The effect of season and location on phosphoadenylate concentrations and adenylate energy charge in two species of freshwater clams

Oecologia. 1981 May;49(1):1-7. doi: 10.1007/BF00376890.

Abstract

Concentrations of phosphoadenylate nucleotides and the adenylate energy charge ((ATP+1/2ADP)/(ATP+ADP+AMP)) have been suggested as sensitive integrating measures of the energy state of organisms. This synoptic study investigated the seasonal and spatial variation of phosphoadenylate concentrations and AEC in two freshwater bivalve molluscs, the paper-shell clam, Anodonta imbecillis and the asian clam, Corbicula fluminea. Concentrations of all three adenylates, as well as the total adenylate concentration and adenylate energy charge of both species varied seasonally. These fluctuations were closely related to reproductive periods in both species. Total adenylate concentrations and ATP concentrations were slightly negatively correlated with shell length in A. imbecillis but the ADP and AMP concentrations and AEC were not significantly correlated with shell length. In C. fluminea the AEC was negatively correlated were positively correlated with shell length. Neither species exhibited significant differences in AEC between two collection locations. When C. fluminea collected from the Savannah River were acclimated and fed in the laboratory their AEC increased significantly.