The energy metabolism of the leechHirudo medicinalis in anoxia and muscular work
β Scribed by Zebe, E. ;Salge, U. ;Wiemann, C. ;Wilps, H.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 486 KB
- Volume
- 218
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-104X
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The medical leech Hirudo medicinalis has only small reserves of glycogen (Λ 40 ΞΌmol/g fresh weight), but malate is present in comparatively high concentrations (8 to 10 ΞΌmol/gm fresh weight) in the tissues and in the blood. Leeches are able to survive several days of anoxia at 20Β°C. From the onset of anoxia the level of malate drops rapidly and concomitantly the concentration of succinate rises in converse manner. After the initial phase, both metabolites do not change significantly. Then large quantities of propionate accumulate which, in part, are also excreted into the surrounding water. In contrast, continuous swimming causes the concentration of lactate to rise steeply and lactate is the dominant end product. There is only a modest decrease in the concentration of malate whereas succinate does not change. These distinct patterns of metabolite concentrations arising in anoxia and in muscular activity seem to indicate that different modes of energy metabolism are used in both situations.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In individual leeches the flux of labeled serum through the digestive tract was monitored to measure the rate of digestion. A mean value of 10 mg of the original serum (or 2-3 mg of the contents of the foregut) per individual per day was found, which was constant during 10 weeks. On average the seru