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Measurement of the Rate of Protein Turnover and Synthesis in the Marsupial Honey Possum (Tarsipes Rostratus)

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Date 2008 Sep 18
PMID 18797879
Citations 1
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Abstract

Rates of protein turnover and synthesis were measured in wild-caught Honey possums (Tarsipes rostratus) in the southwest of Western Australia and compared between males and females with and without pouch young. Possums were injected with 50 microg of (15)N-glycine and ammonia collected within 24 h was used as the nitrogen end-product in a single-injection protocol. The overall mean rate of protein synthesis measured was 7.7+/-0.5 g kg(-0.75) day(-1), which falls within the range of values reported for other marsupial species. Whole body rates of nitrogen flux and protein synthesis did not vary significantly between males and females with and without young, but females with pouch young showed significantly lower rates of protein synthesis when expressed in relation to metabolic body size. This difference was no longer apparent, however, if the mass of the females was corrected for the estimated mass of the young in the pouch averaging 9.3+/-1.6 g kg(-0.75) day(-1) and suggesting that the young should not be considered as part of the metabolic body pool. Whole body rates of protein degradation were significantly reduced in females carrying pouch young, suggesting that protein may be being diverted from the pool to milk production. Calculations indicate that the daily fraction of the female's nitrogen synthesis rate that needs to be diverted to pouch young to sustain their growth is less than 5%, and may not be detectable with the current methodology.

Citing Articles

The physiology of the honey possum, Tarsipes rostratus, a small marsupial with a suite of highly specialised characters: a review.

Bradshaw D, Bradshaw F J Comp Physiol B. 2011; 182(4):469-89.

PMID: 22160387 DOI: 10.1007/s00360-011-0632-9.

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