Skeletal muscles of mice deficient in muscle creatine kinase lack burst activity.

Cell

Department of Cell Biology and Histology, Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

Published: August 1993

To understand the physiological role of the creatine kinase-phosphocreatine (CK-PCr) system in muscle bioenergetics, a null mutation of the muscle CK (M-CK) gene was introduced into the germline of mice. Mutant mice show no alterations in absolute muscle force, but lack the ability to perform burst activity. Their fast-twitch fibers have an increased intermyofibrillar mitochondrial volume and an increased glycogenolytic/glycolytic potential. PCr and ATP levels are normal in resting M-CK-deficient muscles, but rates of high energy phosphate exchange between PCr and ATP are at least 20-fold reduced. Strikingly, PCr levels decline normally during muscle exercise, suggesting that M-CK-mediated conversion is not the only route for PCr utilization in active muscle.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0092-8674(93)90510-wDOI Listing

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