Fraser Keiron P P, Rogers Alex D
British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, Cambridge CB3 OET, United Kingdom.
Adv Mar Biol. 2007;52:267-362. doi: 10.1016/S0065-2881(06)52003-6.
Growth is a fundamental process within all marine organisms. In soft tissues, growth is primarily achieved by the synthesis and retention of proteins as protein growth. The protein pool (all the protein within the organism) is highly dynamic, with proteins constantly entering the pool via protein synthesis or being removed from the pool via protein degradation. Any net change in the size of the protein pool, positive or negative, is termed protein growth. The three inter-related processes of protein synthesis, degradation and growth are together termed protein metabolism. Measurement of protein metabolism is vital in helping us understand how biotic and abiotic factors affect growth and growth efficiency in marine animals. Recently, the developing fields of transcriptomics and proteomics have started to offer us a means of greatly increasing our knowledge of the underlying molecular control of protein metabolism. Transcriptomics may also allow us to detect subtle changes in gene expression associated with protein synthesis and degradation, which cannot be detected using classical methods. A large literature exists on protein metabolism in animals; however, this chapter concentrates on what we know of marine ectotherms; data from non-marine ectotherms and endotherms are only discussed when the data are of particular relevance. We first consider the techniques available to measure protein metabolism, their problems and what validation is required. Protein metabolism in marine organisms is highly sensitive to a wide variety of factors, including temperature, pollution, seasonality, nutrition, developmental stage, genetics, sexual maturation and moulting. We examine how these abiotic and biotic factors affect protein metabolism at the level of whole-animal (adult and larval), tissue and cellular protein metabolism. Available gene expression data, which help us understand the underlying control of protein metabolism, are also discussed. As protein metabolism appears to comprise a significant proportion of overall metabolic costs in marine organisms, accurate estimates of the energetic cost per unit of synthesised protein are important. Measured costs of protein metabolism are reviewed, and the very high variability in reported costs highlighted. Two major determinants of protein synthesis rates are the tissue concentration of RNA, often expressed as the RNA to protein ratio, and the RNA activity (k(RNA)). The effects of temperature, nutrition and developmental stage on RNA concentration and activity are considered. This chapter highlights our complete lack of knowledge of protein metabolism in many groups of marine organisms, and the fact we currently have only limited data for animals held under a narrow range of experimental conditions. The potential assistance that genomic methods may provide in increasing our understanding of protein metabolism is described.
生长是所有海洋生物的一个基本过程。在软组织中,生长主要通过蛋白质的合成和保留来实现,即蛋白质生长。蛋白质库(生物体中的所有蛋白质)具有高度动态性,蛋白质通过蛋白质合成不断进入该库,或通过蛋白质降解从该库中被去除。蛋白质库大小的任何净变化,无论是正向还是负向,都被称为蛋白质生长。蛋白质合成、降解和生长这三个相互关联的过程统称为蛋白质代谢。蛋白质代谢的测量对于帮助我们理解生物和非生物因素如何影响海洋动物的生长及生长效率至关重要。最近,转录组学和蛋白质组学这两个不断发展的领域已开始为我们提供一种方法,极大地增加我们对蛋白质代谢潜在分子控制的了解。转录组学还可能使我们检测到与蛋白质合成和降解相关的基因表达的细微变化,而这些变化是用传统方法无法检测到的。关于动物蛋白质代谢已有大量文献;然而,本章重点关注我们对海洋变温动物的了解;只有在数据特别相关时,才会讨论来自非海洋变温动物和恒温动物的数据。我们首先考虑可用于测量蛋白质代谢的技术、它们存在的问题以及需要何种验证。海洋生物中的蛋白质代谢对多种因素高度敏感,包括温度、污染、季节性、营养、发育阶段、遗传学、性成熟和蜕皮。我们研究这些非生物和生物因素如何在全动物(成体和幼体)、组织和细胞蛋白质代谢水平上影响蛋白质代谢。还将讨论有助于我们理解蛋白质代谢潜在控制的现有基因表达数据。由于蛋白质代谢似乎在海洋生物的总体代谢成本中占很大比例,准确估计每单位合成蛋白质的能量成本很重要。本文回顾了已测量的蛋白质代谢成本,并强调了报告成本中存在的极高变异性。蛋白质合成速率的两个主要决定因素是RNA的组织浓度,通常表示为RNA与蛋白质的比率,以及RNA活性(k(RNA))。本文考虑了温度、营养和发育阶段对RNA浓度和活性的影响。本章强调我们对许多海洋生物群体的蛋白质代谢完全缺乏了解,以及我们目前在狭窄的实验条件范围内饲养动物时仅有有限数据这一事实。文中描述了基因组方法在增进我们对蛋白质代谢理解方面可能提供的潜在帮助。