Cargando…

Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice

From an evolutionary perspective, the ancestors of cetaceans first lived in terrestrial environments prior to adapting to aquatic environments. Whereas anatomical and morphological adaptations to aquatic environments have been well studied, few studies have focused on physiological changes. We focus...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Miyaji, Kazuki, Nagao, Kenji, Bannai, Makoto, Asakawa, Hiroshi, Kohyama, Kaoru, Ohtsu, Dai, Terasawa, Fumio, Ito, Shu, Iwao, Hajime, Ohtani, Nobuyo, Ohta, Mitsuaki
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2970564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21072195
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013808
_version_ 1782190472000700416
author Miyaji, Kazuki
Nagao, Kenji
Bannai, Makoto
Asakawa, Hiroshi
Kohyama, Kaoru
Ohtsu, Dai
Terasawa, Fumio
Ito, Shu
Iwao, Hajime
Ohtani, Nobuyo
Ohta, Mitsuaki
author_facet Miyaji, Kazuki
Nagao, Kenji
Bannai, Makoto
Asakawa, Hiroshi
Kohyama, Kaoru
Ohtsu, Dai
Terasawa, Fumio
Ito, Shu
Iwao, Hajime
Ohtani, Nobuyo
Ohta, Mitsuaki
author_sort Miyaji, Kazuki
collection PubMed
description From an evolutionary perspective, the ancestors of cetaceans first lived in terrestrial environments prior to adapting to aquatic environments. Whereas anatomical and morphological adaptations to aquatic environments have been well studied, few studies have focused on physiological changes. We focused on plasma amino acid concentrations (aminograms) since they show distinct patterns under various physiological conditions. Plasma and urine aminograms were obtained from bottlenose dolphins, pacific white-sided dolphins, Risso's dolphins, false-killer whales and C57BL/6J and ICR mice. Hierarchical cluster analyses were employed to uncover a multitude of amino acid relationships among different species, which can help us understand the complex interrelations comprising metabolic adaptations. The cetacean aminograms formed a cluster that was markedly distinguishable from the mouse cluster, indicating that cetaceans and terrestrial mammals have quite different metabolic machinery for amino acids. Levels of carnosine and 3-methylhistidine, both of which are antioxidants, were substantially higher in cetaceans. Urea was markedly elevated in cetaceans, whereas the level of urea cycle-related amino acids was lower. Because diving mammals must cope with high rates of reactive oxygen species generation due to alterations in apnea/reoxygenation and ischemia-reperfusion processes, high concentrations of antioxidative amino acids are advantageous. Moreover, shifting the set point of urea cycle may be an adaption used for body water conservation in the hyperosmotic sea water environment, because urea functions as a major blood osmolyte. Furthermore, since dolphins are kept in many aquariums for observation, the evaluation of these aminograms may provide useful diagnostic indices for the assessment of cetacean health in artificial environments in the future.
format Text
id pubmed-2970564
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29705642010-11-10 Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice Miyaji, Kazuki Nagao, Kenji Bannai, Makoto Asakawa, Hiroshi Kohyama, Kaoru Ohtsu, Dai Terasawa, Fumio Ito, Shu Iwao, Hajime Ohtani, Nobuyo Ohta, Mitsuaki PLoS One Research Article From an evolutionary perspective, the ancestors of cetaceans first lived in terrestrial environments prior to adapting to aquatic environments. Whereas anatomical and morphological adaptations to aquatic environments have been well studied, few studies have focused on physiological changes. We focused on plasma amino acid concentrations (aminograms) since they show distinct patterns under various physiological conditions. Plasma and urine aminograms were obtained from bottlenose dolphins, pacific white-sided dolphins, Risso's dolphins, false-killer whales and C57BL/6J and ICR mice. Hierarchical cluster analyses were employed to uncover a multitude of amino acid relationships among different species, which can help us understand the complex interrelations comprising metabolic adaptations. The cetacean aminograms formed a cluster that was markedly distinguishable from the mouse cluster, indicating that cetaceans and terrestrial mammals have quite different metabolic machinery for amino acids. Levels of carnosine and 3-methylhistidine, both of which are antioxidants, were substantially higher in cetaceans. Urea was markedly elevated in cetaceans, whereas the level of urea cycle-related amino acids was lower. Because diving mammals must cope with high rates of reactive oxygen species generation due to alterations in apnea/reoxygenation and ischemia-reperfusion processes, high concentrations of antioxidative amino acids are advantageous. Moreover, shifting the set point of urea cycle may be an adaption used for body water conservation in the hyperosmotic sea water environment, because urea functions as a major blood osmolyte. Furthermore, since dolphins are kept in many aquariums for observation, the evaluation of these aminograms may provide useful diagnostic indices for the assessment of cetacean health in artificial environments in the future. Public Library of Science 2010-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2970564/ /pubmed/21072195 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013808 Text en Miyaji et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Miyaji, Kazuki
Nagao, Kenji
Bannai, Makoto
Asakawa, Hiroshi
Kohyama, Kaoru
Ohtsu, Dai
Terasawa, Fumio
Ito, Shu
Iwao, Hajime
Ohtani, Nobuyo
Ohta, Mitsuaki
Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice
title Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice
title_full Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice
title_fullStr Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice
title_full_unstemmed Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice
title_short Characteristic Metabolism of Free Amino Acids in Cetacean Plasma: Cluster Analysis and Comparison with Mice
title_sort characteristic metabolism of free amino acids in cetacean plasma: cluster analysis and comparison with mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2970564/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21072195
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013808
work_keys_str_mv AT miyajikazuki characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT nagaokenji characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT bannaimakoto characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT asakawahiroshi characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT kohyamakaoru characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT ohtsudai characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT terasawafumio characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT itoshu characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT iwaohajime characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT ohtaninobuyo characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice
AT ohtamitsuaki characteristicmetabolismoffreeaminoacidsincetaceanplasmaclusteranalysisandcomparisonwithmice