction with another substance Y because the total flux of X in the pathway is the sum of the fluxes of X and Y. This notion is generalized and is seen to include the familiar enhanced intracellular diffusion of oxygen by oxymyoglobin. In this framework the function of creatine kinase (CK) is seen to have two aspects: 1) phosphocreatine (PCr) via the CK reaction buffers the cellular ATP and ADP concentrations and 2) transport of high-energy phosphates is predominantly in the chemical form of PCr. This predominance of PCr is a consequence of the maintained ATP, ADP, and total creatine levels and of the apparent equilibrium constant of the reaction. Thus experimental results demonstrating the transport aspects of the CK reaction emphasize only one feature of a more general notion of facilitated diffusion by near-equilibrium metabolic reactions and do not per se establish the existence of any physical or functional compartmentation of ATP, ADP, PCr, or creatine. PCr can be a large source for increasing inorganic phosphate levels during contractile activity, possibly as a metabolic regulator. Neither the transport nor buffer aspects can be quantitatively important in cells with small distances between ATP-utilizing and ATP-generating sites, such as is the case with cardiac myofibrils and mitochondria.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Thyrotoxic myopathy in mice: Accentuation by a creatine transport inhibitor

TL;DR: The results indicate that high concentrations of creatine and phosphocreatine are essential for the maintenance of muscle integrity during periods of metabolic stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitochondrial Activities of Phosphagen Kinases are Not Widely Distributed in the Invertebrates

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated whether the mitochondria of phosphagen kinases are present in invertebrate muscles and found that they are not widely distributed in the invertebrates.
Book ChapterDOI

Mathematical modeling of intracellular transport processes and the creatine kinase systems: a probability approach

TL;DR: A probability approach was used to describe mitochondrial respiration in the presence of substrates, ATP, ADP, Cr and PCr, and the results allow to consider the observed kinetic and thermodynamic iriegularities in behavior of structurally bound creatine kinase as a direct consequence of its tight coupling to translocase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attenuation by creatine of myocardial metabolic stress in Brattleboro rats caused by chronic inhibition of nitric oxide synthase.

TL;DR: Results indicate that creatine supplementation can attenuate the metabolic stress associated with L‐NAME administration and that this effect occurs as a consequence of the action of creatine on myocardial energy metabolism.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of extracellular buffer concentration and propionate on lactate efflux from frog muscle

TL;DR: Transmembrane lactate efflux appears to consist of two components, one of which is proton linked and carried either by undissociated lactic acid or coupled proton-lactate transport, the other being carried by independent lactate ions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping of metabolites in whole animals by 31P NMR using surface coils.

TL;DR: The metabolic state of skeletal muscle and brain within intact rats is monitored using high resolution phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance, indicating the diagnostic possibilities of the method.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cytosolic phosphorylation potential.

TL;DR: Agreement between two highly active enzyme systems in the same compartment is taken as evidence of the existence of near-equilibrium in both these systems and suggests that free cytosolic [sigma ADP] is probably 20-fold lower than measured cell ADP content in mitochondrial-containing tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transport of energy in muscle: the phosphorylcreatine shuttle

TL;DR: It was proposed in 1951 that contracting muscle fibers liberate creatine, which acts to produce an acceptor effect--later called respiratory control--on the muscle mitochondria, which established a molecular basis for a phosphorylcreatine-creatine shuttle for energy transport in heart and skeletal muscle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of pH and free Mg2+ on the Keq of the creatine kinase reaction and other phosphate hydrolyses and phosphate transfer reactions.

TL;DR: The observed equilibrium constants (Kobs) of the creatine kinase, myokinase, glucose-6-phosphatase, and fructose-1,6-diph phosphatase reactions have been determined at 38 degrees C, pH 7.0, ionic strength 0.25, and varying free magnesium concentrations.
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