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Intracellular osmoregulatory role of amino acids and urea in marine elasmobranchs
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1976
Year
Muscle FunctionEngineeringAmino AcidsDasyatis AmericanaCellular PhysiologyRaja ErinaceaOxidative StressMuscle InjurySkeletal MuscleAquacultureBiomechanicsOsmoregulationAnimal PhysiologyMarine ElasmobranchsMolecular PhysiologyIntracellular Osmoregulatory RoleBiochemistryOsmotic StressBiologyPhysiologyMuscle Cell VolumeMarine BiologyMetabolismMedicine
Little skates, Raja erinacea, and stingrays, Dasyatis americana, were gradually transferred over a period of 4-5 days from full strength to approximatley 50% seawater. Plasma and muscle osmolarity fell. Hematocrits were essentially unchanged. Extracellular fluid volume (ECF) of muscle, estimated as the chloride space, increased 70% during this period. Regulation of muscle cell volume was associated with sharp declines in cellular concentrations of total amino acids (ninhydrin-positive materials) and urea. The osmoregulatory importance of the free amino acid pool in erythrocytes and muscle was a particularly prominent feature in both species. Intracellular amino acid concentration in R. erinacea muscle fell from 214 to 144 mmol/liter during transfer to 50% seawater, urea from 398 to 264, and trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) dropped from 63.9 to 35.8 mmol/liter. TMAO plasma levels were similar in stingray and skate, but muscle TMAO concentrations were much higher in the former. Urea content in stingray plasma greatly exceeded that in R. erinacea-630 and 574 mmol/liter in two specimens-perhaps the highest recorded.