Literature DB >> 26944497

Inadequate food intake at high temperatures is related to depressed mitochondrial respiratory capacity.

Karine Salin1, Sonya K Auer2, Graeme J Anderson2, Colin Selman2, Neil B Metcalfe2.   

Abstract

Animals, especially ectotherms, are highly sensitive to the temperature of their surrounding environment. Extremely high temperature, for example, induces a decline of average performance of conspecifics within a population, but individual heterogeneity in the ability to cope with elevating temperatures has rarely been studied. Here, we examined inter-individual variation in feeding ability and consequent growth rate of juvenile brown trout Salmo trutta acclimated to a high temperature (19°C), and investigated the relationship between these metrics of whole-animal performances and among-individual variation in mitochondrial respiration capacity. Food was provided ad libitum, yet intake varied ten-fold amongst individuals, resulting in some fish losing weight whilst others continued to grow. Almost half of the variation in food intake was related to variability in mitochondrial capacity: low intake (and hence growth failure) was associated with high leak respiration rates within liver and muscle mitochondria, and a lower coupling of muscle mitochondria. These observations, combined with the inability of fish with low food consumption to increase their intake despite ad libitum food levels, suggest a possible insufficient capacity of the mitochondria for maintaining ATP homeostasis. Individual variation in thermal performance is likely to confer variation in the upper limit of an organism's thermal niche and might affect the structure of wild populations in warming environments.
© 2016. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ecophysiology; Food intake; Global warming; Proton leak; Respiration rate; Respiratory control ratio

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26944497     DOI: 10.1242/jeb.133025

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


  10 in total

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2.  Differences in mitochondrial efficiency explain individual variation in growth performance.

Authors:  Karine Salin; Eugenia M Villasevil; Graeme J Anderson; Simon G Lamarre; Chloé A Melanson; Ian McCarthy; Colin Selman; Neil B Metcalfe
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4.  Simultaneous measurement of mitochondrial respiration and ATP production in tissue homogenates and calculation of effective P/O ratios.

Authors:  Karine Salin; Eugenia M Villasevil; Sonya K Auer; Graeme J Anderson; Colin Selman; Neil B Metcalfe; Christos Chinopoulos
Journal:  Physiol Rep       Date:  2016-10-24

5.  Intraspecific variation and plasticity in mitochondrial oxygen binding affinity as a response to environmental temperature.

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8.  The relationships between growth rate and mitochondrial metabolism varies over time.

Authors:  Jean-Baptiste Quéméneur; Morgane Danion; Joëlle Cabon; Sophie Collet; José-Luis Zambonino-Infante; Karine Salin
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9.  Decreased mitochondrial metabolic requirements in fasting animals carry an oxidative cost.

Authors:  Karine Salin; Eugenia M Villasevil; Graeme J Anderson; Sonya K Auer; Colin Selman; Richard C Hartley; William Mullen; Christos Chinopoulos; Neil B Metcalfe
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Authors:  Laura Gabriela Nisembaum; Guillaume Loentgen; Thibaut L'Honoré; Patrick Martin; Charles-Hubert Paulin; Michael Fuentès; Karine Escoubeyrou; María Jesús Delgado; Laurence Besseau; Jack Falcón
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  10 in total

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