Literature DB >> 11914385

Peripheral oxygen transport in skeletal muscle of Antarctic and sub-Antarctic notothenioid fish.

S Egginton1, C Skilbeck, L Hoofd, J Calvo, I A Johnston.   

Abstract

Transcellular oxygen flux was modelled mathematically in the aerobic skeletal muscles of perciform fish species living at widely different temperatures (Antarctica, sub-Antarctica and the Mediterranean Sea). Using structural data derived from stereological analysis of electron micrographs, mean fibre P(O(2)) was calculated on the basis of temperature-corrected rates of mitochondrial respiration and oxygen diffusion. The mean muscle fibre diameter (MFD) among Antarctic notothenioids was in the range 17-61 microm and mitochondrial volume density, Vv(mit,f), was 0.27-0.53, but capillary-to-fibre ratio varied only between 1.2 and 1.5. For a mean capillary P(O(2)) of 6 kPa, the model predicted a mean tissue P(O(2)) in the range 0.7-5.8 kPa at the estimated maximum aerobic capacity (M(O(2)max)). The lowest levels of tissue oxygenation were found in the pectoral muscle fibres of the icefish Chaenocephalus aceratus, which lacks the respiratory pigments haemoglobin and myoglobin. Red-blooded notothenioids found in the sub-Antarctic had a similar muscle fine structure to those caught south of the Antarctic Convergence, with an MFD of 20-41 microm and Vv(mit,f) of 0.27-0.33, resulting in an estimated mean P(O(2)) of 4-5 kPa at M(O(2)max). Mean tissue P(O(2)) in the sub-Antarctic icefish Champsocephalus esox, with greater MFD and Vv(mit,f), 56 microm and 0.51, respectively, was calculated to exceed 1 kPa at winter temperatures (4 degrees C), although oxidative metabolism was predicted to be impaired at the summer maximum of 10 degrees C. At the high end of the thermal range, related perciform species from the Mediterranean had a negligible drop in intracellular P(O(2)) across their small-diameter fibres, to a minimum of 5.4 kPa, comparable with that predicted for Trematomus newnesi from the Antarctic (5.6 kPa) with a similar MFD. These data suggest that, within a single phylogenetic group, integrative structural adaptations potentially enable a similar degree of tissue oxygenation over a 20 degrees C range of environmental temperature in the red-blooded notothenioids, and that this is compromised by the lack of respiratory pigments in the icefishes. The mean capillary radius was 1.5 times greater in the two icefish than in the other notothenioids, and the model simulations indicate that the evolution of wide-bore capillaries is essential to maintain tissue oxygenation in the absence of respiratory pigments.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11914385     DOI: 10.1242/jeb.205.6.769

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Biol        ISSN: 0022-0949            Impact factor:   3.312


  12 in total

Review 1.  Molecules in motion: influences of diffusion on metabolic structure and function in skeletal muscle.

Authors:  Stephen T Kinsey; Bruce R Locke; Richard M Dillaman
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Review 2.  Molecular ecophysiology of Antarctic notothenioid fishes.

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5.  Muscle fibre number varies with haemoglobin phenotype in Atlantic cod as predicted by the optimal fibre number hypothesis.

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6.  Scaling with body mass of mitochondrial respiration from the white muscle of three phylogenetically, morphologically and behaviorally disparate teleost fishes.

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8.  The formation and functional consequences of heterogeneous mitochondrial distributions in skeletal muscle.

Authors:  B Pathi; S T Kinsey; M E Howdeshell; C Priester; R S McNeill; B R Locke
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9.  Maximum cardiac performance of Antarctic fishes that lack haemoglobin and myoglobin: exploring the effect of warming on nature's natural knockouts.

Authors:  Stuart Egginton; Michael Axelsson; Elizabeth L Crockett; Kristin M O'Brien; Anthony P Farrell
Journal:  Conserv Physiol       Date:  2019-10-11       Impact factor: 3.079

10.  Biophysical characterisation of neuroglobin of the icefish, a natural knockout for hemoglobin and myoglobin. Comparison with human neuroglobin.

Authors:  Daniela Giordano; Ignacio Boron; Stefania Abbruzzetti; Wendy Van Leuven; Francesco P Nicoletti; Flavio Forti; Stefano Bruno; C-H Christina Cheng; Luc Moens; Guido di Prisco; Alejandro D Nadra; Darío Estrin; Giulietta Smulevich; Sylvia Dewilde; Cristiano Viappiani; Cinzia Verde
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-12-03       Impact factor: 3.240

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