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Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 Review Life in the slow lane: molecular mechanisms of estivation夞 Kenneth B. Storey* Institute of Biochemistry, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1S 5B6 Received 13 January 2002; received in revised form 4 April 2002; accepted 10 April 2002 Abstract Estivation is a state of aerobic hypometabolism used by organisms to endure seasonally arid conditions, often in desert environments. Estivating species are often active for only a few weeks each year to feed and breed and then retreat to estivate in sheltered sites, often underground. In general, estivation includes a strong reduction in metabolic rate, a primary reliance on lipid oxidation to fuel metabolism, and methods of water retention, both physical (e.g. cocoons) and metabolic (e.g. urea accumulation). The present review focuses on several aspects of metabolic adaptation during estivation including changes in the activities of enzymes of intermediary metabolism and antioxidant defenses, the effects of urea on estivator enzymes, enzyme regulation by reversible protein phosphorylation, protein kinases and phosphatases involved in signal transduction mechanisms, and the role of gene expression in estivation. The focus is on two species: the spadefoot toad, Scaphiopus couchii, from the Arizona desert; and the land snail, Otala lactea, a native of the Mediterranean region. The mechanisms of metabolic depression in estivators are similar to those seen in hibernation and anaerobiosis, and contribute to the development of a unified set of biochemical principles for the control of metabolic arrest in nature. 䊚 2002 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved. Keywords: Scaphiopus couchii; Otala lactea; Signal transduction; Gene expression; Reversible phosphorylation; Riboflavin binding protein; Metabolic rate depression; Urea effects on enzymes 1. Introduction Estivation is a state of aerobic torpor that is probably best defined as a survival strategy for dealing with arid conditions, but is also typically 夞 This paper was originally presented at ‘Chobe 2001’; The Second International Conference of Comparative Physiology and Biochemistry in Africa, Chobe National Park, Botswana – August 18–24, 2001. Hosted by the Chobe Safari Lodge and the Mowana Safari Lodge, Kasane; and organised by Natural Events Congress Organizing ([email protected]). *Corresponding author. Tel.: q1-613-520-3678; fax: q1613-520-2569. E-mail address: kenneth [email protected] (K.B. Storey). associated with a lack of food availability and frequently with high environmental temperatures (Pinder et al., 1992; Abe, 1995; Land and Bernier, 1995). Estivation occurs widely in both vertebrates and invertebrates. Among vertebrates the list includes various air-breathing fish (prominently the lungfish), amphibians (frogs, toads, salamanders) and reptiles (lizards, crocodilians, turtles) as well as some small mammals (Bemis et al., 1987; Etheridge, 1990; Kennett and Christian, 1994; Abe, 1995; Land and Bernier, 1995; Wilz and Heldmaier, 2000). The physiology and biochemistry of estivation has been studied in greatest detail in two groups—anuran amphibians and pulmonate land snails. Estivation can be short term 1095-6433/02/$ - see front matter 䊚 2002 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved. PII: S 1 0 9 5 - 6 4 3 3 Ž 0 2 . 0 0 2 0 6 - 4 734 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 (Wilz and Heldmaier, 2000), but is more often employed to allow organisms to survive through a long dry season that is incompatible with active life. Animals often estivate for 9–10 months of the year, but there are numerous examples of continuous estivation stretching for 2 or more years. Spadefoot toads (Scaphiopus couchii) of the American southwest are a good example of anuran estivators. They may be active above ground for less than 20 nights of the year (Tocque et al., 1995). Their initial emergence from underground burrows is triggered by the first torrential rains of the summer. With this stimulus, toads quickly dig out from underground, males immediately set up breeding choruses, and mating and egg-laying occur within the first night in rainwater ponds. Adults then become ravenous eaters and over the next few days replenish the fuel reserves needed to sustain them for many more months underground. Animal adaptations for life in stressful environments typically include adjustments at multiple levels—behavioral, physiological and biochemical—and estivation is no different. The critical elements for long-term survival during estivation are water retention and sufficient fuel reserves. At a behavioral level, species seek sheltered locations in which to estivate that help them to conserve body water, minimize their exposure to the elements, and hide them from predators. For example, snails shelter in crevices, under logs, etc., lungfish burrow into the mud of drying streams, and toads dig deep underground. Fish often curl into a Ushape and anurans assume a crouched posture with limbs drawn in under the body; these postures reduce the surface area for evaporative water loss. Estivators also express physiological adaptations that defend the body from water loss during dormancy. Because water is lost during breathing and also across the skinyepithelium, animals typically enter estivation with large reserves of body water that can be drawn upon to keep tissues hydrated. Anurans, for example, have a huge reserve of water in the bladder that is slowly resorbed over time to replace tissue water lost by evaporation. Evaporative water loss during breathing is minimized by apnoic breathing patterns; for example, pulmonate land snails may breath only 2–3 timesyh and show patterns of discontinuous CO2 release and O2 uptake (Barnhart and McMahon, 1987). Evaporative water loss across the integument is also reduced by physical or chemical barriers. Snails secrete a mucus epiphragm to cover the aperture of the shell (Barnhart, 1983), lungfish secrete a cocoon of dried mucus (Bemis et al., 1987), and several frog species produce cocoons made of multiple layers of shed skin (Loveridge and Withers, 1981; Pinder et al., 1992). Water loss is also retarded by colligative means by elevating the osmolality of body fluids via the production of high concentrations of solutes. Urea is used for this purpose by various fish, amphibian and snail species (Rees and Hand, 1993; Land and Bernier, 1995; Withers and Guppy, 1996); for example, in spadefoot toads (that do not make cocoons) urea can rise to ;300 mM in blood after several months of estivation (McClanahan, 1967). Ultimately, however, estivating species also show high tolerance for tissue dehydration; estivating, arboreal and freeze tolerant species all top the list of desiccation tolerant anurans (Hillman, 1980; Shoemaker, 1992; Storey and Storey, 1996). Spadefoot toads endure the loss of as much as 60% of their total body water (representing ;50% of their body mass) after several months of natural estivation (McClanahan 1967) and, with bladders drained prior to experimental dehydration, they still endured the loss of 45% of body water (Hillman, 1980). To deal with metabolic fuel supply during dormancy, estivation is prefaced by the laying down of large reserves of endogenous fuels. For vertebrate species, energy metabolism during estivation is based primarily on the aerobic oxidation of lipids together with some protein catabolism and a relatively small contribution by carbohydrates. In spadefoot toads, for example, the net contributions to the total energy budget over the estivating season were calculated as 72% from fatty acid oxidation, 23% from protein, and 5% from carbohydrate (Jones, 1980). Protein use changes over time, being low during the early weeks of estivation but rising as the water potential of the soil declines and the demand for urea synthesis rises. However, carbohydrate catabolism appears to be of major importance for land snail estivation (Livingstone and de Zwaan, 1983). Fuel use over 7 months of estivation was monitored in two species of mountain snails, Oreohelix strigosa and O. subrudis (Rees and Hand, 1993). Polysaccharide was the primary metabolic fuel for the initial 2–4 months of estivation and when this was depleted, net protein catabolism began; a low rate of lipid catabolism was maintained throughout. K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 Conservation of fuel reserves is a key issue for long-term survival and this results from one of the most important adaptations that support estivation: metabolic rate depression. Metabolic rate during estivation is low, typically only approximately 10– 30% of the corresponding resting metabolic rate in aroused individuals at the same temperature (Herreid, 1977; Bemis et al., 1987; Pinder et al., 1992; Pedler et al., 1996). The greater the reduction in metabolic rate, the longer the time that a fixed reserve of fuel can sustain basal metabolism. Part of the reduction in metabolic rate comes from the cessation of digestion and a lack of voluntary movements, and part is due to reduced rates of breathing and heart beat as well as apnoic breathing patterns and their consequent effects on pH and oxygen consumption in oxy-conforming species. However, a substantial component is due to a coordinated reduction in the rates of energy turnover in tissues. For example, in vitro incubation studies with isolated tissues from both frogs and snails have shown intrinsic metabolic depression that is sustained for several hours after tissue excision (Guppy et al., 1994). This intrinsic component accounted for approximately 30% of the overall metabolic depression observed when isolated mantle tissues from control vs. estivating land snails, Helix aspersa, were compared; the remaining 70% was attributed to extrinsic factors (PO2, pH) that changed during estivation (Pedler et al., 1996). Comparable studies with isolated cells from H. aspersa hepatopancreas attributed approximately half of the metabolic depression to intrinsic factors (Guppy et al., 2000). Bishop and Brand (2000) showed that metabolic depression included proportional reductions in the rates of three components of oxygen consumption: nonmitochondrial respiration, mitochondrial respiration driving ATP turnover, and mitochondrial respiration driving proton cycling. Non-mitochondrial respiration decreased as oxygen tension was lowered and was responsible for the oxygen-conforming behavior of the cells. This implicated intrinsic factors in the suppression of mitochondrial oxygen consumption during estivation. Using metabolic control analysis, Bishop et al. (2002) assessed the influences on mitochondrial respiration rate that resulted in an approximate two-thirds reduction in respiration rate in hepatopancreas cells from estivating, compared with control, snails. Mitochondrial respiration was divided into two blocks: mitochondrial membrane potential produc- 735 ers and mitochondrial membrane potential consumers, with membrane potential (Dcm) as the intermediate connecting the blocks. Approximately 75% of the decrease in mitochondrial respiration during estivation could be attributed to changes in the Dcm producers (i.e. the kinetics of substrate oxidation), with only 25% of the response attributed to changes in the Dcm consumers (i.e. ATP turnover) (Bishop et al., 2002; Curtis et al., in press). These data suggest the key importance of controls that decrease substrate oxidation and ATP production (rather than those that decrease ATP use) in the development and regulation of the hypometabolic state. Factors contributing to intrinsic metabolic rate depression include suppressed rates of fuel catabolism, ion channel arrest, and reduced rates of protein synthesis (Churchill and Storey, 1989; Storey and Storey, 1990; Rees and Hand, 1991; Guppy et al., 1994). For example, analysis of changes in the levels of glycolytic intermediates during estivation in land snails, as well as estivation-induced changes in the kinetic properties of enzymes in estivators, indicated glycolytic rate depression during long-term estivation (Churchill and Storey, 1989; Brooks and Storey, 1997). Suppression of oxidative metabolism was also indicated by cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) activities in mitochondria from hepatopancreas of estivating snails, Cepaea nemoralis, that were reduced by 84% (although total mitochondrial protein was unaffected) (Stuart et al., 1998). Membrane-bound proteins such as CCO are responsive to changes in their phospholipid environment and the selective suppression of CCO or other enzymes could come from a change in the composition of mitochondrial phospholipids. Notably, the cardiolipin content of hepatopancreas mitochondrial membranes fell by 83% during estivation (Stuart et al., 1998) and several studies have shown a direct dependence of CCO activity on the presence of cardiolipin in the mitochondrial inner membrane (Robinson, 1993). Protein synthesis is also suppressed in estivating animals. Estimates from in vitro studies with liver slices from control vs. estivating Australian desert frogs (Neobratrachus centralis) indicated a 67% decrease in the rate of protein synthesis in estivating animals which accounted for 52% of the metabolic depression in liver (Fuery et al., 1998). The present article reviews some recent advances in our understanding of the biochemistry of estivation with a particular focus on recent studies 736 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 in our lab that address the role of reversible phosphorylation in enzyme control, the signal transduction mechanisms that mediate changes in metabolism, adaptive changes to activities and properties of selected enzymesyproteins, and the role of gene expression in providing new protein variants for specific roles in the hypometabolic state. 2. Coordinated control by reversible protein phosphorylation in metabolic rate depression Key to the long-term maintenance of a hypometabolic state such as estivation are biochemical mechanisms that strongly reduce net ATP turnover. The transition to the hypometabolic state must be regulated in order to achieve a coordinated suppression of many metabolic functions and set up a new balance between ATP-producing and ATPutilizing reactions in cells. The need for such coordinated control has been amply illustrated by many studies of the injurious effects of hypothermia or hypoxia in mammals (summarized by Hochachka, 1986). When ATP production in mammals is disrupted by a drop in temperature or limited oxygen availability, cellular ATP levels fall rapidly and membrane potential difference soon collapses because ATP-dependent ion pumps (that move ions against their concentration gradient) can no longer keep pace with the opposing facilitated flow of ions through ion channels. When membrane potential difference is lost, a variety of destructive events are unleashed that quickly become irreversible; many of these are Ca2qmediated and arise due to an uncontrolled influx of Ca2q into the cytoplasm when depolarization opens voltage-gated channels. Organisms that incorporate facultative hypometabolism into their lifestyle (e.g. estivators, hibernators, anoxia-tolerant species) must implement a suite of control mechanisms that both coordinate an overall steep suppression of metabolic rate and adjust the relative rates of many cell functions. Thus, whereas rates of energy-expensive functions such as ion pumping or protein synthesis are all strongly suppressed in hypometabolic systems, their percentage inhibition can vary widely in line with their relative importance in the hypometabolic state. In hibernating ground squirrels, for example, the rate of protein synthesis in brain was reduced to only 0.04% of the mean rate in euthermia (Frerichs et al., 1998), whereas the activities of sodiumypotassium ATPase were reduced by 40– 60% in most tissues and unaffected in heart (MacDonald and Storey, 1999). The biochemical mechanism(s) used for metabolic suppression in estivation need to be powerful yet easily reversible to allow a quick return to normal metabolism during arousal. Indeed, estivators return to active life with great speed. Spadefoot toads are instantly alert even when they are dug out of earth-filled tubs as gently as possible and when estivating land snails, Otala lactea, are misted with water the foot can emerge from the shell in as little as 5 min. Thus, estivation is not a dormancy in the sense that organisms are unresponsive or must undergo major metabolicydevelopmental changes in order to return to active life, and this further emphasizes the fact the mechanisms of metabolic suppression in estivators must be (a) rapidly reversible, and (b) require very little de novo protein synthesis and reorganization of metabolism. One of the regulatory mechanisms that fits these requirements is reversible protein phosphorylation and in a variety of studies we have shown that this mechanism plays a key role in the regulation of multiple metabolic functions in estivation, hibernation, and anaerobiosis in both vertebrate and invertebrate systems (Storey and Storey, 1990; Storey, 1996, 1997, 1998; Brooks and Storey, 1997). Large changes to the activity state of many enzymes and functional proteins can be made via the addition or removal of covalently bound phosphate through the action of protein kinases and protein phosphatases. The virtually onyoff control of glycogen phosphorylase (GP) that is provided by this mechanism is a classic example, and a coordinated regulation of the rate of carbohydrate catabolism in hypometabolic states is often supplied by reversible phosphorylation controls on key regulatory enzymes including GP, 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase (PFK), pyruvate kinase (PK) and pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH). 2.1. Reversible phosphorylation control of enzymes in land snails The first demonstration that reversible phosphorylation was involved in metabolic control during estivation came from studies of O. lactea. In a series of studies we showed that carbohydrate catabolism is suppressed in a coordinated fashion in estivating snails via reversible phosphorylation K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 control over enzymes including GP, PFK, PK and PDH (reviewed by Brooks and Storey, 1997). Protein phosphorylation changes the charge distribution on enzymes so that the phosphorylated and dephosphorylated forms of enzymes are separable by isoelectrofocusing or ion exchange chromatography. Isofocusing trials provided evidence that estivation alters the phosphorylation state of O. lactea enzymes. The isoelectric point (pI) of both PFK and PK was 5.85 in foot muscle of control snails, but rose to 6.75 for PFK and 6.20 for PK in muscle from estivating animals. By contrast, the pI for aldolase, which is not regulated by reversible phosphorylation, was 4.84 and 4.82 in the two states. Kinetic analysis of enzymes from control vs. estivating snails documented both a stable modification of enzyme properties during estivation and showed that kinetic properties during estivation were consistent with a less active enzyme form. Thus, PK from foot or mantle of estivating snails showed changes, compared with controls, that included a significant reduction in enzyme affinity for both substrates, PEP and ADP (S0.5 values rose by 18–83%) and an increase in enzyme sensitivity to inhibitors, alanine and ATP (I50 values dropped by 33–58%, except for a rise in I50 alanine of mantle PK) (Whitwam and Storey, 1990). Similar effects were seen for PK from foot muscle of H. aspersa (Fields, 1992) and ventricle of H. lucorum (Michaelidis and Pardalidis, 1994). The changes in O. lactea PK properties during estivation were very similar to those that resulted from anoxia exposure of the snails and were qualitatively the same as the anoxia-induced phosphorylation of PK that occurs in various marine molluscs (Brooks and Storey, 1997). Thus, it appears that the same controls over PK activity are used in estivation and anoxia to facilitate overall glycolytic rate suppression. An analysis of the time course of changes in the I50 for ATP by foot PK showed that this parameter dropped from aerobic to estivating values between 12 and 48 h after food and water were withdrawn, but rebounded within 10 min when 22 day estivated snails were aroused by misting with water. The mechanism of estivationinduced changes in PK properties was confirmed from in vitro incubation studies. Stimulation of protein kinase activities in foot muscle extracts from control snails resulted in a reduction in the I50 value for alanine of PK, but did not affect the 737 enzyme from estivating snails whereas treatment with alkaline phosphatase elevated the I50 value of estivator PK, but did not affect the control enzyme (Whitwam and Storey, 1990). Hence, the enzymes in control vs. estivating snails were identified as the low and high phosphate forms of PK, respectively. The identity of the protein kinase involved in PK control during estivation or anoxia in O. lactea remains to be determined. Levels of cyclic AMP drop in both foot and hepatopancreas over the early hours of estivation (Brooks and Storey, 1996) and the percentage of protein kinase A present as the active catalytic subunit remains constant or decreases in estivation (Brooks and Storey, 1994a). Therefore, a role for protein kinase A in the suppression of PK activity in estivation seems unlikely (Brooks and Storey, 1994a). However, cyclic GMP levels rise during the early hours of estivation (and during anoxia exposure) in O. lactea and this implicates protein kinase G in the stress-induced suppression of PK activity in snails (Brooks and Storey, 1996). Similar results were seen when PFK was assessed in control vs. estivating snails (Whitwam and Storey, 1991). Stable modifications to fructose-6-phosphate substrate affinity and inhibitory activator constants were found that were consistent with a less active enzyme form in estivating animals (Table 1). Furthermore, in vitro incubation studies indicated that estivation-induced changes in enzyme properties were the result of PFK phosphorylation so that, as with PK, the enzymes in control vs. estivating snails were identified as the low and high phosphate forms of PFK, respectively. PDH, the enzyme that gates the entry of carbohydrate into the tricarboxylic acid cycle, is also regulated by reversible phosphorylation during estivation in O. lactea. PDH occurs in active (dephosphorylated) and inactive (phosphorylated) forms. The percentage of PDH present in the active a form decreased from approximately 98% in controls to approximately 60% in estivating animals over the first 25–30 h, but rebounded to control values within 1 h when snails were aroused (Brooks and Storey, 1992). Oppositely directed controls on PFK and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) are often used to promote unidirectional flux through glycolysis or gluconeogenesis depending on tissue metabolic requirements. In vertebrate liver, for example, both enzymes are regulated by fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (F2,6P2) and AMP, but these metabolites 738 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 Table 1 Kinetic properties of 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase and fructose1,6-bisphosphatase from Otala lactea hepatopancreas: control vs. 22 day estivation Control Estivated PFK Activity, mmolyminyg wet wt. S0.5 fructose-6-P, mM Ka AMP, mM Ka fructose-2,6-P2, mM I50 citrate, mM 0.49"0.04 2.4"0.2 300"10 0.70"0.09 46"3.5 0.78"0.05a 3.2"0.1a 230"10a 2.3"0.4a 24"0.5a FBPase Activity, mmolyminyg wet wt. S0.5 fructose-1,6-P2, mM I50 AMP, mM I50 fructose-2,6-P2, mM I50 CaCl2, mM 0.45"0.04 1.04"0.48 53.5"3.8 0.40"0.06 0.54"0.04 0.53"0.11 1.13"0.14 56.6"10.6 0.33"0.01 0.62"0.02 a Significantly different from the corresponding control, P0.05. Data are means"S.E.M., ns3 for FBPase and ns4–10 for PFK. Data for PFK are from Whitwam and Storey (1991) and the preparation of hepatopancreas extracts for FBPase assay was also as described in that paper. Assay conditions for FBPase were 50 mM imidazole buffer, pH 7.2, 0.2 mM NADP, 5 mM MgCl2 with varying F1,6P2 for S0.5 determinations, and 7 mM F1,6P2 for I50 determinations. I50 values are defined as the inhibitor concentration that reduces enzyme velocity by 50% and were determined from plots of Vo yVi vs. wIx. activate PFK and inhibit FBPase. Phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase also has opposite effects on the two liver enzymes, inhibiting PFK but activating FBPase. During estivation, however, the rates of both glycolysis and gluconeogenesis should be suppressed as part of the overall metabolic depression, and so we hypothesized that phosphorylation-mediated suppression of PFK in tissues of estivating O. lactea (discussed above) would not be met by an opposite activation of FBPase. Indeed, this seems to be the case. Contrary to the results for PFK, an analysis of the kinetic properties of FBPase from hepatopancreas of control vs. estivating snails showed no significant differences in a range of enzyme properties including maximal activity, Km for substrate, and I50 values for inhibitors between the two states (Table 1). However, activities of both PFK and FBPase may be strongly influenced by changes in the levels of the allosteric effector, fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (F2,6P2), during estivation. Levels of F2,6P2 decreased by 11-fold in hepatopancreas during estivation, from 0.56"0.20 mM in controls to 0.05"0.01 mM in 22 day estivated snails (Whitwam and Storey, 1991). Reduced F2,6P2 could potentiate FBPase activity (and gluconeogenesis in general) during estivation by releasing enzyme inhibition by this metabolite whereas, oppositely, the reduced F2,6P2 levels, coupled with the 3.5-fold rise in Ka F2,6P2 for PFK (Table 1), would greatly lower the influence of this activator on PFK activity during estivation. High F2,6P2 typically mediates a high glucose signal in cells that potentiates the use of carbohydrate for anabolic purposes (Hue and Rider, 1987). Low F2,6P2, by contrast, potentiates glucose export in two ways: (a) by inhibiting PFK so that glycogenolysis can be directed into glucose output; and (b) by activating FBPase to promote gluconeogenesis. Indeed, F2,6P2 levels are reduced in liver-like tissues in multiple situations where glycolysis is inhibited andyor metabolic rate is suppressed including hypoxia, anoxia, starvation, freezing and responses to various hormones (Hue and Rider, 1987; Storey, 1988; Vazquez-Illanes and Storey, 1993). Gluconeogenesis is typically important in states of aerobic dormancy such as estivation and hibernation because it utilizes inputs of glycerol (from triglyceride catabolism) or amino acids (from protein breakdown) to provide a sustained low production of glucose that is needed to fuel selected tissues. Hence, changes in tissue F2,6P2 levels may be key to shifting the relative flux through the PFK vs. FBPase loci during estivation in favor of FBPase and gluconeogenesis. Estivation also had a marked effect on the enzyme that is responsible for F2,6P2 synthesisy degradation. This enzyme is bifunctional. Acting as a 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase (PFK-2) it synthesizes F2,6P2, but in the reverse direction it acts as a fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase (F2,6Pase) to catabolize F2,6P2. Phosphorylation of the mammalian liver enzyme by cAMP-dependent protein kinase activates the F2,6Pase function and inactivates the PFK-2 activity (Hue and Rider, 1987). Analysis of the PFK-2 activity in O. lactea foot and hepatopancreas is shown in Table 2. Major changes in the kinetic properties of foot muscle PFK-2 were noted during estivation. The enzyme from 22 day estivated snails showed a Km for fructose-6-P that was 3.1-fold higher than that of the control enzyme whereas the Km ATP dropped to 42% of the control value. Both of these stable changes in enzyme properties indicate of a covalent modification of PFK-2 during estivation, probably as a result of enzyme phosphorylation. These estivation-induced K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 changes in properties would reduce the enzyme’s PFK-2 activity and probably enhance its F2,6Pase activity. The effect of estivation on Km fructose-6P would particularly influence enzyme function for levels of this substrate drop in vivo in foot during estivation (from 16 mM in controls to 7 mM in 22 day estivating snails) whereas ATP levels in foot were substantially higher than the enzyme Km value in both cases (830–1160 mM) (Churchill and Storey, 1989). In hepatopancreas a different effect of estivation on PFK-2 was seen. Maximal activity of the enzyme was reduced by 38% during estivation, without changes in enzyme kinetic properties (Table 2). This suggests a possible down-regulation enzyme synthesis during estivation that could be responsible for the reduced levels of F2,6P2 in hepatopancreas. Effects of estivation on PFK-2 in both tissues are consistent with a starved state and similar responses by mammalian liver PFK-2 characterizes carbohydrate sparing during starvation in mammalian liver (Hue and Rider, 1987). 2.2. Reversible phosphorylation control of enzymes in spadefoot toads Reversible phosphorylation control also plays a major role in the control of metabolic rate depression in estivating toads. Cowan and Storey (1999) evaluated estivation-associated changes in PK and PFK in toad skeletal muscle. Isoelectrofocusing revealed that two forms of each enzyme were present in toad muscle and that their proportions changed substantially after 2 months of estivation at 15 8C. For both enzymes, estivation led to a strong increase in the proportion of total activity in peak II (pIs6.2–6.4), compared with peak I (pIs5.3–5.4) (Fig. 1). For PK the distribution 739 Fig. 1. Pyruvate kinase elution in two peaks after isoelectric focusing of spadefoot toad leg muscle extracts. (a) Extract from control toads, (b) extract from 2 month estivated toads. PK activity is expressed as a percentage of the total activity applied to the column. From Cowan and Storey (1999). was 23% in Peak I and 77% in Peak II in muscle extracts from control toads, whereas after estivation the proportions were 13% in Peak I and 87% in Peak II. For PFK, approximately 50% of activity was in each peak in extracts from control toads but this changed to ;25% in Peak I and 75% in Peak II in estivators. In vitro incubation of muscle extracts with 32P-ATP resulted in strong radiolabeling of the enzymes in Peak I, but not Peak II. This provided evidence that the basis of the estivation-associated change in enzyme distribution was reversible protein phosphorylation and, furthermore, that the effect of estivation was to increase the proportion of the dephosphorylated (Peak II) enzymes in muscle. Reverse phase HPLC also confirmed that the subunits of PK and PFK found in Peak I contained 32P. Evidence that cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) was the enzyme responsible for the phosphorylation of peak I enzymes came from in vitro incubations in the presence vs. the absence of the PKA inhibitor, PKA-I (5-24), followed by immunoprecipitation Table 2 Properties of 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase from Otala lactea: effect of 22 day estivation Foot muscle Activity, nmolyminyg wet wt. Km fructose-6-P, mM Km ATP, mM a Hepatopancreas Control Estivated Control Estivated 0.60"0.08 8.77"2.53 73.2"7.80 0.48"0.04 27.4"4.56a 30.5"6.90a 0.92"0.09 10.7"1.00 590"55 0.57"0.05a 9.90"1.00 650"100 Significantly different from the corresponding control value, P-0.05. Tissue extracts were prepared and PFK-2 assayed as in Vazquez-Illanes and Storey (1993), except that the supernatant from fractionation with 12% wyv polyethylene glycol 8000 was used for assay with optimal substrate conditions of 1 mM fructose-6-P (q3 mM glucose-6-P), and 2.5 or 5 mM Mg.ATP for foot or hepatopancreas. Data are means"S.E.M., ns3 for Km values, ns10 for activity. 740 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 of PK or PFK with specific antibodies. The amount of radiolabeled PK in immunoprecipitates was 36fold higher when extracts were incubated with 32PATP and PKA alone, compared with incubations that also contained PKA-I; the comparable value for PFK was 3.2-fold. Kinetic analysis also showed significant differences in properties of the two forms of toad skeletal muscle PK and PFK. For PK, the Km for phosphoenolpyruvate and the Ka for fructose-1,6bisphosphate of the Peak II (low phosphate) enzyme were 1.6-fold and 2.4-fold higher, respectively, than the values for the Peak I (high phosphate) form (Cowan and Storey, 1999). These differences suggest that Peak II PK is the less active enzyme form, and coupled with the shift to predominantly the Peak II form during estivation, the data are consistent with a suppression of PK activity in estivating muscle. Phosphorylation of vertebrate skeletal muscle PFK typically occurs during exercise and the phospho-enzyme shows increased binding to myofibrils in active muscle (Foe and Kemp, 1982). Therefore, the increased content of the Peak II, low phosphate, form of PFK in muscle of estivating, inactive toads is also consistent with metabolic suppression during estivation. Peak II PFK also showed reduced sensitivity to inhibition by Mg:ATP (I50 50% higher) compared with Peak I PFK, suggesting that the enzyme in estivating muscle is less tightly regulated by cellular adenylate status than in control toads. Data for both enzymes are consistent with less active enzyme forms and overall metabolic rate depression during estivation. 3. Signal transduction 3.1. Protein kinase A Given the prominent role of reversible phosphorylation in enzymatic control during estivation, it was obvious that protein kinases and protein phosphatases must play a role in transitions to and from the hypometabolic state during estivation. Effects of estivation on the activities of seriney threonine protein kinases and phosphatases have recently been evaluated in spadefoot toad organs (Cowan et al., 2000). The reduced content of Peak I enzymes (both PK and PFK) during estivation suggested a reduced activity of PKA during estivation and indeed, the organ-specific responses of PKA during estivation were consistent those pre- Table 3 Effect of estivation on protein kinases A and C in spadefoot toad tissues: the percentage of PKA present as the active catalytic subunit (PKAc) and the percentage of PKC present as the active, membrane-bound enzyme % PKAc Control Brain Liver Muscle Heart Kidney 57.0"8.0 97.0"5.0 80.0"6.0 38.0"3.0 82.0"2.0 % PKC membrane bound Estivated a 25.0"3.0 62.0"8.0a 47.7"1.0a 20.0"5.0a 62.0"4.0a Control Estivated 45.8"1.6 46.6"5.7 29.6"5.6 62.2"1.4 70.8"12.0 21.5"3.2a 16.4"2.4a 29.8"3.9 65.6"1.1 18.7"4.7a a Significantly different from the corresponding control value, P-0.05. From Cowan et al. (2000). Note that total PKA activity did not change in any tissue during estivation whereas total PKC activity changed only in liver and kidney. Data are means"S.E.M., ns4. dictions. Table 3 shows that the percentage of the enzyme present as the free catalytic subunit (%PKAc), the active form, was strongly reduced in all organs tested during estivation. A common role for PKA is the activation of fuel catabolism, frequently as a response to hormones such as adrenaline or glucagon; for example, PKA mediates the activation of both glycogen phosphorylase and hormone sensitive lipase to increase the breakdown of carbohydrate and lipid stores, respectively. Therefore, the reduced %PKAc in toad organs during estivation is consistent with lower rates of fuel catabolism and other PKA-mediated processes during dormancy. However, total PKA activity was unaltered during estivation (Cowan et al., 2000) and this maintains organ sensitivity to PKA-mediated signals, so that fuel catabolism and metabolic rate can be rapidly re-elevated during the arousal process. 3.2. Protein kinase C Ca2q-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase C (PKC) mediates intracellular responses to multiple events including cell proliferation, differentiation, exocytosis, and neural activity (Kikkawa et al., 1989). The enzyme is distributed between membrane-bound and cytosolic forms and in response to extracellular stimuli that elevate phosphatidylserine and Ca2q, PKC is translocated from inactive cytosolic pools to the plasma membrane where it becomes active. Hence, a key parameter in the analysis of PKC activity is the K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 percentage that is membrane-bound. Analysis of the percentage of membrane-bound PKC in toad organs showed a strong reduction in this parameter in all toad tissues tested during estivation (Table 3). In addition, total PKC activity also decreased by 57% in liver during estivation (Cowan et al., 2000). The net effect then, was a reduction in the amount of active membrane-bound PKC during estivation, to 50% of the control value in brain and kidney and to just 13% in liver. This low amount of active PKC is consistent with the reduced organ metabolic rate of estivation and suggests that various PKC-regulated metabolic processes are suppressed in the hypometabolic state. Furthermore, the similar responses of PKA and PKC suggest that suppression of protein kinase-mediated signal transduction pathways is important for the induction and maintenance of the hypometabolic state during estivation. 3.3. Protein phosphatases 1 and 2 The responses by protein phosphatases to metabolic stress are typically opposite to those of their protein kinase partners. However, an analysis of estivation effects on the activities of protein phosphatase (PP) types 1, 2A and 2C in toad organs, showed only a few changes in phosphatase activities in the hypometabolic state (Cowan et al., 2000). PP-1 was quantified in dilute, trypsintreated extracts to release any enzyme bound to inhibitor proteins and give a measure of total PP1 activity and also in untreated extracts to measure the free, active enzyme (Price et al., 1986). Total PP-1 activity (in trypsin-treated extracts) and the percentage of free, active enzyme (in untreated extracts) changed in four organs of estivating toads, but changes in these two parameters were generally oppositely directed so that the net change in active PP-1 was low in liver, heart and gut (Cowan et al., 2000). However, active PP-1 in kidney fell from 1.16 Uymg in control toads to 0.33 Uymg in estivated animals. What is striking about these results is that whereas PKA and PKC activities were uniformly suppressed in toad organs, PP-1 activities did not show an opposite rise but remained constant or were reduced. PP2A activity was also constant (brain, skeletal muscle, lung, kidney) or reduced by 29–43% (liver, heart, gut) in estivating toads, whereas PP2C activity decreased by 50% in heart, was unaffected in three organs, and rose in brain, muscle 741 and gut of estivating animals (Cowan et al., 2000). The conclusion from this analysis is that the normally oppositely-directed responses by seriney threonine kinases and phosphatases are abandoned during estivation, and both arms of these signal transduction mechanisms are suppressed in estivation. 3.4. Tyrosine kinases and phosphatases Multiple signal transduction systems are present in cells and all can potentially contribute to the support of estivation. The possible roles of protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) and protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) in organismal responses to environmental stress have received little consideration to date. However, a new study with spadefoot toads provides some initial evidence that PTKs and PTPs have roles to play in estivation. Protein phosphorylation on tyrosyl residues was first identified approximately 20 years ago (Witte et al., 1980; Hunter and Sefton, 1980) and reversible control of proteins via the actions of PTKs and PTPs is now known to be involved in many cell functions (Chen et al., 1987; Chou et al., 1987). Both PTKs and PTPs exist in multiple forms and in two broad classes: receptor (membrane-associated) and non-receptor (or nontransmembrane) enzymes. Among PTKs, the receptor types, such as the EGF, PDGF and insulin receptor tyrosine kinases, have attracted the most attention but cytosolic PTKs have also been found in all mammalian tissues tested (Elberg et al., 1995). Elevated PTK activities have been associated with multiple cellular responses including cell differentiation in rat lung (Srivastava, 1985), hypotonic cell swelling of cardiac myocytes (Sadoshima et al., 1996), and tumor growth (Rosen et al., 1986). To assess PTK and PTP responses to estivation, we chose an initial approach that broadly surveyed PTK and PTP classes in control vs. 2 month estivated toads by monitoring four parameters in multiple tissues: changes in total enzyme activities, changes in enzyme distribution between soluble and insoluble fractions, changes in enzyme elution patterns off ion exchange chromatography and, for PTPs only, changes enzyme response to different phospho-substrates (Cowan and Storey, 2001). Analysis of these parameters for PTKs revealed the following: (1) total PTK activity decreased significantly by 27–52% in liver, lung and skeletal 742 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 Table 4 Effect of estivation on total protein tyrosine kinase and protein tyrosine phosphatase activities in organs of spadefoot toads, Scaphiopus couchii PTK PTP Active Heart Liver Lung Muscle 1499"171 3217"214 3224"293 2359"152 Estivated (57%) (58%) (88%) (71%) a 2488"291 (66%) 1841"154a (60%) 1540"85a (71%) 1720"175a (63%) Active Estivated 12.5"2.2 (33%) 260"42.2 (37%) 67.9"14.6 (46%) 60.0"6.4 (46%) 21.8"2.2 (54%)a 118"12.8 (44%)a 57.0"10.9 (56%) 85.7"12.7 (72%) a Activities are nanomoles of phosphate transferred per minute per gram wet weight, ns3–4, measuring phosphate transfer onto a poly Glu–Tyr substrate for PTK and phosphate removal from the peptide, ENDpYINASL, for PTP. Values in brackets show the mean percentage of the total activity that is soluble. Modified from Cowan and Storey (2001). Significantly different from the corresponding value in active toads, P-0.05. muscle during estivation, but rose by 66% in heart (Table 4). (2) The distribution of PTKs between soluble, cytoplasmic (13 000=g supernatant) and insoluble, membrane-associated (Triton-extracted) forms shifted substantially in some organs during estivation; for example, PTKs in lung decreased from 88% soluble in controls to 71% soluble in estivated toads (Table 4). (3) Changes in PTK activities resulted from effects on both the soluble and insoluble enzymes in heart and liver, but were due to changes in soluble enzymes only in lung and muscle (Fig. 2). (4) Three major peaks of PTK activity were identified in both soluble and insoluble fractions of skeletal muscle via DEAE Sephadex chromatography and distinct shifts in their elution positions were seen for one peak in the soluble fraction, and two in the insoluble fraction when extracts from control vs. estivated toads were compared (Cowan and Storey, 2001). A stable change in the elution position of an enzyme on ion exchange is indicative of a covalent modification that alters protein charge and this could suggest that PTKs are themselves subject to reversible protein phosphorylation during estivation. Thus, it is apparent that PTKs also respond to estivation in toad organs, that their activities may be modified by multiple mechanisms (altered activities, solubleyinsoluble distribution, possible reversible phosphorylation), and that they may be involved in regulating responses by various metabolic processes in the hypometabolic state. Analysis of PTP activities in spadefoot toad tissues revealed that the same types of control mechanisms applied to them (Cowan and Storey, 2001). For example, total PTP activity changed in some organs (increased by 75% in heart, decreased Fig. 2. Effect of estivation on the activities of protein tyrosine kinases in (a) soluble and (b) insoluble (membrane-associated, Tritonextracted) fractions of tissues from active (gray bars) and 2 month estivated (black bars) spadefoot toads. Data are Uymg protein, means"S.E.M., ns4, one unit being the amount of enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of one nanomole of Pi to the poly Glu–Tyr (4:1) substrate per minute at 30 8C. a—Significantly different from the corresponding control value by the Student’s t-test, P-0.05. Modified from Cowan and Storey (2001). K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 by 55% in liver) during estivation (Table 4), as did the distribution of PTPs between soluble and insoluble fractions (e.g. soluble PTP activities rose in skeletal muscle and heart and insoluble PTPs decreased). Evidence of enzyme covalent modification came again from shifts in the elution position of two of the four peaks of soluble PTP activity, and all three peaks of insoluble PTP activity in skeletal muscle of estivating, vs. control, toads. Furthermore, differential effects of estivation on PTP activities were also revealed by assays with two different peptide substrates: (a) a general PTP substrate (ENDpYINASL) that represents a highly conserved motif (DYINA) in the catalytic domain of most PTPs and seems to be the better substrate for soluble PTPs; and (b) the peptide DADEpYLIPQQG which corresponds to the autophosphorylation site found in EGFR (a receptor PTP), and is a substrate for PTPs that contain the SH2 (src-homology) binding site. Assays revealed substrate-specific differences in both the distribution of PTPs between soluble and insoluble fractions during estivation, and in the ion exchange elution profiles of the enzymes (Cowan and Storey, 2001). For example, when assayed with ENDpYINASL, soluble PTP activity in heart rose during estivation by 71%, whereas insoluble activity decreased by 36%. However, just the opposite occurred when heart PTP was assayed with DADEpYLIPQQG; soluble PTP activity decreased by 75% whereas insoluble activity rose three-fold. These results for heart as well as differential responses to the two substrates in most other tissues provided evidence that the receptor and non-receptor PTPs respond differently during estivation. Hence, current data suggest that changes in PTKs and PTPs have an impact on estivation and provide a starting point for future studies. Whether this is a positive impact in stimulating metabolic changes that support estivation or a case that PTK or PTP mediated processes are suppressed in the hypometabolic state, remains to be determined as does the identification of specific PTK or PTP types and their specific actions in estivation. The data for heart are particularly interesting, however, in that the elevated total activities of PTK and PTP in heart contrast with the opposite effects of estivation in suppressing the activities of seriney threonine kinases and phosphatase in heart (PKA, PP-2A, PP-2C were all reduced in heart; Cowan et al., 2000). Hence, the influence of seriney 743 threonine kinases and phosphatases is apparently reduced during estivation in heart, whereas that of the tyrosine kinases and phosphatases is enhanced. 4. Estivation and metabolic enzymes Estivation is a complex phenomenon and several influences may be at work to readjust metabolism for optimal function over the long months of dormancy. One of these is starvation and the pattern of stored fuel use during estivation, typically changes to include a major reliance on the oxidation of body lipid reserves, a low rate of gluconeogenesis from glycerol or amino acids to maintain glucose supply for selected organs, and a gradual rise in protein catabolism as the demand for urea synthesis increases. Thus, for estivating toads the general expectations associated with the starved state during estivation would be suppression of glycolysis and fatty acid synthesis, and increased protein catabolism, gluconeogenesis, ketone body metabolism, and lipid oxidation. Another influence on metabolic reorganization during estivation may be metabolic arrest. Whereas some enzymes are regulated via reversible phosphorylation to achieve the hypometabolic state during estivation (see above), and some may be influenced by changes in the lipid environment in which they reside (Stuart et al., 1998), others may be controlled by synthesis or degradation with the resulting changes in the maximal activities of selected enzymes contributing to the suppression of different metabolic pathways. Further influences on metabolism during estivation probably also include: (a) dehydration stress may demand changes in selected enzymesypathways in addition to the known elevation of urea cycle enzymes in response to waterysalt stress in anurans (Balinsky, 1981); (b) maturation of reproductive tissues during estivation may require metabolic adjustments in selected tissues. To assess the extent of metabolic reorganization that occurs during estivation, we analyzed changes to the enzymatic make-up of spadefoot toad organs during estivation, focusing on two groups—enzymes of intermediary energy metabolism and enzymes of antioxidant defense. 4.1. Enzymes of intermediary metabolism The maximal activities of a variety metabolic enzymes representing glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, and amino acid, fatty acid, ketone body, and 744 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 adenylate metabolism were assessed in three tissues (brain, liver, and skeletal muscle) of active toads vs. those that were subsequently estivated for 2 months (Cowan et al., 2000). Estivation had little effect on enzymes in brain with activities of 17 out of 23 enzymes unaffected by estivation. Effects in brain included reduced activities during estivation for two enzymes of glycolysis, PFK and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), as well as creatine kinase (CK) (activities fell by 25, 40 and 25%, respectively). By contrast, the activity of glutamate dehydrogenase, a key enzyme of amino acid metabolism, rose by 3.2-fold whereas glucose-6phosphate dehydrogenase activity increased by 70%, and b-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase rose by 50%. These enzymatic changes in brain are consistent with suppressed glycolysis and increased ketone body and amino acid catabolism during estivation and hence, are primarily related to a reorganization of fuel use. Toad liver also showed relatively few changes to the activities of metabolic enzymes during estivation with only nine out of 25 enzymes affected. The maximal activities of eight enzymes of carbohydrate, amino acid, ketone body and phosphagen metabolism decreased during estivation (by 25–60%), whereas activity of the gluconeogenic enzyme, malic enzyme (ME), increased by 2.4-fold (Fig. 3a) (Cowan et al., 2000). The percentage of GP present in the active a form also decreased significantly in liver of estivated toads from 27.6"3.33% in controls to 16.8"1.97% in estivation (Cowan et al., 2000). All of these changes in liver enzymes are again consistent with changes in patterns of fuel use and with a starved state during estivation. Reduced activities of GP and three other glycolytic enzymes are consistent with carbohydrate sparing, and the effects on GP are also those that are expected from the reduced percentage of PKA present as the active catalytic subunit in liver of estivating animals. Only one metabolic enzyme showed a pronounced increase in activity in liver during estivation and that was ME, which has an anaplerotic role in the provision of 4-carbon units (oxaloacetate, derived from malate) to the tricarboxylic acid cycle for condensation with acetyl-CoA. During lipid oxidation (providing 2-carbon acetyl-CoA inputs only), the supply of oxaloacetate can be rate-limiting and malate synthesis using pyruvate derived from a low rate of carbohydrate or amino acid catabolism keeps the TCA cycle primed with 4-carbon units to allow efficient lipid oxidation. Hence, a 2.4fold increase in ME activity during estivation would increase the potential for malate synthesis from pyruvate when the organ switches to fatty acids as a primary fuel during estivation. In skeletal muscle, however, the activities of most metabolic enzymes changed significantly during estivation, with only three out of 27 unaffected. Of these, the activities of 14 enzymes increased whereas 10 decreased (Cowan et al., 2000). Notably, as in brain and liver, these effects were independent of changes in tissue water content and hence, indicate specific and widespread reorganization of muscle metabolism during estivation. Contrary to the results for the two other organs, activities of four enzymes of glycolysis (PFK, PK, aldolase, and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) increased during estivation, although a reduced activity of hexokinase and no change in GP argue against an increased rate of carbohydrate utilization. It is not clear what the purpose of these changes could be. One possibility might be that an enhanced glycolytic capacity, coupled with elevated CK (producing quick ATP from creatine phosphate) and citrate synthase (increasing the capacity for carbohydrate entry into the Krebs cycle), could develop during estivation in anticipation of the high levels of muscular work that will be needed upon emergence from estivation, to support the frenzied breeding that is characteristic of this species. Such a proposition, however, will require detailed measurements of muscle enzymatic make-up both seasonally and over estivationyarousal cycles. Amino acid oxidation also appeared to be facilitated in muscle of estivating toads with elevated activities of serine dehydratase, glutamate-pyruvate transaminase and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). Elevated GDH, also seen in brain, suggests an increased capacity for NHq 4 production in support of urea synthesis by liver. GDH activities in toad liver did not change during estivation but, notably, they were very high to start with, 18-fold higher than in muscle (Cowan et al., 2000). These changes in amino acid metabolizing enzymes correlate with a suite of changes in free amino acid levels in tissues of estivating toads (Cowan et al., 2000). In muscle, glutamate, alanine and valine were elevated by almost two-fold during estivation whereas glutamine was reduced by nearly half. The same pattern was seen in brain and liver (except for glutamine in liver which increased), K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 745 Fig. 3. Maximal activities of selected enzymes in liver of active vs. 2 month estivated spadefoot toads, S. couchii. (a) Metabolic enzymes measured in active toads (gray bars) vs. toads that were subsequently allowed to estivate for 2 months (black bars). Abbreviations: GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; PK, pyruvate kinase; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; IDH, NADP-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase; GPT, glutamate-pyruvate transaminase; CK, creatine kinase; BDH, b-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase; FBP, fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase; ME, malic enzyme (from Cowan et al., 2000). (b) Enzymes of antioxidant defense in toads estivated for 2 months vs. active toads that were aroused from estivation and sampled 10 days later. Abbreviations are: GST, glutathione-Stransferase; GR, glutathione reductase; Se-GPX, selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase; Tot-GPX, total glutathione peroxidase; CAT, catalase; SOD, superoxide dismutase. Compiled from data in Grundy and Storey (1994). Data are means"S.E.M., ns3–4 for metabolic and ns4–9 for antioxidant enzymes. Values for LDH and CAT should be multiplied by 10. *—All values for estivated toads are significantly different from their corresponding value in active aroused toads, P-0.05. K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 746 Table 5 Free amino acid levels in three organs of land snails, Otala lactea: effects of 45 h anoxia exposure under a 95% N2y5% CO2 atmosphere or 22 days of estivation at 21 8C Foot Control Aspartate Glutamate Asparagine Glutamine Arginine Alanine Valine Total AA 1.49"0.47 1.16"0.32 1.99"0.32 6.53"0.77 2.32"0.28 0.75"0.10 0.72"0.14 15.9"4.28 Hepatopancreas Anoxic 1.04"0.11 2.30"0.34 0.34"0.04a 2.25"0.36a 3.80"0.20b 2.16"0.24a 0.28"0.03b 13.5"1.48 Estivated 2.10"0.41 4.17"0.49a 0.23"0.01a 0.92"0.19a 2.63"0.40 0.80"0.11 0.33"0.08b 13.7"3.19 Control 1.74"0.15 2.24"0.41 0.55"0.08 2.99"0.39 0.80"0.07 0.71"0.09 0.70"0.07 15.0"1.37 Mantle Anoxic Estivated a 0.42"0.05 2.17"0.56 0.16"0.04a 1.17"0.11a 1.02"0.12 0.63"0.17 0.33"0.07a 8.89"1.43b a 1.06"0.13 8.34"1.09a 0.25"0.04a 0.97"0.19a 0.53"0.18 0.94"0.24 0.43"0.01b 16.0"1.71 Control Anoxic Estivated 0.97"0.17 1.23"0.27 0.47"0.07 1.15"0.20 0.41"0.05 0.50"0.19 0.30"0.03 7.42"0.98 0.83"0.11 3.82"0.68a 0.35"0.06 2.62"0.44b 2.76"0.28a 2.06"0.24a 0.31"0.06 15.4"1.10a 1.90"0.24a 4.71"0.31a 0.14"0.05b 1.00"0.25 1.67"0.27a 0.78"0.20 0.41"0.05 12.4"1.18b a Significantly different from the corresponding control, P-0.01. P-0.05. Data are in micromoles per gram wet weight, means"S.E.M., ns3–4. Levels of 13 other amino acids did not change significantly under either experimental condition. Amino acids were quantified by HPLC as per Churchill and Storey (1992). b so it appears that these changes may be characteristic of some anuran tissues when poised for urea synthesis from protein catabolism. Free amino acid levels were also affected by estivation (22 days) in O. lactea tissues as shown in Table 5. These data are compared with the effects of anoxia stress (45 h under a nitrogen gas atmosphere) because molluscs have well-known amino acid responses to anoxia. As in toads, a major and consistent response to estivation in O. lactea was a pronounced increase in glutamate by 3.6–3.8-fold in all organs. Correlated with this, although not stoichiometrically equivalent, was a large decrease in glutamine in two organs with levels falling to 14 and 32% of control values in foot and hepatopancreas, respectively. Glutamine conversion to glutamate releases an ammonium ion, which may be used for urea biosynthesis. Asparagine also decreased consistently in all three tissues during estivation and both of its products, NHq and aspartate, are substrates of the urea 4 cycle. Valine also decreased in foot and hepatopancreas. Substantive changes in free amino acids during anoxia exposure in O. lactea were somewhat different and included significant increases in arginine and alanine in foot muscle and mantle. Alanine is a well-known metabolic end product of anaerobic metabolism in molluscs (Hochachka and Somero, 1984), and arginine is the product of the hydrolysis of the phosphagen, arginine phosphate, which indicates that snails deplete this energy reserve under low oxygen stress. Arginine also rose by four-fold in the mantle of estivating snails, which indicates that some tissues may also be under energy stress during estivation. As in estivation, asparagine and glutamine also decreased in anoxia in foot and hepatopancreas whereas aspartate, which is a good anaerobic substrate in marine molluscs, decreased only in hepatopancreas. Hence, substantial differences in amino acid metabolism were seen in the responses to estivation and anoxia, which indicate that free amino acids have different roles to play in each phenomenon. 4.2. Enzymes of antioxidant defense The effect of estivation on enzymes of antioxidant defense has been analyzed in both toads and snails (Hermes-Lima and Storey, 1995; Grundy and Storey, 1998; Hermes-Lima et al., 2001). In toads, the activities of antioxidant enzymes were generally significantly lower in 2 month estivating animals than in active toads sampled 10 days after arousal (Grundy and Storey, 1998). Fig. 3b illustrates this for liver; activities of five enzymes were 70–100% higher in active toads than in estivating animals. The exception to this was superoxide dismutase (SOD) which showed an activity 50% lower in active toads. Results for other organs were not as consistent as for liver, but in general, for the six enzymes quantified in five other tissues (heart, kidney, muscle, lung, gut) there were 12 instances where activities were higher in active toads than in estivators, and only 4 where the opposite was true (with no change in 14 cases). In particular, glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activity was significantly higher in active toads in K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 all organs except skeletal muscle (Grundy and Storey, 1998). The rate of reactive oxygen species generation and the accumulation of oxyradical damage products correlates positively with oxygen consumption in various species (Adelman et al., 1988). Hence, the above data showing generally lower activities of antioxidant enzymes in organs of estivating toads are consistent with the significantly reduced rates of organ oxygen consumption during estivation, as well as a reduced load of xenobiotics to process due to the starved state. Antioxidant defenses are clearly adaptable enzyme systems that respond to the oxyradical load imposed upon them. By contrast, a different situation occurred in estivating O. lactea. Activities of catalase (CAT), SOD, glutathione peroxidase and GST were generally higher in hepatopancreas and foot muscle of estivating snails than in active snails (HermesLima and Storey, 1995). It was postulated that these adjustments to antioxidant defenses would minimize damage due to a burst of reactive oxygen species generation, occurring as a result of a rapid increase in oxygen consumption over the early minutes of arousal (Hermes-Lima et al., 1998, 2001). Indeed, levels of lipid peroxidation damage products peak within 20 min when snails are aroused which suggests an initial burst of oxyradical production (Hermes-Lima and Storey, 1995). Periods of high oxygen uptake also occur intermittently during estivation; oxygen uptake rises by up to 5-fold over short periods every 20–50 h during which snails also hyperventilate and release CO2 (Barnhart and McMahon, 1987). As opposed to the continuous pattern of oxygen uptake seen in active snails, this pattern of discontinuous oxygen uptake during estivation could also cause short bursts of oxyradical production intermittently during estivation. Because snails may need to sustain continuous estivation for over a year or more, good antioxidant defenses may be critical to preventing or minimizing the accumulation of oxyradical damage products during prolonged estivation. 5. Urea effects on enzymesyproteins from estivators Many estivating species accumulate urea in their body fluids to help retard the loss of body water (Rees and Hand, 1993; Land and Bernier, 1995; Withers and Guppy, 1996). Concentrations can often reach several hundred millimolar; for exam- 747 ple, values of 200–300 mM have been measured in spadefoot toads after several months of estivation (Jones, 1980; Grundy and Storey, 1998). Urea is well known for its ability to denature proteins, and researchers first became interested in the potentially negative effects of high urea on body proteins from studies of elasmobranch fish. These maintain permanently high plasma and tissue urea concentrations (400–500 mM) in order to keep body fluids isosmotic with seawater. Multiple studies of urea effects on elasmobranch enzymes revealed various disruptive effects of high urea on the properties of selected enzymes (summarized in Hochachka and Somero, 1984). However, these effects were largely counteracted by the effects of other osmolytes, the methylamines, that are also present in elasmobranch body fluids. At the natural ratio of 2:1 ureaymethylamines, net enzyme function was unperturbed. Because of the situation in sharks, we wondered whether or not spadefoot toad proteins would be sensitive to urea, particularly in light of the fact that there is little evidence of the presence of counteracting solutes in estivating anurans. In spadefoot toads there is no osmolality gap that could be filled by such solutes (McClanahan, 1967), and three species of Australian frogs that accumulated high urea during estivation (100–200 mM) showed little or no accumulation of methylamines (such as trimethylamine oxide or betaine that are prominent in elasmobranchs) or other potential counteracting solutes (Withers and Guppy, 1996). Fuery et al. (1997) reported effects of urea on pyruvate binding by LDH from Australian desert frogs, but interestingly, 400 mM urea had less effect on the Km for pyruvate of M4-LDH from urea-accumulating anurans than it did on the enzyme from non-accumulators which suggests an adaptation for tolerance of high urea by the enzyme of the estivating species. In recent studies, we analyzed the effects of urea on selected enzymes involved in intermediary metabolism and antioxidant defense in spadefoot toad organs and compared these with the effects of high salt (KCl) (Grundy and Storey, 1994, 1998). The colligative effect of high urea helps to retain water in toad tissues, but viewed from another perspective the accumulation of urea also minimizes the increase in the ionic strength of body fluids that would otherwise occur as estivators dehydrate. Among vertebrates, amphibians have the highest tolerance for variation in body 748 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 Fig. 4. Effect of urea and KCl on maximal activities of enzymes from spadefoot toad skeletal muscle. Bars are: control (light gray), q300 mM urea (dark gray), q200 mM KCl (black). Enzymes are: PK, pyruvate kinase; PFK, phosphofructokinase; IDH, NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase; and GDH, glutamate dehydrogenase. Data are expressed relative to control activities and are means"S.E.M., ns3–4. *— Significantly different from the corresponding control, P0.01. Compiled from data in Grundy and Storey (1994). water content and body fluid ionic strength, an adaptation necessitated by their highly water-permeable skin (Hillman, 1988). However, although anurans can endure high ion levels that would kill mammals, there is undoubtedly also an upper limit to their tolerance. Fig. 4 shows the effect of 300 mM urea and 200 mM KCl on the maximal activities of PK, PFK, GDH and NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) from spadefoot toad skeletal muscle (Grundy and Storey, 1994). Urea had no effect on three enzymes, but lowered GDH activity to 65% of control values. By contrast, 200 mM KCl inhibited all four enzymes with a particularly strong effect on GDH activity, which was reduced to just 11% of control values. Similar responses to urea and KCl were also seen when these same enzymes were assessed in skeletal muscle of leopard frogs (Rana pipiens), a non-estivating species (Grundy and Storey, 1994). Urea and KCl effects on the kinetic properties of PK and PFK from spadefoot toad muscle were also analyzed. Neither 300 mM urea nor 200 mM KCl changed the Km values for substrates of either enzyme but calculated I50 values (inhibitor concentration reducing activity by 50%) were instructive. For PK assayed at low, near physiological levels of PEP (0.04 mM), the I50 value for KCl was ;300 mM whereas I50 urea was ;1300 mM. For PFK the I50 KCl was ;250 mM, whereas I50 urea was ;2 M. Hence, spadefoot toad enzymes are clearly much more sensitive to high ion concentrations than they are to high urea and, in the absence of urea accumulation, it is likely that cellular ionic strength during estivation would rise to a level that could be deleterious both to individual enzymes and to the integrated functioning of various metabolic pathways. Hence, a key consequence of the accumulation of urea is that it minimizes the elevation of cellular ionic strength that would otherwise occur, and thereby reduces or prevents metabolic disruption by high ionic strength. Urea and KCl effects were also assessed during the study of antioxidant enzymes in spadefoot toads (Grundy and Storey, 1998). Again, 300 mM urea had little or no effect on enzyme activities; of three antioxidant enzymes assessed wGST, glutathione reductase (GR), CATx in six organs from both control and estivating spadefoot toads, only three instances were identified where 300 mM urea significantly reduced enzyme maximal activity. Urea reduced GR activity in kidney and GST in lung of control (but not estivated) toads by 19– 20%, and urea lowered CAT activity in heart of estivated toads by 26%. By contrast, the addition of 200 mM KCl reduced GST and CAT activities by 51–55% in all tissues of both control and estivated toads, and also reduced GR activity in liver by 25–40%. Hence, these data again support the idea that a key function of urea accumulation in toad tissues is to minimize the elevation of cellular ionic strength that would otherwise occur and hence, limit the deleterious effects of high ions on enzyme function. 5.1. Fatty acid binding protein (FABP) Vertebrate estivators derive most of their energy needs from the aerobic oxidation of lipid reserves and so adaptations of proteins involved in lipid catabolism could be important for long term survival. Fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) are 14 kDa cytoplasmic proteins that mediate the intracellular trafficking of fatty acids between three points: plasma membrane; intracellular triglyceride droplets; and mitochondria. In a recent study we purified and analyzed the FABP from skeletal muscle of S. couchii (Stewart et al., 2000). Little is known about amphibian FABPs; only two other studies have reported on the amphibian liver isoform (Schleicher and Santome, 1996; Baba et al., K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 1999). Like FABPs from most other sources (Paulussen and Veerkamp, 1991), spadefoot toad muscle FABP had a molecular weight of ;14 kDa, a blocked N-terminus (due to N-acetylation) and bound fatty acids with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The Kd values for oleate and the fluorescent probe, cisparinarate, were 1.04"0.08 and 1.15"0.16 mM, respectively, within the typical range for FABPs from other sources. Compared with FABP from other species, no outstanding differences were noted for the toad protein that might specifically serve estivation. Effects of urea on the binding of cis-parinarate were also assessed. Urea at 200 mM increased the binding of the fluorescent probe by ;60%, which suggests that fatty acid binding and transport by FABP would not be impeded as cytoplasmic urea levels rose in estivating toads (Stewart et al., 2000). High levels of urea (1 M) also had no negative effect on the protein. By contrast, the addition of 200 mM KCl showed a trend (not significant) to reduce probe binding to FABP. Again, as suggested previously, this suggests that high urea itself is not detrimental to estivator proteins, and that one of the functions of urea accumulation is to mitigate the negative effects on proteins of the very high ion concentrations that would otherwise develop in the cytoplasm as organs dehydrated. 6. Estivation and gene expression Modern techniques in molecular biology are having a huge impact in many areas of biology and in the field of biochemical adaptation are finally providing the means to do thorough surveys that identify all of the key genesyproteins that are involved in stress and adaptation to environmental insults. Techniques such as cDNA library screening and differential display PCR have recently identified a wide range of genes and their protein products that are responsive to stresses including anoxiayhypoxia, osmotic stress, chilling and freezing in a variety of species and that support a range of hypometabolic states including anaerobiosis, hibernation, and diapause (Andrews et al., 1998; Gracey, 1999; Cannon et al., 1999; Storey, 1999, 2001; Stears and Gullans, 2000; Denlinger, 2001). Furthermore, the recent advent of cDNA microchipsyarrays with their opportunity to evaluate responses to stress by hundreds or even thousands of genes simultaneously, is causing an explosion 749 of information in mammalian fields that is now beginning to filter into comparative biochemistry. For example, cDNA array screening has recently been used in our lab to assess gene responses to hibernation in ground squirrels. Using a rat gene array we found good cross-reaction between species for most of the over 500 genes assessed and, more importantly, were able to compare relative mRNA transcript levels for genes involved in a wide range of metabolic pathwaysyfunctions in euthermic vs. hibernating states (Eddy and Storey, in press). Arrays based on the Drosophila or Xenopus genomes will soon bring this technology to many other groups of animals. Relatively little is known to date about the gene and protein responses that underlie estivation. Various studies have focused on specific enzymatic systems. For example, it has been well known for many years that one of the protein synthesis responses to water or salt stresses in anuran amphibians, including estivating species, is an increase in the activities of the enzymes involved in urea biosynthesis (Balinsky, 1981). Various of the estivation-linked changes in the activities of enzymes involved in intermediary energy metabolism or antioxidant defenses in toads (discussed above) must also be based on estivation (or arousal)-stimulated changes in gene expression and protein synthesis. Furthermore, evidence for estivation-specific proteins has been found in land snails, O. lactea (Brooks and Storey, 1995). Snails injected with 35S-methionine, then allowed to enter estivation and sampled 2 days later showed strong synthesis of a 50 kDa protein in hepatopancreas that was not labeled in control snails, whereas labeled proteins of 70 and 30 kDa appeared in foot muscle after 2 days of estivation. By contrast, snails that were first estivated for 14 days, then injected with 35S-methionine and sampled 1 day later while still estivating showed labeling of a 91 kDa protein in hepatopancreas. These results not only document new protein synthesis during estivation but show tissue- and time-specific differences in the proteins produced. Furthermore, these results for estivation can be contrasted with comparable studies that compared 35S-labeling patterns in control vs. anoxic-exposed O. lactea; these found no change in protein labeling patterns under anoxia (Brooks and Storey, 1994b). However, whereas protein-labeling studies do show that new protein types are synthesized during estivation, 750 K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 their downfall is that protein identity remains elusive. A recent study used cDNA library screening to provide the first identification of a gene that is upregulated during estivation in liver of spadefoot toads. Screening of a cDNA library made from liver of 2 month estivated toads with probes made from liver of active (control) toads vs. 2 month estivated toads revealed one strong positive result (Storey et al., 1999). The insert of the clone contained a complete open reading frame coding for a protein of 235 amino acids that was identified as riboflavin binding protein (RfBP). RfBP is a phosphoglycoprotein monomer that is synthesized by liver of female vertebrates and secreted into the plasma, where it binds plasma riboflavin and loads the vitamin into the yolk of avian or reptilian eggs or the fetus of mammals (White and Merrill, 1988). Our study was the first confirmation that RfBP also occurs in amphibians. The putative amino acid sequence of toad RfBP showed 50% identity with the sequences of the chicken or turtle proteins and essential structural features found in chicken RfBP were conserved. These included 18 cysteine residues forming nine disulfide bridges, two asparagine glycosylation sites and six tryptophan residues that appear to act in ligand binding (Blankenhorn, 1978; Monaco, 1997). However, toad RfBP differed in one key way from the protein of higher vertebrates and that was the lack of a highly phosphorylated region near the Cterminus that in chicken RfBP contains eight phosphoserines interspersed with glutamate residues. This forms the recognition site for the carrier that facilitates transport of the vitamin-loaded protein into the yolk (Sooryanarayana et al., 1998). Toad RfBP showed only three serine residues in this region, spaced by two glutamate residues. Hence, recognition and binding of RfBP to amphibian oocytes could be quite different than it is in birds and reptiles. The reasons for RfBP up-regulation during estivation are still unclear and have not been experimentally tested. However, we can suggest two possibilities. One is that RfBP production may be related to the maturation of eggs in females so that females are prepared for the explosive breeding that occurs within hours after emergence. A second possibility is that RfBP might function in the adult estivator to ‘cache’ riboflavin within the body over the 9–10 months of estivation when the toads neither eat, defecate or urinate. Hence, any riboflavin released as the result of catabolic processes in cells during estivation, including the significant wasting of skeletal muscle mass that occurs (S. couchii loses ;17% of its body protein reserves during estivation) (Jones, 1980) can be cached. This could be an important conservation strategy for key nutrients in these desert animals. In this regard, the results of the northern blots that analyzed the organ distribution of RfBP mRNA transcripts were very interesting. RfBP was strongly up-regulated in liver during estivation, but no transcripts were detected in brain, gut, heart or kidney. Surprisingly, however, RfBP transcripts were found in skeletal muscle of estivating toads, but not in controls, a finding that could be consistent with the above idea of vitamin caching in tissues that experience significant wasting during estivation. 7. Perspectives Studies of the biochemical and molecular mechanisms underlying estivation are well advanced on some fronts. For example, we have a good understanding of fuel metabolism, urea production, antioxidant defenses, glycolytic regulation and the role of reversible protein phosphorylation as a major control mechanism in metabolic arrest. We also have strong data that link the participation of multiple types of protein kinases to the molecular events involved in estivation, although as yet, the targets of action for most of these kinases have not yet been elucidated. Much of the data on estivation parallels information that has come out of other systems of animal metabolic arrest (e.g. hibernation, anoxia tolerance) and together with those data, support the idea that there are unifying molecular mechanisms of metabolic arrest that are broadly expressed across phylogenetic lines. For example, the use of reversible protein phosphorylation for the coordinated suppression of multiple metabolic processes (e.g. fuel metabolism, ion pump and channel arrest, protein synthesis) in hypometabolic states is now well-established in systems of anoxia tolerance and hibernation. The parallels between phosphorylation control of glycolytic enzymes in estivating land snails and in anoxic marine molluscs confirm the importance of this mechanism in the regulation of fuel catabolism in estivators, and imply that other aspects of metabolic suppression and reorganization during estivation will likely also prove to be regulated K.B. Storey / Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A 133 (2002) 733–754 via reversible phosphorylation. For example, the suppression of protein synthesis in hibernating mammals and anoxic marine snails that has recently been linked to phosphorylation of specific ribosomal proteins, the eukaryotic initiation factor-2 (eIF-2) and eukaryotic elongation factor-2 (eEF2) (Frerichs et al., 1998; Chen et al., 2001; Larade and Storey, 2002). For eEF-2 in hibernators, this result was achieved by an ;50% higher activity of eEF-2 kinase in tissues from hibernating animals and a corresponding 20–30% decrease in the activity of protein phosphatase 2A (which opposes eEF-2 kinase), as a result of a 50–60% increase in the levels of the specific inhibitor of PP2A, IPP2A . It could be predicted that parallel studies of 2 the controls on protein synthesis in estivators will produce similar results, and such studies will be important for confirming the importance of the suppression of protein biosynthesis as an integral part of metabolic rate depression. Considerable research remains to be done on other aspects of metabolic regulation in estivation. Thus, whereas it is obvious that protein kinases and phosphatases have a central regulatory role to play in the phenomenon, there is virtually no information to date on the upstream signals (extraor intracellular) that stimulate these signal transduction cascades and no more than a few of the downstream targets of kinaseyphosphatase action are known. The possible involvement of hormones or other extracellular signaling molecules remains to be investigated. For example, there is growing evidence that mammalian hibernation may involve a ‘hibernation induction trigger’ that is opioid in nature (Horton et al., 1998), and the possibility of a similar blood-borne hormonal factor in vertebrate estivators should to be explored. Much more research also needs to be done on the role of gene expression in estivation. It is probable that estivation involves selected changes in the expression of a variety of proteins as is also proving to be the case in hibernation and anoxia tolerance (for reviews see Storey, 1999, 2001; Larade and Storey, in press). Our initial analysis of differential gene expression in estivating spadefoot toads made a comparison between aroused and 2 month estivated animals (Storey et al., 1999), but it can be hypothesized that that major changes in gene expression are much more likely to be associated with the early stages of entry into estivation (andyor during the arousal from estivation). Hence, such studies should be redone to 751 monitor changes in gene expression over the transition period while animals are sinking into the hypometabolic state. The advent of cDNA array screening will provide a major aid to this search. We have recently used human 19K cDNA arrays to screen for anoxia-induced changes in gene expression in the hepatopancreas of the marine snail Littorina littorea (Larade and Storey, in press), and freeze-induced changes in liver of the freeze-tolerant wood frog, Rana sylvatica (unpublished). Although heterologous probing is generally plagued by low cross-reactivity (e.g. L. littorea cDNA cross-reacted with only 18.35% of the human cDNA sequences), the potential for gene discovery is still enormous (18.35% of 19 000 genes means the responses of 3500 genes were still assessed). Of these cross-reacting genes, almost 11% (or 385 genes) showed putative upregulation by two-fold or more during anoxia. These included selected protein phosphatases and kinases, MAP kinase-interacting factors, translation factors, antioxidant enzymes, and nuclear receptors (Larade and Storey, unpublished data). Although many of these candidate genes may not hold up to scrutiny by techniques such as Northern blotting that are needed to confirm their upregulation, we nonetheless have gained a much broader view of the potential gene expression responses that may play significant roles in anoxia survival, including genes representing areas of cell function that have never before been considered as having a role in estivation or metabolic rate depression. Arrays are already available for the Drosophila and C. elegans genomes and these may represent effective alternatives for analyzing estivation-induced gene expression in land snails, and arrays currently being developed for the Xenopus genome will be effective for studies of estivating anurans. 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