Counteraction of urea destabilization of protein structure by methylamine osmoregulatory compounds of elasmobranch fishes
- 1 November 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 183 (2) , 317-323
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj1830317
Abstract
Intracellular fluids of marine elasmobranchs (sharks, skates and rays), holocephalans and the coelacanth contain urea at concentrations averaging 0.4m, high enough to significantly affect the structural and functional properties of many proteins. Also present in the cells of these fishes are a family of methylamine compounds, largely trimethylamine N-oxide with some betaine and sarcosine, and certain free amino acids, mainly β-alanine and taurine, whose total concentration is approx. 0.2m. These methylamine compounds and amino acids have been found to be effective stabilizers of protein structure, and, at a 1:2 molar concentration ratio of these compounds to urea, perturbations of protein structure by urea are largely or fully offset. These counteracting effects of solutes on proteins are seen for: (1) thermal stability of protein secondary and tertiary structure (bovine ribonuclease); (2) the rate and extent of enzyme renaturation after acid denaturation (rabbit and shark lactate dehydrogenases); and (3) the reactivity of thiol groups of an enzyme (bovine glutamate dehydrogenase). Attaining osmotic equilibrium with seawater by these fishes has thus involved the selective accumulation of certain nitrogenous metabolites that individually have significant effects on protein structure, but that have virtually no net effects on proteins when these solutes are present at elasmobranch physiological concentrations. These experiments indicate that evolutionary changes in intracellular solute compositions as well as in protein amino acid sequences can have important roles in intracellular protein function.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Solute compatibility with enzyme function and structure: Rationales for the selection of osmotic agents and end‐products of anaerobic metabolism in marine invertebratesJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1979
- Effect of coenzymes and temperature on the process of in vitro refolding and reassociation of lactic dehydrogenase isoenzymesBiochemistry, 1977
- Ligand-lnduced alterations in the reactivity of sulfhydryl groups and the structure of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenaseArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1977
- Free amino acids in tissues of the skate Raja erinacea and the stingray Dasyatis sabina: Effects of environmental dilutionJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1977
- Microbial water stress.1976
- The salt relations of marine and halophilic species of the unicellular green alga,DunaliellaArchiv für Mikrobiologie, 1974
- Studies on protein subunits. 3. Kinetic evidence for the presence of active subunits during the renaturation of muscle aldolase.1973
- Water Relations of Sugar-tolerant Yeasts: the Role of Intracellular PolyolsJournal of General Microbiology, 1972
- On the conformational stability of globular proteins. The effects of various electrolytes and nonelectrolytes on the thermal ribonuclease transition.1965
- The Relationship of Structure to the Effectiveness of Denaturing Agents for ProteinsBiochemistry, 1963