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Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of anoxia upon energy sources and selected metabolic intermediates in the brains of fish, frog and turtle.

TLDR
The levels of the main cerebral energy reserves, ATP, P‐creatine, glycogen and glucose, and of several glycolytic intermediates and lactate, were measured in the brains of fish, turtle and frog and were similar to those found in mammalian brain.
Abstract
— The levels of the main cerebral energy reserves, ATP, P-creatine, glycogen and glucose, and of several glycolytic intermediates and lactate, were measured in the brains of fish (Carassius auratus), turtle (Pseudemys scripta elegans) and frog (Rana pipiens). The levels of glycogen in these brains were 2-9 times higher than those reported for mammals. In frog, cerebral glycogen levels were 35 per cent higher during the winter than in spring. The P-creatine: ATP ratios were 3 instead of the more usual (mammalian) value of 1. The levels of other intermediates were similar to those found in mammalian brain. When anoxia was produced by decapitation, changes in the various substances measured were similar to those in mammalian brain, but were much slower. The initial rate at which high-energy phosphate was used could be calculated from these changes. Values of 1.1 m-equiv./kg/min for fish and frog and of 0.46 m-equiv./kg/min for turtle were found, which are 1/20 and 1/50, respectively, of the rate in mouse brain. The rate of disappearance of high-energy phosphate reserves followed first-order kinetics for 4 hr in turtle and for at least an hour in the other species. Changes in metabolites as the experiment progressed were interpreted to indicate a progressively falling intracellular pH, prolonged inhibition of phosphofructokinase, and a long period of hexokinase inhibition.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology and physiology of hibernation and overwintering among freshwater fishes, turtles, and snakes

TL;DR: Freshwater fishes are the most northerly of freshwater ectotherms, followed by frogs, and North American freshwater snakes, turtles, and salamanders do not range farther north than southernmost Canada.
Book ChapterDOI

Free Arachidonic Acid and Other Lipids in the Nervous System During Early Ischemia and After Electroshock

TL;DR: The action of neurohormones and drugs on polar lipids of the nervous system has mainly been explored by measuring the 32P metabolism, but studies regarding the hydrophobic moiety of membrane lipids were limited to survey the fatty acid distribution and the uptake of labeled precursors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neonatal tolerance to hypoxia: a comparative-physiological approach.

TL;DR: Although anaerobic metabolism is improved in neonatal mammals by increased glycogen stores, reduced metabolic demands, and sustained wash-out of acid metabolites, neonatal hypoxia tolerance seems to be primarily based on the ability to maintain tissue aerobiosis as long as possible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of ischemia on metabolism of the brain of the newborn mouse

TL;DR: It is concluded that the chief factor in the resistance of very young animals to ischemia is the low cerebral metabolic rate, not high glycolytic capacity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Ischemia on Known Substrates and Cofactors of the Glycolytic Pathway in Brain

TL;DR: This is a record of the concentrations of the nonenzyme components of the Embden-Meyerhof system in mouse brain measured at brief intervals after the production of complete ischemia by decapitation, which resulted in increases in glycolytic rates of at least 4to 7-fold in different experimental groups of mice.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationships between substrates and enzymes of glycolysis in brain.

TL;DR: The combined analytical and kinetic information makes it seem likely that along the glycol.ytic pathway in mouse brain (a) no step is limited by the amount of enzyme present; (b) equilibrium is approximated at five or possibly six steps even during maximal glycolysis; (c) one step never reaches equilibrium; and (d) the hexokinase and phosphofructokinase steps are the only points at which there is absolute control of Glycolytic flux.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetic evidence for multiple binding sites on phosphofructokinase.

TL;DR: The kinetic findings have been interpreted to indicate the presence of not less than seven substrate, inhibitor, and deinhibitor sites (and possibly as many as 12) in the formulation of P-fructokinase, and it would appear that these sites are so arranged that the addition of one inhibitor (ATP) makes it easier to add the other
Journal ArticleDOI

Regional energy reserves in mouse brain and changes with ischaemia and anaesthesia.

TL;DR: Although this 'closed system' method of measuring metabolic rate is relatively cumbersome it avoids some of the uncertainties of other procedures based on in vitro measurements or blood flow and should be particularly useful for application to small areas of the brain for which there are no other methods available.