Analysis Of Oxygen Diffusion Limitation In Contracting Skeletal Muscle During Higher ATP Demand

2010 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 23-24
Author(s):  
Nicola Lai ◽  
Jessica Spires ◽  
Bruno Grassi ◽  
L Bruce Gladden ◽  
Gerald Saidel
1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (8) ◽  
pp. 67-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Satoshi Okabe ◽  
Kikuko Hirata ◽  
Yoshimasa Watanabe

Dynamic changes in spatial microbial distribution in mixed-population biofilms were experimentally determined using a microslicer technique and simulated by a biofilm accumulation model (BAM). Experimental results were compared with the model simulation. The biofilms cultured in partially submerged rotating biological contactors (RBC) with synthetic wastewater were used as test materials. Experimental results showed that an increase of substrate loading rate (i.e., organic carbon and NH4-N) resulted in the microbial stratification in the biofilms. Heterotrophs defeated nitrifiers and dominated in the outer biofilm, whereas nitrifiers were diluted out in the outer biofilm and forced into the inner biofilm. At higher organic loading rates, a stronger stratified microbial spatial distribution was observed, which imposed a severe internal oxygen diffusion limitation on nitrifiers and resulted in the deterioration of nitrification efficiency. Model simulations described a general trend of the stratified biofilm structure. However, the actual stratification was stronger than the simulated results. For implication in the reactor design, when the specific carbon loading rate exceeds a certain limit, nitrification will be deteriorated or require a long start-up period due to the interspecies competition resulting in oxygen diffusion limitation. The extend of microbial stratification in the biofilm is especially important for determination of feasibility of nitrification in the presence of organic matters.


2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Oostra ◽  
E. P. le Comte ◽  
J. C. van den Heuvel ◽  
J. Tramper ◽  
A. Rinzema

2002 ◽  
Vol 205 (6) ◽  
pp. 829-840 ◽  
Author(s):  
Durmus Deveci ◽  
Stuart Egginton

SUMMARY The physiological, metabolic and anatomical adaptations of skeletal muscle to chronic cold exposure were investigated in Wistar rats (Rattus norvegicus), a species that defends core temperature, and Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus), which may adopt a lower set point under unfavourable conditions. Animals were exposed to a simulated onset of winter in an environmental chamber, progressively shortening photoperiod and reducing temperature from 12 h:12 h L:D and 22°C to 1 h:23 h L:D and 5°C over 4 weeks. The animals were left at 4°C for a further 4 weeks to complete the process of cold-acclimation. M. tibialis anterior from control (euthermic) and cold-acclimated animals of similar mass showed a significant hyperactivity-induced hypertrophy in the rat, but a small disuse atrophy in the hamster. Little evidence was found for interconversion among fibre types in skeletal muscle on cold-acclimation, and only modest differences were seen in activity of oxidative or glycolytic enzymes in either species. However, adjustments in Type II fibre size paralleled the muscle hypertrophy in rat and atrophy in hamster. Cold-induced angiogenesis was present in the rat, averaging a 28 % increase in capillary-to-fibre ratio (C:F) but, as this was balanced by fibre hypertrophy across the whole muscle, there was no change in capillary density (CD). In contrast, the C:F was similar in both groups of hamsters, whereas CD rose by 33 % in line with fibre atrophy. Within distinct regions of the m. tibialis anterior, there was a correlation between angiogenesis and fibre size in rats, in which oxygen diffusion distance increased, but not in hamsters, in which there was a reduced oxygen diffusion distance. Consequently, the change in C:F was greatest (39 %) in the glycolytic cortex region of the m. tibialis anterior in rats. We conclude that non-hibernator and hibernator rodents improve peripheral oxygen transport following cold-acclimation by different mechanisms. In rats, an increase in fibre girth was accompanied by a true angiogenesis, while the improved apparent capillary supply in hamsters was due to smaller fibre diameters. These responses are consistent with the strategies of resisting and accommodating, respectively, an annual fall in environmental temperature.


Author(s):  
Citlalli A. Aquino ◽  
Ryan M. Besemer ◽  
Christopher M. DeRito ◽  
Jan Kocian ◽  
Ian R. Porter ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTSea star wasting disease describes a condition affecting asteroids that resulted in significant Northeastern Pacific population decline following a mass mortality event in 2013. The etiology of sea star wasting is unresolved. We hypothesized that asteroid wasting is a sequela of microbial organic matter remineralization near respiratory surfaces which leads to boundary layer oxygen diffusion limitation (BLODL). Wasting lesions were induced in Pisaster ochraceus by enrichment with a variety of organic matter (OM) sources and by experimentally reduced oxygen conditions. Microbial assemblages inhabiting tissues and at the asteroid-water interface bore signatures of copiotroph proliferation before wasting onset, followed by the proliferation of putatively facultative and strictly anaerobic taxa. These results together illustrate that suboxic conditions at the animal-water interface may be established by heterotrophic bacterial activity in response to organic matter loading. Wasting susceptibility was significantly and positively correlated with rugosity, a key determinant of boundary layer thickness. At a semi-continuously monitored field site (Langley Harbor), wasting predictably occurred at annual peak or decline in phytoplankton biomass over 5 years, suggesting that primary production-derived OM may contribute to BLODL. Finally, wasting individuals from 2013 – 2014 bore stable isotopic signatures reflecting anaerobic processes which suggests that this phenomenon may have affected asteroids during mass mortality. The impacts of BLODL may be more pronounced under higher temperatures due to lower O2 solubility, in more rugose asteroid species due to restricted hydrodynamic flow, and in larger specimens due to their lower surface area to volume ratios which affects diffusive respiratory potential. Moreover, our results demonstrate that marine invertebrate disease may result from heterotrophic microbial activity that occurs adjacent to respiratory tissues, which raises important questions about the etiology of marine diseases in other benthic taxa.


2006 ◽  
Vol 572 (2) ◽  
pp. 551-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shi-Jin Zhang ◽  
Joseph D. Bruton ◽  
Abram Katz ◽  
Håkan Westerblad

1994 ◽  
Vol 29 (10-11) ◽  
pp. 377-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Tijhuis ◽  
E. Rekswinkel ◽  
M. C. M. van Loosdrecht ◽  
J. J. Heijnen

The dynamics of population and biofilm structure of nitrifying and heterotrophic biomass in biofilms on small suspended particles in an airlift reactor were measured during shifts from purely nitrification to a heterotrophic medium and back to nitrification. Biofilms from a full scale reactor with predominantly heterotrophic activity were used as start material. In the first twenty days of the nitrification period ammonia was oxidized to nitrite. Hereafter the oxidation was mainly to nitrate. A conversion of nearly 5 kgN/(m3 d) was reached in fifty days. Following the change to heterotrophic medium the nitrifying biofilm served as carrier for the development of a heterotrophic biofilm layer. The nitrification capacity of the biofilms dropped to 1 kgN/(m3 d) due to oxygen diffusion limitation in the heterotrophic layer. After the switch back to nitrification the heterotrophic biofilm layer was sheared off very rapidly, while the nitrification activity increased very fast to the level at the end of the first nitrification period due to decreased diffusion limitation.


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