Regulation of Blood Oxygen Affinity in the Australian Blackfish Gadopsis Marmoratus: I. Correlations between Oxygen-binding Properties, Habitat and Swimming Behaviour

1982 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 223-243
Author(s):  
G. P. DOBSON ◽  
J. BALDWIN

1. The regulation of whole blood oxygen affinity in the freshwater blackfish Gadopsis marmoratus Richardson has been examined, and correlations made between oxygen-binding properties and the habitat and swimming behaviour of the fish. 2. Blackfish whole blood has a low oxygen affinity relative to other fish bloods reported in the literature. This is not due to a low oxygen affinity of the stripped haemoglobins, but arises from interactions between haemoglobin and intraerythrocytic modulators. 3. The presence of high concentrations of ATP, and to a lesser extent GTP, in the erythrocyte, together with the effect of these nucleoside triphosphates on the oxygen affinity of haemoglobin solutions at physiological NTP: Hb4 molar ratios, demonstrates that this class of compounds is a major regulator of oxygen affinity in blackfish blood. 4. The oxygen affinities of whole blood and haemoglobin solutions are sensitive to pH, with haemoglobin solutions displaying a relatively large alkaline Bohr coefficient of - 1.05 over the physiologically relevant pH range of 6.5–7.0. 5. Although increasing Pco2, lowers the oxygen affinity of whole blood, it does so only through the effect on pH, as pH-buffered haemoglobin solutions show no oxygen-linked CO2 binding. This lack of oxygen-linked CO2 binding has not been reported for any other naturally occurring vertebrate haemoglobins. 6. Muscle morphology and biochemistry, and behavioural observations, indicate that the blackfish uses anaerobic energy metabolism during rapid swimming and in recovery. 7. It is concluded that the oxygen-binding properties of blackfish blood reflect adaptations for maintaining adequate tissue oxygenation for animals at rest and during slow sustained swimming in waters of high oxygen tensions.

1993 ◽  
Vol 175 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. C. Grigg ◽  
R. M. G. Wells ◽  
L. A. Beard

The P50 of whole blood [30°C, PCO2=2.08 kPa (15.6 mmHg)] decreases during embryonic development from approximately 6.7 kPa (50 mmHg) at 15 days to about half this value at hatching (86 days), paralleling a decrease in ATP from 100 to 5–10 micromole g-1 Hb. There is also a progressive changeover from embryonic to adult haemoglobin (HbA). A pulse of 2,3- diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG) (18 micromole g-1 Hb) occurs late in embryonic life. It has no effect on whole-blood oxygen-affinity and falls rapidly at hatching to values typical of post-hatchling crocodilians in general (<1.0 micromole g-1 Hb). ATP has a marked effect on the oxygen affinity of embryonic haemoglobin (HbE) but not on HbA. 2,3-DPG has only very small effects on the oxygen affinities of HbE and HbA. CO2 has a small effect on the oxygen affinity of HbE but a marked effect on that of HbA. Values of PO2 measured in the chorio-allantoic artery [2.9 kPa (22 mmHg)] and vein [5.9 kPa (52 mmHg)] imply an increase in saturation from approximately 30 % to more than 80 %. Neither whole-blood oxygen-affinity nor ATP level was altered in response to an experimental 7-day exposure to low ambient oxygen levels [10.7 kPa (80 mmHg)]. The results do not lend themselves easily to the pan-selectionist paradigm in which all physiological traits are viewed as being adaptive.


1984 ◽  
Vol 109 (1) ◽  
pp. 265-279
Author(s):  
VILHELM TETENS ◽  
RUFUS M. G. WELLS ◽  
ARTHUR L. DEVRIES

1. The effects of thermal acclimation on whole blood oxygen affinity were examined in the antarctic fish Pagothenia borchgrevinki. 2. 4.5°C-acclimated fish had a P50 value of 26.7 mmHg at pH 8.1, compared to 20.7 mmHg for −1.5°C-acclimated fish. The apparent heat of oxygenation, ΔH = −26.7 kJ mol−1, is comparable to values for temperate species. 3. Warm-acclimation was followed by an increased ATP: Hb4 molar ratio, resulting in an augmentation of the thermal effect on oxy-haemoglobin affinity. This may be considered adaptive in a constantly well oxygenated environment, where oxygen loading at the gills is secured. Unloading to the tissues is thereby enhanced, supporting an elevated rate of aerobic metabolism at higher temperatures. 4. In vivo blood pH was high, between 8.10 and 8.25 at −1.5°C. Astrup titration revealed arterial CO2 tensions of less than 0.8 mmHg, indicating relative hyperventilation and low oxygen extraction efficiency in antarctic fish. 5. Blood oxygen affinities of four antarctic nototheniid species were low (P50 between 11.9 and 20.7 mmHg at pH 8.1 and --1.5°C) in comparison with the temperate species Notothenia angustata (P50 = 10.8 mmHg). The zoarcid Rhigophila dearborni had a high blood oxygen affinity (P50 = 4.3 mmHg). Blood oxygen-binding properties are discussed in relation to the polar environment, mode of life, and the concept of cold adaptation.


1982 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 245-254
Author(s):  
G. P. DOBSON ◽  
J. BALDWIN

1. The effects of thermal acclimation on whole blood oxygen affinity were examined in the freshwater blackfish Gadopsis marmoratus. 2. Oxygen equilibrium curves for 20°C-acclimated fish were shifted to the right of curves obtained for 10°C-acclimated fish when determined at both 20°C and 10°C. Oxygen equilibrium curves obtained for solutions of stripped haemoglobin prepared from blood of 20°C- and 10°C-acclimated fish did not show the differences observed for whole blood. 3. Thermal acclimation did not alter the number, migration rates, or relative amounts of the five electrophoretic forms of haemoglobin present in blackfish blood. 4. The intraerythrocytic concentration of nucleoside triphosphates was higher in the 20°C-acclimated fish than in 10°C-acclimated fish, while the whole blood haemoglobin concentration was lower in the 20 °C-acclimated fish. These differences gave NTP: Hb4 molar ratios of 1.68 for the 20°C-acclimated fish and 1.32 for 10°C-acclimated fish. The effects of nucleoside triphosphates on oxygen affinity were similar for stripped haemoglobins of both acclimation groups. 5. The change in NTP:Hb4 molar ratios with acclimation temperature acts to enhance oxygen unloading to the tissues rather than oxygen uptake at the gills at the higher acclimation temperature. As the waters inhabited by the blackfish retain high oxygen tensions at 20°C, these changes in blood oxygen affinity could be considered adaptive if they were associated with elevated rates of oxygen-dependent metabolism at the higher temperatures.


1977 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-88
Author(s):  
J. Qvist ◽  
R. E. Weber ◽  
A. L. DeVries ◽  
W. M. Zapol

Blood pH in the antarctic cod (Dissostichus mawsoni) and in two Trematomus species, occlrring at --1-9 degrees C, is extremely high (approximately 8-2 to 8-3). This supports and extends Rahn's (1966) model for the temperature-pH relationship in cold-blooded vertebrates. The blood of D. mawsoni shows a low oxygen affinity (P50 approximately equal to 14-5 mmHg at pH 8–16 and −1-9 degrees C). Despite normal in vitro temperature and pH sensitivities, blood P50 increases only slightly when live fish are temperature-stressed (+ 4-0 degrees C), or become acidotic as a result of agitational stress (blood pH 7–71), primarily as a result of compensatory decreases in blood ATP levels. Oxygen-binding properties of ‘stripped’ (cofactor-free) solutions of D. mawsoni haemoglobin were measured in attempts to elucidate the molecular mechanisms involved in the function of the pigment.


2008 ◽  
Vol 276 (1658) ◽  
pp. 833-841 ◽  
Author(s):  
Øivind Andersen ◽  
Ola Frang Wetten ◽  
Maria Cristina De Rosa ◽  
Carl Andre ◽  
Cristiana Carelli Alinovi ◽  
...  

A major challenge in evolutionary biology is to identify the genes underlying adaptation. The oxygen-transporting haemoglobins directly link external conditions with metabolic needs and therefore represent a unique system for studying environmental effects on molecular evolution. We have discovered two haemoglobin polymorphisms in Atlantic cod populations inhabiting varying temperature and oxygen regimes in the North Atlantic. Three-dimensional modelling of the tetrameric haemoglobin structure demonstrated that the two amino acid replacements Met55β 1 Val and Lys62β 1 Ala are located at crucial positions of the α 1 β 1 subunit interface and haem pocket, respectively. The replacements are proposed to affect the oxygen-binding properties by modifying the haemoglobin quaternary structure and electrostatic feature. Intriguingly, the same molecular mechanism for facilitating oxygen binding is found in avian species adapted to high altitudes, illustrating convergent evolution in water- and air-breathing vertebrates to reduction in environmental oxygen availability. Cod populations inhabiting the cold Arctic waters and the low-oxygen Baltic Sea seem well adapted to these conditions by possessing the high oxygen affinity Val55–Ala62 haplotype, while the temperature-insensitive Met55–Lys62 haplotype predominates in the southern populations. The distinct distributions of the functionally different haemoglobin variants indicate that the present biogeography of this ecologically and economically important species might be seriously affected by global warming.


Blood ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 398-406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank G. de Furia ◽  
Denis R. Miller

Abstract Oxygen affinity studies in a splenectomized patient with sporadically occurring Hb Köln disease revealed high whole blood oxygen affinity (P50 O2 17.6 mm Hg) with increased 2, 3-diphosphoglycerate (DPG), low ATP, and normal RBC ΔpH. Isolated electrophoretically slow migrating Hb Köln had a high oxygen affinity, decreased Hill’s number, and normal DPG reactivity. Functional evidence for hybrid tetramers with normal mobility is presented. Partial deoxygenation may play a role in the denaturation of the Hb Köln molecule and thus account for a higher oxygen affinity (low P50 O2), measured by the mixing technique, than the actual values for P50 that exist in vivo. Increased oxygen affinity and decreased P50 O2 would result in increased erythropoiesis and account for a well-compensated hemolytic process in this patient with a normal red cell mass and normal values of hemoglobin.


1978 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 688-692 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Berglund ◽  
T. Almén ◽  
B. W. Johansson

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document