Custer Adrian V
Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, 201 Wellman Hall #3112, University of California, Berkeley 94720, USA.
BMC Ecol. 2005 Aug 5;5:6. doi: 10.1186/1472-6785-5-6.
The time varying flows of biomass and energy in tsetse (Glossina) can be examined through the construction of a dynamic mass-energy budget specific to these flies but such a budget depends on efficiencies of metabolic conversion which are unknown. These efficiencies of conversion determine the overall yields when food or storage tissue is converted into body tissue or into metabolic energy. A biochemical approach to the estimation of these efficiencies uses stoichiometry and a simplified description of tsetse metabolism to derive estimates of the yields, for a given amount of each substrate, of conversion product, by-products, and exchanged gases. This biochemical approach improves on estimates obtained through calorimetry because the stoichiometric calculations explicitly include the inefficiencies and costs of the reactions of conversion. However, the biochemical approach still overestimates the actual conversion efficiency because the approach ignores all the biological inefficiencies and costs such as the inefficiencies of leaky membranes and the costs of molecular transport, enzyme production, and cell growth.
This paper presents estimates of the net amounts of ATP, fat, or protein obtained by tsetse from a starting milligram of blood, and provides estimates of the net amounts of ATP formed from the catabolism of a milligram of fat along two separate pathways, one used for resting metabolism and one for flight. These estimates are derived from stoichiometric calculations constructed based on a detailed quantification of the composition of food and body tissue and on a description of the major metabolic pathways in tsetse simplified to single reaction sequences between substrates and products. The estimates include the expected amounts of uric acid formed, oxygen required, and carbon dioxide released during each conversion. The calculated estimates of uric acid egestion and of oxygen use compare favorably to published experimental measurements.
This biochemical analysis provides reasonable first estimates of the conversion efficiencies for the major pathways used by tsetse metabolism. These results now enable a deeper analysis of tsetse ecology based on the construction of a dynamic mass-energy budget for tsetse and their populations.
通过构建特定于采采蝇(舌蝇属)的动态质量-能量预算,可以研究采采蝇体内生物质和能量随时间的流动情况,但这样的预算取决于未知的代谢转化效率。这些转化效率决定了食物或储存组织转化为身体组织或代谢能量时的总体产量。一种用于估算这些效率的生化方法利用化学计量学和对采采蝇代谢的简化描述,来推导给定数量的每种底物转化为产物、副产物和交换气体时的产量估算值。这种生化方法比通过量热法获得的估算值有所改进,因为化学计量计算明确纳入了转化反应的低效率和成本。然而,这种生化方法仍然高估了实际转化效率,因为该方法忽略了所有生物方面的低效率和成本,如渗漏膜的低效率以及分子运输、酶产生和细胞生长的成本。
本文给出了采采蝇从一毫克血液中获得的三磷酸腺苷(ATP)、脂肪或蛋白质净量的估算值,并提供了一毫克脂肪沿两条独立途径分解代谢形成的ATP净量估算值,一条用于静息代谢,另一条用于飞行。这些估算值来自基于对食物和身体组织成分的详细量化以及对采采蝇主要代谢途径简化为底物与产物之间的单一反应序列的描述所构建的化学计量计算。这些估算值包括每次转化过程中形成的尿酸预期量、所需氧气量和释放的二氧化碳量。计算得出的尿酸排泄量和氧气消耗量估算值与已发表的实验测量值相比具有优势。
这种生化分析为采采蝇代谢所使用的主要途径的转化效率提供了合理的初步估算值。这些结果现在能够基于构建采采蝇及其种群的动态质量-能量预算,对采采蝇生态学进行更深入的分析。