Comparative studies of high performance swimming in sharks II. Metabolic biochemistry of locomotor and myocardial muscle in endothermic and ectothermic sharks
D. Bernal1,*,
D. Smith2,
G. Lopez2,
D. Weitz2,
T. Grimminger2,
K. Dickson2 and
J. B. Graham1
1 Center for Marine Biotechnology and Biomedicine and Marine Biology
Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of
California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0204, USA
2 Department of Biological Science, California State University, Fullerton,
CA 92834-6850, USA

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Fig. 1. Relationship between shark white muscle enzyme activity [µmol substrate
converted to product per min (IU) per g wet mass of tissue] at 20°C and
body mass. (A) Citrate synthase (CS) activity in blue (open circles),
scalloped hammerhead (open triangles), leopard (open squares), common thresher
(shaded triangles), mako (shaded circles) and salmon (shaded squares) sharks.
In cases where the correlation between enzyme activity and mass was
significant for a species, a linear regression was fit to the data. For the
mako, IU g-1=2.780.53x[log10(mass)],
r=-0.44, P=0.01, N=31; for the scalloped hammerhead
IU g-1=1.17+1.53x[log10(mass)], r=0.72,
P=0.01, N=10. (B) Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity for
the same species as for CS and two additional shark species: the Atlantic
blacknose (open diamonds) and Atlantic sharpnose (open inverted
triangles).
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Fig. 2. (A) Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and (B) citrate synthase (CS) activities at
20°C in shark heart ventricle (HV; an unknown mixture of compact and
spongy myocardium). Values are means ±S.E.M. for ectothermic
sharks (open bars) and sharks known to be endothermic (shaded bars). Values in
parentheses at the base of each bar are the sample size and the data source:
a, present study; b, Dickson et al.
(1993 ). Horizontal lines group
species that do not differ significantly from the comparison species
(indicated by a black circle), as determined by a TukeyKramer multiple
comparisons test at P<0.05. For example, leopard shark HV CS
(bottom horizontal line in B) is not significantly different from that of the
blue shark but differs significantly from all other species studied.
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Fig. 3. Temperature effects on the activities of RM CS (left column) and LDH (right
column) in four mako, two salmon and six common thresher sharks. Symbols
identify specimens by body mass, and the lines show mean enzyme activity at
each temperature. The thermal rate coefficient (Q10) (±95%
C.I.) values were computed for the activities at 5°C and 30°C (see
Materials and methods).
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Fig. 5. Relationship between white muscle lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and citrate
synthase (CS) activity at 20°C in six shark species. Species
identification symbols are as in Fig.
1: shortfin mako (shaded circles), salmon shark (shaded squares),
common thresher shark (shaded triangles), blue shark (open circles), scalloped
hammerhead shark (open triangles) and leopard shark (open squares). Regression
line equation is: CS activity=0.52+0.012(LDH activity), r=0.69,
P<0.01, N=60.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2003