4.5 Article

Ambient CO2, fish behaviour and altered GABAergic neurotransmission: exploring the mechanism of CO2-altered behaviour by taking a hypercapnia dweller down to low CO2 levels

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 219, Issue 1, Pages 109-118

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.131375

Keywords

Pangasianodon hypophthalmus; Acid-base regulation; Carbon dioxide; Climate change; Gabazine

Categories

Funding

  1. Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DANIDA) [DFC] [12-014AU9]
  2. University of Oslo
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)
  4. American Physiological Society
  5. Company of Biologists

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Recent studies suggest that projected rises of aquatic CO2 levels cause acid-base regulatory responses in fishes that lead to altered GABAergic neurotransmission and disrupted behaviour, threatening fitness and population survival. It is thought that changes in Cl- and HCO3- gradients across neural membranes interfere with the function of GABA-gated anion channels (GABA(A) receptors). So far, such alterations have been revealed experimentally by exposing species living in low-CO2 environments, like many oceanic habitats, to high levels of CO2 (hypercapnia). To examine the generality of this phenomenon, we set out to study the opposite situation, hypothesizing that fishes living in typically hypercapnic environments also display behavioural alterations if exposed to low CO2 levels. This would indicate that ion regulation in the fish brain is fine-tuned to the prevailing CO2 conditions. We quantified pH regulatory variables and behavioural responses of Pangasianodon hypophthalmus, a fish native to the hypercapnic Mekong River, acclimated to high-CO2 (3.1 kPa) or low-CO2 (0.04 kPa) water. We found that brain and blood pH was actively regulated and that the low-CO2 fish displayed significantly higher activity levels, which were reduced after treatment with gabazine, a GABAA receptor blocker. This indicates an involvement of the GABAA receptor and altered Cl-and HCO3- ion gradients. Indeed, Goldman calculations suggest that low levels of environmental CO2 may cause significant changes in neural ion gradients in P. hypophthalmus. Taken together, the results suggest that brain ion regulation in fishes is fine-tuned to the prevailing ambient CO2 conditions and is prone to disruption if these conditions change.

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