pubmed-article:9176148 | pubmed:abstractText | Mitochondrial and cytosolic creatine kinase (CK) isozymes are active in cells with high and variable ATP metabolic rates. beta-Guanidinopropionic acid (GPA), a competitive inhibitor of creatine transport, was used to study the hypothesis that the creatine-CK-phosphocreatine (PCr) system is important in regulating brain ATP metabolism. The CK-catalyzed reaction rate and reactant concentrations were measured in vivo with 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy during energy deficit (hypoxia) or high-energy turnover (seizures) states in urethane-anesthetized mice fed GPA, creatine, or standard chow (controls). Brain phosphagen (i.e., cellular energy reserves) or PCr plus phosphorylated GPA (GPAP) concentrations were equal. The phosphagen-to-NTP ratio was lower than in controls. In vivo CK reaction rate decreased fourfold, whereas ex vivo CK activity that was biochemically measured was doubled. During seizures, CK-catalyzed fluxes increased only in GPA-fed mice. Phosphagen increased in GPA-fed mice, whereas PCr decreased in controls. Survival was higher and brain phosphagen and ATP losses were less for hypoxic GPA-fed mice than for controls. In contrast to mice fed GPA, hypoxic survival and CK reactant concentrations during hypoxia and seizures were the same in creatine-fed mice and controls. Thus GPA, GPAP, or adaptive changes in ATP metabolism stabilize brain ATP and enhance survival during hypoxia in mice. | lld:pubmed |