Literature DB >> 17626121

Multiple strategies of Lake Victoria cichlids to cope with lifelong hypoxia include hemoglobin switching.

H A Rutjes1, M C Nieveen, R E Weber, F Witte, G E E J M Van den Thillart.   

Abstract

Many fish species adapt to hypoxia by reducing their metabolic rate and increasing hemoglobin-oxygen (Hb-O(2)) affinity. Pilot studies with young broods of cichlids showed that the young could survive severe hypoxia in contrast with the adults. It was therefore hypothesized that early exposure results in improved oxygen transport. This hypothesis was tested using split brood experiments. Broods of Astatoreochromis alluaudi, Haplochromis ishmaeli, and a tilapia hybrid (Oreochromis) were raised either under normoxia (NR; 80-90% air saturation) or hypoxia (HR; 10% air saturation). The activity of the mitochondrial citrate synthase was not different between NR and HR tilapia, but was significantly decreased in HR A. alluaudi and H. ishmaeli, indicating lowered maximum aerobic capacities. On the other hand, hemoglobin and hematocrit levels were significantly higher in all HR fish of the three species, reflecting a physiological adaptation to safeguard oxygen transport capacity. In HR tilapia, intraerythrocytic GTP levels were decreased, suggesting an adaptive increase of blood-O(2) affinity. Similar changes were not found in HR H. ishmaeli. In this species, however, all HR specimens exhibited a distinctly different iso-Hb pattern compared with their NR siblings, which correlated with a higher intrinsic Hb-O(2) affinity in the former. All HR cichlids thus reveal left-shifted Hb-O(2) equilibrium curves, mediated by either decreased allosteric interaction or, in H. ishmaeli, by the production of new hemoglobins. It is concluded that the adaptation to lifelong hypoxia is mainly due to improved oxygen transport.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17626121     DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00536.2006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6119            Impact factor:   3.619


  16 in total

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Authors:  Jay F Storz
Journal:  Physiology (Bethesda)       Date:  2016-05

2.  Climatic variability in combination with eutrophication drives adaptive responses in the gills of Lake Victoria cichlids.

Authors:  Jacco C van Rijssel; Robert E Hecky; Mary A Kishe-Machumu; Saskia E Meijer; Johan Pols; Kaj M van Tienderen; Jan D Ververs; Jan H Wanink; Frans Witte
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5.  Hypoxia during incubation does not affect aerobic performance or haematology of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) when re-exposed in later life.

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10.  Whole-genome duplication and the functional diversification of teleost fish hemoglobins.

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