Inter-tissue differences in mitochondrial enzyme activity, RNA and DNA in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
1998
We examined whether the relationships between mitochondrial enzyme
activity, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and mitochondrial RNA (mtRNA) were
conserved in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) tissues that differ widely
in their metabolic and molecular organization. The activity of citrate
synthase (CS), expressed either per gram of tissue or per milligram of
total DNA, indicated that these tissues (blood, brain, kidney, liver,
cardiac, red and white muscles) varied more than 100-fold in mitochondrial
content. Several-fold differences in the levels of CS mRNA per milligram of
DNA and CS activity per CS mRNA were also observed, suggesting that
fundamental differences exist in the regulation of CS levels across
tissues. Although tissues varied 14-fold in RNA g-1, poly(A+) RNA (mRNA)
was approximately 2 % of total RNA in all tissues. DNA g-1 also varied
14-fold across tissues, but RNA:DNA ratios varied only 2.5-fold. The
relationship between two mitochondrial mRNA species (COX I, ATPase VI) and
one mitochondrial rRNA (16S) species was constant across tissues. The ratio
of mtRNA to mtDNA was also preserved across most tissues; red and white
muscle had 10- to 20-fold lower levels of mtDNA g-1 but 7- to 10-fold
higher mtRNA:mtDNA ratios, respectively. Collectively, these data suggest
that the relationship between mitochondrial parameters is highly conserved
across most tissues, but that skeletal muscles differ in a number of
important aspects of respiratory gene expression (9respiratory genes9
include genes located on mtDNA and genes located in the nucleus that encode
mitochondrial protein) and mtDNA transcriptional regulation.
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