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Fig. 1. Oxygen-dependence of respiration at 20°C for superfused sartorius
muscle and for skeletal muscle mitochondria isolated from the frog Rana
temporaria. Measurements were made using high-resolution respirometry
(Oroboros Oxygraph, Paar, Garz, Austria) that enables sensitive measurements
of oxygen kinetics at low oxygen partial pressures (see
St-Pierre et al., 2000c ).
Mitochondria show strict oxyregulation over a broad range of O2
tensions, while skeletal muscle begins to oxyconform at
PO2 levels that are far in excess of the
Km of isolated mitochondria. Although oxyconformation is
seldom seen in isolated cell preparations (see, however,
Brand et al., 2000 ;
Bishop and Brand, 2000 ;
Guppy et al., 2000 ;
Bishop et al., 2002 ), it does
operate at the level of intact skeletal muscle
(Hochachka and Guppy, 1987 ;
West and Boutilier, 1998 ). One
possibility is that the PO2 of localised
(hypoperfused) regions of tissue might fall below the critical
PO2 (Pcrit) at which
diffusion of oxygen to the mitochondria begins to limit oxidative
phosphorylation. The metabolic rate of such localised regions could therefore
become suppressed even though the mixed venous blood continues to exit the
tissue at PO2 levels higher than the
Pcrit. This so-called `diffusion limitation' could be one
explanation for the well-known oxyconformation response seen in the intact
skeletal muscle of cat (Whalen et al.,
1973 ) and frog (Boutilier et
al., 1997 ; West and Boutilier,
1998 ). Alternatively, oxyconformation could occur through some
oxygen-sensing elements that trigger a reduction in the rate of mitochondrial
respiration. From Boutilier
(2001 ) with permission.
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