The Response of the Corbiculidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia) to Osmotic Stress: The Cellular Response
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Physiological Zoology
- Vol. 51 (1), 79-91
- https://doi.org/10.1086/physzool.51.1.30158667
Abstract
When Polymesoda was transferred from 10‰ to fresh water, the free amino acid (FAA) pool decreased by 70% in 24 h; alanine accounted for 85% of the decrease. In Polymesoda blood, FAA doubled within 10 h after hypoosmotic stress; between 10 and 24 h the FAA decreased by 24%. Most of the increase and subsequent decrease were accounted for by alanine. In Corbicula, transferred from 5‰ to fresh water, the FAA pool decreased by 87% in 48 h; alanine accounted for 73% of the decrease. Upon transfer from fresh water to 10‰, the free amino acid (FAA) pool of Polymesoda foot muscle increased from 27 to 176 μmol/g dry weight during the first 36 h; between 36 and 73 h the FAA pool increased only to 187 μmol/g dry weight. Alanine accounted for 56% of the increase before 36 h and 77% after 36 h. When Corbicula was transferred from fresh water to 5‰ the FAA pool increased from 20 to 115 μmol/g dry weight; between 70 h and 30 days the pool increased to 197 μmol/g dry weight. Alanine accounted for 78% of the initial increase in the FAA pool.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of environmental salinity of free amino acids of Crassostrea virginica gmelinComparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 1966
- The osmotic function of amino acids and taurine in the mussel, Mytilus edulisComparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 1963
- FREE AMINO ACIDS IN SOME AQUATIC INVERTEBRATESThe Biological Bulletin, 1959