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Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The Siberian salamander is a unique amphibian that is capable to survive long-term freezing at −55 °C. We used (1)H-NMR analysis to study quantitative changes of multiple metabolites in liver and hindlimb muscle of the Siberian salamander in response to freezing. For the majority of...

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Autores principales: Shekhovtsov, Sergei V., Bulakhova, Nina A., Tsentalovich, Yuri P., Zelentsova, Ekaterina A., Meshcheryakova, Ekaterina N., Poluboyarova, Tatiana V., Berman, Daniil I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8614755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34827165
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10111172
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author Shekhovtsov, Sergei V.
Bulakhova, Nina A.
Tsentalovich, Yuri P.
Zelentsova, Ekaterina A.
Meshcheryakova, Ekaterina N.
Poluboyarova, Tatiana V.
Berman, Daniil I.
author_facet Shekhovtsov, Sergei V.
Bulakhova, Nina A.
Tsentalovich, Yuri P.
Zelentsova, Ekaterina A.
Meshcheryakova, Ekaterina N.
Poluboyarova, Tatiana V.
Berman, Daniil I.
author_sort Shekhovtsov, Sergei V.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The Siberian salamander is a unique amphibian that is capable to survive long-term freezing at −55 °C. We used (1)H-NMR analysis to study quantitative changes of multiple metabolites in liver and hindlimb muscle of the Siberian salamander in response to freezing. For the majority of molecules we observed significant changes in concentrations. Glycerol content in frozen organs was as high as 2% w/w, which confirms its role as a cryoprotectant. No other putative cryoprotectants were detected. Freezing resulted in increased concentrations of glycolysis products: lactate and alanine. Unexpectedly, we detected no increase in concentrations of succinate, which accumulates under ischemia in various tetrapods. Freezing proved to be a dramatic stress with high levels of nucleotide degradation products. There was also significant increase in the concentrations of choline and glycerophosphocholine, which may be interpreted as the degradation of biomembranes. Thus, we found that freezing results not only in macroscopical damage due to ice formation, but also to degradation of DNA and biomembranes. ABSTRACT: The Siberian salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii Dybowski, 1870 is a unique amphibian that is capable to survive long-term freezing at −55 °C. Nothing is known on the biochemical basis of this remarkable freezing tolerance, except for the fact that it uses glycerol as a low molecular weight cryoprotectant. We used (1)H-NMR analysis to study quantitative changes of multiple metabolites in liver and hindlimb muscle of S. keyserlingii in response to freezing. For the majority of molecules we observed significant changes in concentrations. Glycerol content in frozen organs was as high as 2% w/w, which confirms its role as a cryoprotectant. No other putative cryoprotectants were detected. Freezing resulted in ischemia manifested as increased concentrations of glycolysis products: lactate and alanine. Unexpectedly, we detected no increase in concentrations of succinate, which accumulates under ischemia in various tetrapods. Freezing proved to be a dramatic stress with reduced adenosine phosphate pool and high levels of nucleotide degradation products (hypoxanthine, β-alanine, and β-aminoisobutyrate). There was also significant increase in the concentrations of choline and glycerophosphocholine, which may be interpreted as the degradation of biomembranes. Thus, we found that freezing results not only in macroscopical damage due to ice formation, but also to degradation of DNA and biomembranes.
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spelling pubmed-86147552021-11-26 Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii Shekhovtsov, Sergei V. Bulakhova, Nina A. Tsentalovich, Yuri P. Zelentsova, Ekaterina A. Meshcheryakova, Ekaterina N. Poluboyarova, Tatiana V. Berman, Daniil I. Biology (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The Siberian salamander is a unique amphibian that is capable to survive long-term freezing at −55 °C. We used (1)H-NMR analysis to study quantitative changes of multiple metabolites in liver and hindlimb muscle of the Siberian salamander in response to freezing. For the majority of molecules we observed significant changes in concentrations. Glycerol content in frozen organs was as high as 2% w/w, which confirms its role as a cryoprotectant. No other putative cryoprotectants were detected. Freezing resulted in increased concentrations of glycolysis products: lactate and alanine. Unexpectedly, we detected no increase in concentrations of succinate, which accumulates under ischemia in various tetrapods. Freezing proved to be a dramatic stress with high levels of nucleotide degradation products. There was also significant increase in the concentrations of choline and glycerophosphocholine, which may be interpreted as the degradation of biomembranes. Thus, we found that freezing results not only in macroscopical damage due to ice formation, but also to degradation of DNA and biomembranes. ABSTRACT: The Siberian salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii Dybowski, 1870 is a unique amphibian that is capable to survive long-term freezing at −55 °C. Nothing is known on the biochemical basis of this remarkable freezing tolerance, except for the fact that it uses glycerol as a low molecular weight cryoprotectant. We used (1)H-NMR analysis to study quantitative changes of multiple metabolites in liver and hindlimb muscle of S. keyserlingii in response to freezing. For the majority of molecules we observed significant changes in concentrations. Glycerol content in frozen organs was as high as 2% w/w, which confirms its role as a cryoprotectant. No other putative cryoprotectants were detected. Freezing resulted in ischemia manifested as increased concentrations of glycolysis products: lactate and alanine. Unexpectedly, we detected no increase in concentrations of succinate, which accumulates under ischemia in various tetrapods. Freezing proved to be a dramatic stress with reduced adenosine phosphate pool and high levels of nucleotide degradation products (hypoxanthine, β-alanine, and β-aminoisobutyrate). There was also significant increase in the concentrations of choline and glycerophosphocholine, which may be interpreted as the degradation of biomembranes. Thus, we found that freezing results not only in macroscopical damage due to ice formation, but also to degradation of DNA and biomembranes. MDPI 2021-11-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8614755/ /pubmed/34827165 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10111172 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Shekhovtsov, Sergei V.
Bulakhova, Nina A.
Tsentalovich, Yuri P.
Zelentsova, Ekaterina A.
Meshcheryakova, Ekaterina N.
Poluboyarova, Tatiana V.
Berman, Daniil I.
Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii
title Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii
title_full Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii
title_fullStr Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii
title_full_unstemmed Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii
title_short Biochemical Response to Freezing in the Siberian Salamander Salamandrella keyserlingii
title_sort biochemical response to freezing in the siberian salamander salamandrella keyserlingii
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8614755/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34827165
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10111172
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