Journal
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 212, Issue 12, Pages 1949-1964Publisher
COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.028464
Keywords
sodium flux; potassium flux; PEG-4000; diffusive water flux; urine flow rate; glomerular filtration rate; gill morphology; mitochondria rich cell; transepithelial potential; fish
Categories
Funding
- NSERC Discovery Grant
- National Research Council (CNPq) of Brazil/Amazon State Research Foundation (FAPEAM) PRONEX
- Canada Research Chair Program
- International Congress of Comparative Physiology and Biochemistry
- CNPq
- Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour
- Royal Society (UK)
- Research Foundation of Flanders
- Izaak Walton Killam Predoctoral Fellowship
- PIATAM/FINEP
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Earlier studies demonstrated that oscars, endemic to ion-poor Amazonian waters, are extremely hypoxia tolerant, and exhibit a marked reduction in active unidirectional Na+ uptake rate (measured directly) but unchanged net Na+ balance during acute exposure to low P-O2, indicating a comparable reduction in whole body Na+ efflux rate. However, branchial O-2 transfer factor does not fall. The present study focused on the nature of the efflux reduction in the face of maintained gill O-2 permeability. Direct measurements of Na-22 appearance in the water from bladder-catheterized fish confirmed a rapid 55% fall in unidirectional Na+ efflux rate across the gills upon acute exposure to hypoxia (P-O2=10-20torr; 1 torr=133.3 Pa), which was quickly reversed upon return to normoxia. An exchange diffusion mechanism for Na+ is not present, so the reduction in efflux was not directly linked to the reduction in Na+ influx. A quickly developing bradycardia occurred during hypoxia. Transepithelial potential, which was sensitive to water [Ca2+], became markedly less negative during hypoxia and was restored upon return to normoxia. Ammonia excretion, net K+ loss rates, and (H2O)-H-3 exchange rates (diffusive water efflux rates) across the gills fell by 55-75% during hypoxia, with recovery during normoxia. Osmotic permeability to water also declined, but the fall (30%) was less than that in diffusive water permeability (70%). In total, these observations indicate a reduction in gill transcellular permeability during hypoxia, a conclusion supported by unchanged branchial efflux rates of the paracellular marker [H-3]PEG-4000 during hypoxia and normoxic recovery. At the kidney, glomerular filtration rate, urine flow rate, and tubular Na+ reabsorption rate fell in parallel by 70% during hypoxia, facilitating additional reductions in costs and in urinary Na+, K+ and ammonia excretion rates. Scanning electron microscopy of the gill epithelium revealed no remodelling at a macro-level, but pronounced changes in surface morphology. Under normoxia, mitochondria-rich cells were exposed only through small apical crypts, and these decreased in number by 47% and in individual area by 65% during 3h hypoxia. We suggest that a rapid closure of transcellular channels, perhaps effected by pavement cell coverage of the crypts, allows conservation of ions and reduction of ionoregulatory costs without compromise of O-2 exchange capacity during acute hypoxia, a response very different from the traditional osmorespiratory compromise.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available