Altered brain phosphocreatine and ATP regulation when mitochondrial creatine kinase is absent.

2001 
In cerebral gray matter, ATP concentration is closely maintained despite rapid, large increases in turnover and low substrate reserves. As seen in vivo by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, brain ATP is stable early in seizures, a state of high energy demand, and in mild hypoxia, a state of substrate deficiency. Like other tissues with high and variable ATP turnover, cerebral gray matter has high phosphocreatine (PCr) concentration and both cytosolic and mitochondrial creatine kinase (UbMi-CK) isoenzymes. To understand the physiology of brain creatine kinases, we used 31P NMR to study PCr and ATP regulation during seizures and hypoxia in mice with targeted deletion of the UbMi-CK gene. The baseline CK reaction rate constant (k) was higher in mutants than wild-types. During seizures, PCr and ATP decreased in mutants but not in wild-types. The k-value for the CK catalyzed reaction rate increased in wild-types but not in the mutants. Hypoxic mutants and wild-types showed similar PCr losses and stable ATP. During recovery from hypoxia, brain PCr and ATP concentrations returned to baseline in wild-types but were 20% higher than baseline in the mutants. We propose that UbMi-CK couples ATP turnover to the CK catalyzed reaction rate and regulates ATP concentration when synthesis is increased. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    21
    References
    41
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []