4.5 Article

Could thermal sensitivity of mitochondria determine species distribution in a changing climate?

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 217, Issue 13, Pages 2348-2357

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.098798

Keywords

Fish; Thermal limits; Cardiac mitochondria; Heart failure; Oxidative phosphorylation

Categories

Funding

  1. Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Grant [3622690]
  2. Maurice Wilkins Centre
  3. Royal Society of New Zealand Marsden Grant
  4. Griffith Health Institute Grant

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For many aquatic species, the upper thermal limit (T-max) and the heart failure temperature (T-HF) are only a few degrees away from the species' current environmental temperatures. While the mechanisms mediating temperature-induced heart failure (HF) remain unresolved, energy flow and/or oxygen supply disruptions to cardiac mitochondria may be impacted by heat stress. Recent work using a New Zealand wrasse (Notolabrus celidotus) found that ATP synthesis capacity of cardiac mitochondria collapses prior to THF. However, whether this effect is limited to one species from one thermal habitat remains unknown. The present study confirmed that cardiac mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to heat stress-induced HF in two additional wrasses that occupy cold temperate (Notolabrus fucicola) and tropical (Thalassoma lunare) habitats. With exposure to heat stress, T. lunare had the least scope to maintain heart function with increasing temperature. Heat-exposed fish of all species showed elevated plasma succinate, and the heart mitochondria from the cold temperate N. fucicola showed decreased phosphorylation efficiencies (depressed respiratory control ratio, RCR), cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) flux and electron transport system (ETS) flux. In situ assays conducted across a range of temperatures using naive tissues showed depressed complex II (CII) and CCO capacity, limited ETS reserve capacities and lowered efficiencies of pyruvate uptake in T. lunare and N. celidotus. Notably, alterations of mitochondrial function were detectable at saturating oxygen levels, indicating that cardiac mitochondrial insufficiency can occur prior to HF without oxygen limitation. Our data support the view that species distribution may be related to the thermal limits of mitochondrial stability and function, which will be important as oceans continue to warm.

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