Abstract
We compared two-dimensional electrophoretic patterns of cytosolic extracts from fast muscle of the 10°C- and 30°C-acclimated carp Cyprinus carpio, and revealed that cold acclimation resulted in an approximately two-fold increase of the expression levels of a 55-kDa protein. This protein was identified as mitochondrial ATP synthase β-subunit by N-terminal amino acid sequencing after electrophoresis along with subsequent cDNA cloning. A full-length cDNA clone of carp ATP synthase β-subunit encoded 518 amino acids, showing 72-89% identity to those of eukaryotes at the level of amino acid sequence. The accumulated levels of ATP synthase β-subunit transcripts in the fast muscle from the 10°C- and 30°C-acclimated carp were well correlated with those at the protein level, suggesting that expression of this protein during temperature acclimation is regulated mainly at the transcription level.
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Kikuchi, K., Itoi, S., & Watabe, S. (1999). Increased levels of mitochondrial ATP synthase β-subunit in fast skeletal muscle of carp acclimated to cold temperature. Fisheries Science, 65(4), 629–636. https://doi.org/10.2331/fishsci.65.629
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