Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms

Polar, especially Antarctic, oceans host ectothermic fish and invertebrates characterized by low-to-moderate levels of motor activity; maximum performance is reduced compared with that in warmer habitats. The present review attempts to identify the trade-offs involved in adaptation to cold in the li...

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Main Author: Pörtner, H. O.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Company of Biologists 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/205/15/2217
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:jexbio:205/15/2217 2023-05-15T13:40:54+02:00 Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms Pörtner, H. O. 2002-08-01 00:00:00.0 text/html http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/205/15/2217 en eng Company of Biologists http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/205/15/2217 Copyright (C) 2002, Company of Biologists Review TEXT 2002 fthighwire 2015-02-28T12:44:15Z Polar, especially Antarctic, oceans host ectothermic fish and invertebrates characterized by low-to-moderate levels of motor activity; maximum performance is reduced compared with that in warmer habitats. The present review attempts to identify the trade-offs involved in adaptation to cold in the light of progress in the physiology of thermal tolerance. Recent evidence suggests that oxygen limitations and a decrease in aerobic scope are the first indications of tolerance limits at both low and high temperature extremes. The cold-induced reduction in aerobic capacity is compensated for at the cellular level by elevated mitochondrial densities, accompanied by molecular and membrane adjustments for the maintenance of muscle function. Particularly in the muscle of pelagic Antarctic fish, among notothenioids, the mitochondrial volume densities are among the highest known for vertebrates and are associated with cold compensation of aerobic metabolic pathways, a reduction in anaerobic scope, rapid recovery from exhaustive exercise and enhanced lipid stores as well as a preference for lipid catabolism characterized by high energy efficiency at high levels of ambient oxygen supply. Significant anaerobic capacity is still found at the very low end of the activity spectrum, e.g. among benthic eelpout (Zoarcideae). In contrast to the cold-adapted eurytherms of the Arctic, polar (especially Antarctic) stenotherms minimize standard metabolic rate and, as a precondition, the aerobic capacity per milligram of mitochondrial protein, thereby minimizing oxygen demand. Cost reductions are supported by the downregulation of the cost and flexibility of acid—base regulation. At maintained factorial scopes, the reduction in standard metabolic rate will cause net aerobic scope to be lower than in temperate species. Loss of contractile myofilaments and, thereby, force results from space constraints due to excessive mitochondrial proliferation. On a continuum between low and moderately high levels of muscular activity, polar fish have ... Text Antarc* Antarctic Arctic HighWire Press (Stanford University) Antarctic Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
op_collection_id fthighwire
language English
topic Review
spellingShingle Review
Pörtner, H. O.
Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms
topic_facet Review
description Polar, especially Antarctic, oceans host ectothermic fish and invertebrates characterized by low-to-moderate levels of motor activity; maximum performance is reduced compared with that in warmer habitats. The present review attempts to identify the trade-offs involved in adaptation to cold in the light of progress in the physiology of thermal tolerance. Recent evidence suggests that oxygen limitations and a decrease in aerobic scope are the first indications of tolerance limits at both low and high temperature extremes. The cold-induced reduction in aerobic capacity is compensated for at the cellular level by elevated mitochondrial densities, accompanied by molecular and membrane adjustments for the maintenance of muscle function. Particularly in the muscle of pelagic Antarctic fish, among notothenioids, the mitochondrial volume densities are among the highest known for vertebrates and are associated with cold compensation of aerobic metabolic pathways, a reduction in anaerobic scope, rapid recovery from exhaustive exercise and enhanced lipid stores as well as a preference for lipid catabolism characterized by high energy efficiency at high levels of ambient oxygen supply. Significant anaerobic capacity is still found at the very low end of the activity spectrum, e.g. among benthic eelpout (Zoarcideae). In contrast to the cold-adapted eurytherms of the Arctic, polar (especially Antarctic) stenotherms minimize standard metabolic rate and, as a precondition, the aerobic capacity per milligram of mitochondrial protein, thereby minimizing oxygen demand. Cost reductions are supported by the downregulation of the cost and flexibility of acid—base regulation. At maintained factorial scopes, the reduction in standard metabolic rate will cause net aerobic scope to be lower than in temperate species. Loss of contractile myofilaments and, thereby, force results from space constraints due to excessive mitochondrial proliferation. On a continuum between low and moderately high levels of muscular activity, polar fish have ...
format Text
author Pörtner, H. O.
author_facet Pörtner, H. O.
author_sort Pörtner, H. O.
title Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms
title_short Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms
title_full Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms
title_fullStr Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms
title_full_unstemmed Physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms
title_sort physiological basis of temperature-dependent biogeography: trade-offs in muscle design and performance in polar ectotherms
publisher Company of Biologists
publishDate 2002
url http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/205/15/2217
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
op_relation http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/short/205/15/2217
op_rights Copyright (C) 2002, Company of Biologists
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