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Does intracellular metabolite diffusion limit post-contractile recovery in burst locomotor muscle?

TLDR
It is concluded that fiber SA:V and O2 flux exert more control than intracellular metabolite diffusive flux over the developmental changes in metabolic organization and metabolic fluxes that characterize these muscles.
Abstract
Post-metamorphic growth in the blue crab entails an increase in body mass that spans several orders of magnitude. The muscles that power burst swimming in these animals grow hypertrophically, such that small crabs have fiber diameters that are typical of most cells ( 600·µm). Thus, as the animals grow, their muscle fibers cross and greatly exceed the surface area to volume ratio (SA:V) and intracellular diffusion distance threshold that is adhered to by most cells. Large fiber size should not impact burst contractile function, but post-contractile recovery may be limited by low SA:V and excessive intracellular diffusion distances. A number of changes occur in muscle structure, metabolic organization and metabolic flux during development to compensate for the effects of increasing fiber size. In the present study, we examined the impact of intracellular metabolite diffusive flux on the rate of postcontractile arginine phosphate (AP) resynthesis in burst locomotor muscle from small and large animals. AP recovery was measured following burst exercise, and these data were compared to a mathematical reaction‐diffusion model of aerobic metabolism. The measured rates of AP resynthesis were independent of fiber size, while simulations of aerobic AP resynthesis yielded lower rates in large fibers. These contradictory findings are consistent with previous observations that there is an increased reliance on anaerobic metabolism for post-contractile metabolic recovery in large fibers. However, the model results suggest that the interaction between mitochondrial ATP production rates, ATP consumption rates and diffusion distances yield a system that is not particularly close to being limited by intracellular metabolite diffusion. We conclude that fiber SA:V and O2 flux exert more control than intracellular metabolite diffusive flux over the developmental changes in metabolic organization and metabolic fluxes that characterize these muscles.

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Do we underestimate the importance of water in cell biology

TL;DR: Water can generate small active clusters and macroscopic assemblies, which can both transmit information on different scales and allow water to execute an intricate three-dimensional 'ballet' while retaining complex order and enduring effects.
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Molecules in motion: influences of diffusion on metabolic structure and function in skeletal muscle

TL;DR: Experimental measurements of metabolic fluxes, diffusion distances and diffusion coefficients, coupled with reaction–diffusion mathematical models in a range of muscle types has started to reveal some general principles guiding muscle structure and metabolic function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fishes of southern South America: a story driven by temperature

TL;DR: Biological and ecological data of marine and freshwater fishes from the southern Neotropics, including Patagonia, are reviewed, and several examples of dependence on temperature are reported, from glacial times to today’s climate change.
Journal ArticleDOI

The long and winding road: influences of intracellular metabolite diffusion on cellular organization and metabolism in skeletal muscle.

TL;DR: The effect of diffusion distance on O(2) flux in muscle has been the subject of quantitative analyses for a century, but the influence of ATP diffusion from mitochondria to cellular ATPases on aerobic metabolism has received much less attention as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of oxygen and high-energy phosphate diffusion on metabolic scaling in three species of tail-flipping crustaceans

TL;DR: An examination of the influence of O2 and HEP diffusion on the observed rate of aerobic flux in muscle revealed that diffusion limitation was minimal under most conditions, suggesting that diffusion might act on the evolution of fiber design but usually does not directly limit aerobic flux.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Glycogenolysis during recovery from muscular work. The time course of phosphorylase activity is dependent on Pi concentration in the abdominal muscle of the shrimp Crangon crangon.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the glycogenolytic flux in the abdominal muscle of the shrimp even during post-exercise periods depends on the level of the a-form the activity of which is restricted in time and extent by the cytoplasmic Pi concentration.
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