| Literature DB >> 30483931 |
Marina Giacomin1,2, Junho Eom3,4, Patricia M Schulte3, Chris M Wood3,4,5.
Abstract
The Pacific hagfish (Eptatretus stoutii) is a representative of the most basal extant craniates, and is a marine osmoconformer with an extremely low metabolic rate (MO2 = 475 µmol O2/kg/h at 12 °C). We investigated potential physiological trade-offs associated with compensatory changes in gill ventilation and perfusion when 12 °C-acclimated hagfish were acutely exposed to 7 °C or 17 °C, as reflected in diffusive unidirectional water flux ([Formula: see text], measured with tritiated water: 3H2O), net ammonia flux (Jamm), and plasma ion and acid-base status. [Formula: see text] was high (~ 1.4 L/kg/h at 12 °C) in comparison to marine teleosts and elasmobranchs. MO2 increased linearly with temperature (R2 = 0.991), and was more sensitive (Q10 = 3.22) in the 12-7 °C range than either Jamm (1.86) or [Formula: see text] (1.35), but the pattern reversed from 12 to 17 °C (Q10s: MO2 = 2.77, Jamm = 2.88, [Formula: see text] = 4.01). Heart rate, ventilatory index (a proxy for total ventilation), and coughing frequency also increased but with different patterns. At 17 °C, plasma [Ca2+] and [Mg2+] decreased, although osmolality increased, associated with elevations in plasma [Na+] and [Cl-]. Blood pH and PCO2 were unaffected by acute temperature changes while [HCO3-] increased. Hyperoxia (PO2 > 300 Torr) attenuated the increase in [Formula: see text] at 17 °C, did not affect Jamm, and had diverse effects on plasma ion and acid-base status. Our results suggest a clear osmorespiratory compromise occurring for the diffusive water fluxes as a result of acute temperature changes in this osmoconformer.Entities:
Keywords: Gill permeability; Hagfish; Metabolic rate; Osmoconformer; Temperature; Tritiated water; pH regulation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30483931 DOI: 10.1007/s00360-018-1191-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Comp Physiol B ISSN: 0174-1578 Impact factor: 2.200