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Ectotherm mitochondrial economy and responses to global warming

Journal

ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA
Volume 237, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/apha.13950

Keywords

animals; ATP synthesis; energy trade-off; mitochondrial efficiency; mitochondrial proton leak; oxidative phosphorylation; oxidative stress; reactive oxygen species; temperature

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Temperature is an important abiotic factor that affects the ecology, biogeography, and evolution of species. Environmental temperature has significant impacts on mitochondrial functions, which in turn affects organismal performances. Elevated temperatures can cause negative shifts in the mitochondrial energy economy, leading to negative consequences for fitness traits.
Temperature is a key abiotic factor affecting ecology, biogeography, and evolution of species. Alterations of energy metabolism play an important role in adaptations and plastic responses to temperature shifts on different time scales. Mitochondrial metabolism affects cellular bioenergetics and redox balance making these organelles an important determinant of organismal performances such as growth, locomotion, or development. Here I analyze the impacts of environmental temperature on the mitochondrial functions (including oxidative phosphorylation, proton leak, production of reactive oxygen species(ROS), and ATP synthesis) of ectotherms and discuss the mechanisms underlying negative shifts in the mitochondrial energy economy caused by supraoptimal temperatures. Owing to the differences in the thermal sensitivity of different mitochondrial processes, elevated temperatures (beyond the species- and population-specific optimal range) cause reallocation of the electron flux and the protonmotive force (Delta p) in a way that decreases ATP synthesis efficiency, elevates the relative cost of the mitochondrial maintenance, causes excessive production of ROS and raises energy cost for antioxidant defense. These shifts in the mitochondrial energy economy might have negative consequences for the organismal fitness traits such as the thermal tolerance or growth. Correlation between the thermal sensitivity indices of the mitochondria and the whole organism indicate that these traits experience similar selective pressures but further investigations are needed to establish whether there is a cause-effect relationship between the mitochondrial failure and loss of organismal performance during temperature change.

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