The ventricles of the freshwater mollusc Anodonta cygnea were isolated and perfused with serotonin in order to examine its effect on glycolysis. Serotonin induces an increase in the concentration of glycolytic intermediates. Phosphofructokinase (PFK) preparations from ventricles perfused with serotonin exhibited an increased sensitivity to activation by the substrate fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) and to the activators AMP and fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (F2,6P2) and a reduced sensitivity to inhibition by ATP. In vitro phosphorylation/dephosphorylation experiments revealed that incubation of PFK preparations from ventricles perfused with normal saline in the presence of ATP, cyclic AMP and MgCl2 alters the degree of activation by F6P. In contrast, when enzyme preparations from ventricles treated with serotonin were incubated in the presence of alkaline phosphatase and MgCl2, PFK showed a reduced sensitivity to activation by F6P. Serotonin had no significant effect on the kinetic properties of PK, while it increased the proportion of the active a form of glycogen phosphorylase. These results indicate that serotonin induces an increase in the concentration of glycolytic intermediates in the ventricle of A. cygnea and that this is at least partly due to the activation of PFK, possibly via phosphorylation by an endogenous cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase.

Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine), some invertebrate neuropeptides and acetylcholine are involved in the control of the molluscan heart rate (Jones, 1983; Walker, 1986). Serotonin excites the cardio-excitor nerves (Hill and Welsh, 1966; Welsh, 1971; Jones, 1983); however, an inhibitory action in some molluscan species has been reported (Painter and Greenberg, 1982). The excitatory action of serotonin on the molluscan heart may be mediated by cyclic AMP, since it has been shown that serotonin activates adenylate cyclase and increases the intracellular cyclic AMP concentration in the bivalve heart (Higgins, 1974; Wolleman and S.-Rozsa, 1975).

In vitro studies have shown that the activities of the glycolytic regulatory enzymes, phosphofructokinase (PFK) and pyruvate kinase (PK), from molluscan tissues are partly modulated via phosphorylation/dephosphorylation mechanisms. Phosphorylation of PFK from molluscan tissues by endogenous cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinases turns the enzyme into a more active form compared with the dephosphorylated form. In particular, phosphorylation of PFK increases the affinity of the enzyme for its substrate fructose 6-phosphate (F6P), decreases Ka values for activators and increases I50 values for inhibitors (Michaelidis and Storey, 1990, 1991; Biethinger et al. 1991). In contrast, phosphorylation of PK, possibly by cyclic-GMP-dependent protein kinase, alters its kinetic properties towards a less active enzyme form (Plaxton and Storey, 1984, 1985; Michaelidis et al. 1988; Brooks and Storey, 1990). As far as the control of glycogen phosphorylase is concerned, in vivo studies have shown that, in molluscan muscular tissues, an interconversion of a and b forms is observed. For example, hypoxia reduces the amount of the a form while an increase in the contractile activity of molluscan muscles causes the conversion of the b form to the a form (Chih and Ellington, 1986).

The question of whether serotonin modulates in vivo the PFK and PK activities via phosphorylation and the ratio of glycogen phosphorylase forms and consequently the glycolytic flux in the molluscan hearts, remained unanswered. The present study examines the effect of serotonin on (1) the concentration of glycolytic intermediates, (2) the kinetic properties of PFK and PK, and (3) the ratio of glycogen phosphorylase forms in the perfused ventricle of a freshwater bivalve mollusc, Anodonta cygnea . Serotonin stimulates an increase in cyclic AMP level in the heart of A. cygnea (Wolleman and S.-Rozsa, 1975). In order to examine whether such an increase in cyclic AMP level can modulate the kinetic properties of the glycolytic regulatory enzymes PFK and PK via enzyme phosphorylation, as well as modulating glycolysis, the ventricles of A. cygnea hearts were isolated and perfused with serotonin. Concentrations of glycolytic intermediates were measured and enzyme kinetic constants determined on homogenates of ventricles. In addition, in vitro phosphorylation/dephosphorylation studies were performed in order to determine whether PFK activity can be modified by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. The experiments suggest that serotonin increases the concentration of glycolytic intermediates, possibly via PFK phosphorylation and glycogen phosphorylase interconversion, whereas serotonin has very little effect on PK regulation.

Animals and chemicals

Anodonta cygnea were acquired from a local dealer in the vicinity of Lake Ioannina and were kept starved for 5–6 days in running tap water at 15°C. All biochemicals and coupling enzymes were purchased from Serva (Heidelberg, FRG) and Sigma Chemical (St Louis, USA).

Perfusion of the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea

The heart was exposed by opening the valves and removing most of the soft tissues. The auricle–ventricle junctions were ligatured and the heart was pinned down through one ligature. A cotton thread was hooked through the other ligature and connected to an isotonic transducer (model ST-2, Phipps and Bird, Inc.). A cannula was placed in the anterior aorta and perfusates were delivered through a three-way tap. The saline used in all experiments contained 12mmol l−1 NaHCO3, 3.7mmol l−1 NaCl, 0.45mmol l−1 KCl, 8 mmol l−1 CaCl2, 0.19mmol l−1 MgCl2 and 1mmol l−1 glucose. The above composition of saline was based on the inorganic composition of Anodonta blood (Potts, 1954). Serotonin was dissolved in the same saline to give a final concentration of 3pmol l−1, which is the threshold to achieve a 100% increase in the amplitude of heart beats in Anodonta species (Painter and Greenberg, 1982). The ventricles were perfused for 10min with saline containing serotonin; prior to this, they were perfused with normal saline (without serotonin) until a stable heart rate had been achieved. The perfusate that had flowed outside the ventricles was removed by a suction pipette. In these studies, ventricles were beating against a constant pressure head of 0.49kPa (Peggs, 1975).

Preparation of homogenates for measuring metabolite concentrations and enzyme kinetic constants

Upon completion of perfusion, ventricles were removed immediately from the perfusion system and frozen in liquid nitrogen. For metabolite measurements, the ventricles were homogenized in a ground-glass homogenizer with 3 volumes of ice-cold HClO4 (10% w/v). The precipitated proteins were removed by centrifugation at 4000 gfor 10min and supernatants were neutralized with 3mol l−1 KHCO3. Precipitated potassium perchlorate was removed by centrifugation as above and the supernatants were taken for determination of metabolites. Glucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, phosphoenolpyruvate, pyruvate, lactate and adenosine phosphates (ATP, ADP, AMP) were measured as reported elsewere (Michaelidis and Beis, 1990). In control experiments, levels of the above metabolites were measured in hearts that had been freeze-clamped immediately after dissection and were compared with those of control hearts freeze-clamped after perfusion. The results showed no significant differences in the levels of metabolites between the immediately clamped hearts and control perfused hearts (data not given).

For studies of enzyme kinetic constants, ventricles were perfused as described above and then homogenized 1:3 (w/v) in 50mmol l−1 imidazole–HCl buffer (pH7.0) containing 100mmol l−1 NaF, 5mmol l−1 EDTA, 5mmol l−1 EGTA, 0.1mmol l−1 phenylmethylsulphonyl fluoride, 30mmol l−1 2-mercaptoethanol and 40% (v/v) glycerol (buffer A). After centrifugation at 25000 gfor 20min at 4°C, the supernatant was removed and passed through a 5ml column of Sephadex G-25 equilibrated in 40mmol l−1 imidazole–HCl buffer (pH7.0) containing 5mmol l−1 EDTA, 15mmol l−1 2-mercaptoethanol and 20% (v/v) glycerol in order to remove low-molecular-weight metabolites (Helmerhost and Stokes, 1980). The column was centrifuged in a desktop centrifuge at top speed for 1min and the filtrate was used as the source of enzymes for studies of kinetic constants. Enzyme assays and studies of kinetic constants were perfomed as described by Michaelidis et al. (1990).

In vitro phosphorylation and dephosphorylation studies on PFK

For the phosphorylation experiments, ventricles were perfused with normal saline, as described above, and homogenized 1:2.5 (w/v) in buffer A. After centrifugation, low-molecular-weight metabolites were removed by passing the supernatant through columns of Sephadex G-25 equilibrated in 40mmol l−1 imidazole–HCl (pH7.0), 10mmol l−1 2-mercaptoethanol, 0.5mmol l−1 EDTA, 20% (v/v) glycerol and 10mmol l−1 potassium phosphate. Columns were centrifuged as described previously and the filtrate was collected. Samples of filtrates (100 ¼,l) were added to 100 ¼,l of a solution containing 40mmol l−1 imidazole–HCl (pH7.0), 40mmol l−1 NaF, 10mmol l−1 2-mercaptoethanol, 20% (v/v) glycerol and one of the following: (1) 3mmol l−1 ATP and 5mmol l−1 F6P with no MgCl2; (2) 3mmol l−1 ATP, 20mmol l−1 MgCl2 and 0.5mmol l−1 cyclic AMP. The first condition was the control incubation, omitting one of the two metabolites (ATP, Mg2+) required for protein kinase function. Incubations were carried out for 3h at 30°C; then low-molecular-weight compounds were removed by passage through columns, as described above, and PFK kinetics were assessed.

For experiments involving in vitro dephosphorylation, the ventricles were perfused with saline containing serotonin, as described previously, and then the protocol described above for homogenization and centrifugation was followed. After the homogenates had been centrifuged, the filtrates were incubated in the presence of alkaline phosphatase (0.3unitsml−1) and 20mmol l−1 MgCl2; NaF was omitted from the incubation mixture. Samples without alkaline phosphatase and MgCl2, but containing 40mmol l−1 NaF, were used as controls. After incubation at 30°C for 2h, samples were centrifuged as above and the filtrates were used for the analysis of PFK activity.

Under the experimental conditions of perfusion with normal saline, the ventricles beat at a stable rate of about 12beatsmin−1. Serotonin applied to the ventricle preparation increased both the frequency and the amplitude of the beat (Fig. 1). Specifically, the heart rate increased by 84±1.87% (N=3) and the amplitude increased by 90±2.35% (N=3). After perfusion of the ventricle, metabolite measurements were made and studies of enzyme kinetic properties were performed as described in the Materials and methods section.

Fig. 1.

Response of an isolated ventricle of Anodonta cygnea to perfusion with normal saline and with saline containing serotonin.

Fig. 1.

Response of an isolated ventricle of Anodonta cygnea to perfusion with normal saline and with saline containing serotonin.

Serotonin evoked a significant increase in the level of glycolytic metabolites (Table 1). These data suggest that the increase in both frequency and amplitude of ventricle beats is accompanied by an increase in the content of glycolytic intermediates.

Table 1.

Concentrations of glycolytic metabolites in the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea perfused without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin

Concentrations of glycolytic metabolites in the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea perfused without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin
Concentrations of glycolytic metabolites in the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea perfused without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin

Studies of saturation curves of PFK for the substrate F6P on both untreated and serotonin-treated ventricles showed that serotonin induced an increase in S0.5 for F6P (Fig. 2). Moreover, studies of the kinetic properties of the enzyme from ventricles treated with serotonin revealed that serotonin induced changes in the PFK kinetic properties towards a more active enzyme form. Data presented in Table 2 show that the S0.5 value for the substrate F6P and the Ka value for the activator AMP decreased by about twofold and the Ka value for the other activator, fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (F2,6P2), decreased by 40% compared with PFK from control ventricles. In addition, I50 value for ATP, an inhibitor of PFK, increased by twofold.

Table 2.

Kinetic properties of phosphofructokinase from the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin

Kinetic properties of phosphofructokinase from the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin
Kinetic properties of phosphofructokinase from the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin
Fig. 2.

Fructose 6-phosphate saturation curves for phosphofructokinase from the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea at pH7.0 after perfusion of the ventricles with normal saline (●) or with saline containing serotonin (◯). Values are given as mean ± S.E.M., N=3 determinations on separate preparations of enzyme from different animals.

Fig. 2.

Fructose 6-phosphate saturation curves for phosphofructokinase from the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea at pH7.0 after perfusion of the ventricles with normal saline (●) or with saline containing serotonin (◯). Values are given as mean ± S.E.M., N=3 determinations on separate preparations of enzyme from different animals.

Table 3 shows that serotonin does not have any significant effect on the kinetic properties of the other key glycolytic enzyme, PK, studied under the same conditions.

Table 3.

Kinetic properties of pyruvate kinase from the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin

Kinetic properties of pyruvate kinase from the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin
Kinetic properties of pyruvate kinase from the ventricle of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin

In order to determine whether the changes in PFK kinetic properties induced by serotonin were due to enzyme phosphorylation, enzyme preparations from untreated and serotonin-treated ventricles were subjected to phosphorylation and dephosphorylation experiments as described in Materials and methods. When enzyme preparations, derived from ventricles perfused with normal saline, were incubated with ATP, cyclic AMP and Mg2+, an increased sensitivity to F6P was observed (Fig. 3). In contrast, enzyme preparations from ventricles treated with serotonin exhibited a reduced sensitivity to F6P after incubation with alkaline phosphatase and Mg2+ (Fig. 4).

Fig. 3.

Fructose 6-phosphate saturation curves for phosphofructokinase at pH7.0 from the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea perfused with normal saline, after incubation of enzyme preparations (Sephadex G-25 filtered) at 30°C for 2h with (□) or without (◼) cyclic AMP and MgCl2. Values are given as means ± S.E.M., N=3 determinations on separate preparations of enzyme from different animals.

Fig. 3.

Fructose 6-phosphate saturation curves for phosphofructokinase at pH7.0 from the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea perfused with normal saline, after incubation of enzyme preparations (Sephadex G-25 filtered) at 30°C for 2h with (□) or without (◼) cyclic AMP and MgCl2. Values are given as means ± S.E.M., N=3 determinations on separate preparations of enzyme from different animals.

Fig. 4.

Fructose 6-phosphate saturation curves for phosphofructokinase at pH7.0 from the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea perfused with saline containing serotonin, after incubation of enzyme preparations (Sephadex G-25 filtered) at 30°C for 2h with (●) or without (◯) alkaline phosphatase and MgCl2. Values are given as means ± S.E.M., N=3 determinations on separate preparations of enzyme from different animals.

Fig. 4.

Fructose 6-phosphate saturation curves for phosphofructokinase at pH7.0 from the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea perfused with saline containing serotonin, after incubation of enzyme preparations (Sephadex G-25 filtered) at 30°C for 2h with (●) or without (◯) alkaline phosphatase and MgCl2. Values are given as means ± S.E.M., N=3 determinations on separate preparations of enzyme from different animals.

The total glycogen phosphorylase (a+b) activity was not affected significantly by serotonin. However, the percentage of the active a form increased by about twofold in the ventricles perfused with saline containing serotonin (Table 4).

Table 4.

The total glycogen phosphorylase (a+b) activity and the percentage of the active a form in the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin

The total glycogen phosphorylase (a+b) activity and the percentage of the active a form in the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin
The total glycogen phosphorylase (a+b) activity and the percentage of the active a form in the ventricles of Anodonta cygnea after perfusion without ( 5-HT) or with (+5-HT) serotonin

Serotonin is present in all three major classes of molluscs. It can function as a neurotransmitter, modulator or neurohormone on target cells (Walker, 1986). The effect of serotonin on different molluscan tissues seems to be mediated by cyclic AMP. An increase in the level of cyclic AMP in molluscan tissues induced by serotonin can stimulate several processes at the cellular level via phosphorylation mechanisms. For example, serotonin-induced relaxation of anterior byssus retractor muscle (ABRM) of bivalve molluscs is attributed to the phosphorylation of myosin rods by an endogenous cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase via cyclic AMP (Castellani and Cohen, 1987). Higgins and Greenberg (1974) have isolated a cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase from bivalve myocardium and reported that an increase in cyclic AMP concentration augments the uptake of Ca2+ by myocardial microsomes. Na+ and water uptake by freshwater mussels is also stimulated by serotonin via cyclic AMP (Dietz et al. 1982; Scheide and Dietz, 1986).

The results presented here show that perfusion of the ventricles of the freshwater mussel A. cygnea with serotonin increases the content of glycolytic intermediates (Table 1), suggesting that serotonin stimulates the oxidation of carbohydrates through glycolysis. Serotonin stimulates the adenylate cyclase of the heart of A. cygnea, resulting in an increase in cyclic AMP content (Wolleman and S.-Rozsa, 1975). This observation suggests that cyclic AMP participates in the modulation of the rate of glycolysis by serotonin.

Mechanisms involving phosphorylation of glycolytic regulatory enzymes, especially PFK, may be responsible in part for the effect of serotonin on glycolysis in the ventricle of A. cygnea. The kinetic behaviour of PFK changed when the ventricles were perfused with serotonin. Specifically, PFK exhibited a saturation curve which showed enhanced activation by F6P compared with enzyme from ventricles untreated with serotonin (Fig. 2). Table 2 presents additional evidence that serotonin modified PFK towards a more active form. After the ventricles had been perfused with serotonin, PFK exhibited an increased sensitivity to activation by AMP and F2,6P2 and a reduced sensitivity to inhibition by ATP compared with PFK from control ventricles.

These results suggest that a covalent modification of PFK occurs when ventricles of A. cygnea are stimulated by serotonin. An endogenous cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase appears to phosphorylate PFK molecules. When filtrates from homogenates of control ventricles were incubated in the presence of ATP, cyclic AMP and Mg2+, PFK exhibited kinetic behaviour similar to PFK from ventricles perfused with serotonin (Fig. 3). Dephosphorylation can modify PFK activity towards a less active form. As shown in Fig. 4, PFK exhibited a reduced sensitivity to activation by F6P after filtrate preparations of the ventricles perfused with serotonin had been incubated with alkaline phosphatase compared with the same filtrates not incubated with alkaline phosphatase. In agreement with these findings are the results obtained from phosphorylation experiments on isolated PFK from the molluscs Helix pomatia and Mytilus edulis. In these experiments, the catalytic subunit of the cyclic-AMP-dependent kinase isolated from the same species incorporated 32P into PFK molecules, resulting in a more active form of PFK (Biethinger et al. 1991).

Our present results on the activation of PFK by phosphorylation agree with those we obtained previously. In vitro studies of PFK kinetic behaviour in tissues from different molluscs showed that PFK activity is modulated by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation, with phosphorylation increasing enzyme activity (Michaelidis and Storey, 1990, 1991). Results presented in this paper suggest that in the heart of molluscs such a phosphorylation of PFK can be induced by serotonin via cyclic AMP. This effect of cyclic AMP on molluscan heart PFK resembles the situation described for the parasitic helminths. In these parasites, serotonin also stimulates an increase in intracellular cyclic AMP level (Mansour et al. 1960; Donahue et al. 1981), and the administration of either serotonin or cyclic AMP increases the activity of PFK when they are added directly to Fasciola hepatica homogenate (Mansour and Mansour, 1962). Recent studies have shown that serotonin stimulates the phosphorylation of PFK in both F. hepatica and Ascaris suum (Harris et al. 1982; Kamemoto et al. 1989) and that the phosphorylated form of the enzyme has a lower S0.5 value for F6P than the dephosphorylated enzyme (Hofer et al. 1982; Kamemoto and Mansour, 1986; Kamemoto et al. 1987).

In addition to the activation of PFK by covalent modification, two other mechanisms have been found to influence glycolysis through the PFK step in the tissues of molluscs. These include the synthesis of the potent PFK activator F2,6P2 and the binding of PFK to subcellular particles (Storey, 1985). Whether these mechanisms are stimulated by serotonin in the mollusc heart is at present under investigation.

In contrast to PFK, PK does not show any significant changes in its kinetic properties after application of serotonin to the ventricle of A. cygnea (Table 3). Determination, however, of values for the mass action ratio for the PK from untreated (17.95) ventricles and ventricles treated with serotonin (11.86) indicates an inhibition of PK. Studies on PK from molluscan tissues revealed that covalent modification of PK by phosphorylation results in a less active form compared with the dephosphorylated enzyme (Holwerda et al. 1983; Plaxton and Storey, 1984, 1985; Michaelidis et al. 1988). Exposure of molluscs to anoxia induced phosphorylation of PK, which was stimulated by a cyclic-GMP-dependent protein kinase rather than by a cyclic-AMP-dependent enzyme (Brooks and Storey, 1990). However, as judged by the results presented in the Table 3, the suggestion that PK is regulated by phosphorylation after treatment of the ventricles with serotonin can be excluded. Thus, it is more logical to suggest that other mechanisms, including allosteric effectors, are involved in the regulation of PK in the heart of A. cygnea under the above perfusion conditions.

Whether the increase in the percentage of the active a form of glycogen phosphorylase induced by serotonin is due to the increased level of cyclic AMP and/or to the increased concentration of Ca2+ released from the sarcoplasmic reticulum or to some other factor is not certain.

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