Octopine dehydrogenase (OcDH) from the adductor muscle of the great scallop, Pecten maximus (Linné, 1758), catalyses the NADH-dependent condensation of L-arginine and pyruvate to D-octopine, NAD+ and water during escape swimming and subsequent recovery. During exercise, ATP is mainly provided by the transphosphorylation of phospho-L-arginine and to some extent by anaerobic glycolysis. NADH resulting from the glycolytic oxidation of 3-phosphoglyceraldehyde to 1,3- bisphosphoglycerate is reoxidized during D-octopine formation. In some scallops D-octopine starts to accumulate during prolonged, strong muscular work, whereas in other species D-octopine formation commences towards the end of swimming and continues to rise during subsequent recovery. The activity of OcDH is regulated by a mandatory, consecutive mode of substrate binding in the order NADH, L-arginine and pyruvate, as demonstrated by isothermal titration calorimetry. The first regulatory step in the forward reaction comprises the binding of NADH to OcDH with a dissociation constant K d of 0.014±0.006 mmol l -1, which reflects a high affinity and tight association of the apoenzyme with the co-substrate. In the reverse direction, NAD+ binds first with a K d of 0.20±0.004 mmol l -1 followed by D-octopine. The binary OcDH-NADH complex associates with L-arginine with a K d of 5.5±0.05 mmol l -1. Only this ternary complex combines with pyruvate, with an estimated K d of approximately 0.8 mmol l -1 as deduced from pyruvate concentrations determined in the muscle of exhausted scallops. At tissue concentrations of pyruvate between 0.5 and 1.2 mmol l -1 in the valve adductor muscle of fatigued P. maximus, binding of pyruvate to OcDH plays the most decisive role in initiating OcDH activity and, therefore, in controlling the onset of D-octopine formation. © 2012. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Van Os, N., Smits, S. H. J., Schmitt, L., & Grieshaber, M. K. (2012). Control of D-octopine formation in scallop adductor muscle as revealed through thermodynamic studies of octopine dehydrogenase. Journal of Experimental Biology, 215(9), 1515–1522. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.069344
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