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Difference between revisions of "Krumschnabel 1997 J Comp Physiol B"

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{{Publication
{{Publication
|title=Krumschnabel G, Biasi C, Schwarzbaum PJ, Wieser W (1997) Acute and chronic effects of temperature, and of nutritional state, on ion homeostasis and energy metabolism in teleost hepatocytes. J Comp Physiol B 167:280-6.
|title=Krumschnabel G, Biasi C, Schwarzbaum PJ, Wieser W (1997) Acute and chronic effects of temperature, and of nutritional state, on ion homeostasis and energy metabolism in teleost hepatocytes. J Comp Physiol B 167:280-286.
|info=[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9203369 PMID:9203369]
|info=[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9203369 PMID:9203369]
|authors=Krumschnabel G, Biasi C, Schwarzbaum PJ, Wieser W
|authors=Krumschnabel G, Biasi C, Schwarzbaum PJ, Wieser W

Revision as of 15:23, 1 August 2013

Publications in the MiPMap
Krumschnabel G, Biasi C, Schwarzbaum PJ, Wieser W (1997) Acute and chronic effects of temperature, and of nutritional state, on ion homeostasis and energy metabolism in teleost hepatocytes. J Comp Physiol B 167:280-286.

Β» PMID:9203369

Krumschnabel G, Biasi C, Schwarzbaum PJ, Wieser W (1997) J Comp Physiol B

Abstract: Short- and long-term effects of temperature on ion flux and energy turnover were studied in hepatocytes from thermally acclimated trout and roach. In trout hepatocytes K+ efflux was insensitive towards acute exposure to low temperature but was downregulated during cold acclimation of the fish so as to balance the uncompensated decreased K+ (Rb+) uptake of the cells. In contrast, both K+ (Rb+) uptake and K+ efflux of roach hepatocytes were temperature sensitive in the short term. These acute effects, however, were offset during cold acclimation by a near perfect compensation of both fluxes leading to re-establishment of ion flux homeostasis at the original level. Our findings, based on a new method permitting the simultaneous monitoring of K+ efflux and uptake in the same cell population, provide experimental verification of two of the three possible strategies, recently discussed by Cossins et al. (1995), by which the ionic steady state of fish cells may adjust to acute and chronic temperature change. By comparing hepatocytes from two groups of trout, one kept on a maintenance diet (ration I), the other fed ad libitum (ration II), we discovered striking effects of nutritional state on the absolute levels as well as on the temperature relationships of K+ uptake and protein synthetic activity. Both of these functions in the hepatocytes increased in the ration II fed as compared to the ration I fed trouts, but the increase of protein synthetic activity was greater and more uniform at the three experimental temperatures than that of K+ uptake. Moreover, protein synthetic activity proved to be considerably more temperature sensitive than K+ uptake and, in contrast to the latter, showed a compensatory response after cold acclimation β€’ Keywords: K+ efflux/influx matching, sodium pump, rainbow trout, roach, protein synthesis, temperature acclimation

β€’ O2k-Network Lab: AT Innsbruck OROBOROS


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Tissue;cell: Liver  Preparation: Intact Cell; Cultured; Primary"Intact Cell; Cultured; Primary" is not in the list (Intact organism, Intact organ, Permeabilized cells, Permeabilized tissue, Homogenate, Isolated mitochondria, SMP, Chloroplasts, Enzyme, Oxidase;biochemical oxidation, ...) of allowed values for the "Preparation" property. 

Regulation: Substrate; Glucose; TCA Cycle"Substrate; Glucose; TCA Cycle" is not in the list (Aerobic glycolysis, ADP, ATP, ATP production, AMP, Calcium, Coupling efficiency;uncoupling, Cyt c, Flux control, Inhibitor, ...) of allowed values for the "Respiration and regulation" property.  Coupling state: ROUTINE 

HRR: Oxygraph-2k 

Environmental Physiology