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First published online June 15, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 2462-2471 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02268
Mitochondrial mechanisms of cold adaptation in cod (Gadus morhua L.) populations from different climatic zones
Alfred-Wegener-Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Physiology of Marine Animals, Am Handelshafen 12, 27570 Bremerhaven, Germany
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: mlucassen{at}awi-bremerhaven.de)
Accepted 13 April 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: cold acclimation, cytochrome c oxidase, citrate synthase, RNase protection assay, cod, Gadus morhua
| Introduction |
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Ectothermic animals experience a decelerating effect of cold temperature on
cellular processes and compensate in order to maintain functional balance
between energy allocation and demand, e.g. by adjusting the velocity of
chemical and enzymatic reactions, the rates of diffusion, membrane fluidity
and the flexibility of protein structure. They are thereby able to shift the
window of thermal tolerance according to the ambient temperature regime.
Mitochondria are known to play a key role in this process since they are the
primary site of ATP production in animals, their density and capacity thus
reflecting aerobic energy turnover. Adaptation to cold in a (southern
hemisphere) latitudinal cline is associated with rising mitochondrial
densities in fish muscle; however, capacities of mitochondrial respiration
were found to fall in parallel with decreasing habitat temperature
(Johnston et al., 1998
). In
contrast, acclimation to seasonal cold (studied mostly in northern hemisphere
fish) is well known to cause a rise in aerobic capacity, reflected in rising
mitochondrial densities and/or increasing capacities of mitochondrial enzymes
(cf. Guderley, 1998
;
Guderley, 2004
;
Pörtner, 2002b
). As a
trade-off, the high energy demand for the synthesis of mitochondria and the
generation and maintenance of transmembrane proton gradients despite proton
leakage causes mitochondrial maintenance costs to rise during acclimatisation
to cold (cf. Pörtner et al.,
1998
; Pörtner et al.,
2000
; Pörtner,
2002b
).
Adjustments in aerobic capacity through mitochondrial proliferation or
degradation are thus crucial events in thermal adaptation and the shift of
thermal limits. Measurements of key enzymes of the citric acid cycle, mostly
citrate synthase (CS), on the one hand, and oxidative electron transport
components, mostly cytochrome c oxidase (COX), on the other, are
widely used to monitor the long-term acclimation of fish mitochondria and
tissue aerobic capacity. Increments in these parameters likely reflect
modifications in both the properties and the numbers of the mitochondria
present (Guderley, 1998
).
Regulatory patterns during cold acclimation have been addressed in studies
comparing enzyme capacities with transcript levels of the respective genes.
For example, significant increments in red and white muscle COX activities
were observed upon cold acclimation in trout; however, levels of COX1 mRNA or
other messengers of mitochondrial-encoded genes under study remained
unaffected by cold (Battersby and Moyes,
1998
). In contrast, both mitochondrial-encoded COX1 and COX2 and
nuclear-encoded COX4 mRNA were overcompensated relative to enzyme capacities
in white muscle and liver of the eurythermal common eelpout during cold
acclimation (Hardewig et al.,
1999
). A loose relationship between mRNA levels and maximum
activities was also found for citrate synthase in eelpout liver upon cold
acclimation (Lucassen et al.,
2003
). In this case, an intermediate rise in transcript levels
occurred during acclimation and might have supported rapid establishment of
the new steady state. Therefore, interspecific as well as tissue-specific
variability in acclimation to thermal challenges exist, and all levels of
enzyme expression (transcription, translation, protein modification) seem to
be involved in the adaptation process. The contribution of all of these
processes has to be elucidated in each individual case, before any statements
on unifying principles can be made.
Elevated standard metabolic rates in cold adapted populations of
eurythermal animals indicate that cold compensated metabolic rates are typical
for this group. A recent analysis suggests that the patterns of cold
stenothermy in Antarctic ectotherms versus cold eurythermy in
northern hemisphere ectotherms extend to the respective differences in
metabolic capacities as well as in metabolic scopes and activity levels
(Pörtner, 2002b
). Cold
eurythermy patterns were also shown to develop in northern populations of the
same species in a latitudinal cline of the northern hemisphere, possibly as a
consequence of evolutionary temperature adaptation, linked to genetic
differentiation between populations. In line with a rise in metabolic costs,
increments in mitochondrial aerobic capacities have been observed in marine
invertebrates and in cod during adaptation to eurythermal cold in a (northern
hemisphere) latitudinal cline (Tschischka
et al., 2000
; Sommer and
Pörtner, 2002
; Fischer,
2002
).
In a recent study, the effects of cold acclimation versus those of
cold adaptation were evaluated by studying the capacities of aerobic enzymes
in populations of eastern Atlantic cod along a latitudinal cline
(Lannig et al., 2003
). These
comparisons showed significantly higher capacities of aerobic enzymes in the
northernmost population from the Barents Sea, associated with higher rates of
oxygen consumption after cold acclimation
(Fischer, 2002
). According to
microsatellite analyses the cod populations from the southern North Sea (NSC)
and from the Barents Sea (north-eastern Arctic cod, NEAC) are genetically
distinct (Nielsen et al.,
2001
; Hutchinson et al.,
2001
). The cod population from the North Sea experiences large
seasonal temperature fluctuations between 4°C to 18°C, whereas cold
adapted cod from the Barents Sea live in more stable colder habitats at
temperatures between 2°C and 4°C. Nonetheless, NEAC migrate to
somewhat warmer waters for spawning and display growth optima close to
10°C (Pörtner et al.,
2001
). These patterns indicate that the species is typically
eurythermal in many areas of its distribution range.
Therefore, the present study was designed to investigate at which levels the differences in aerobic metabolism as observed in the two populations are regulated and whether the genetic differentiation as found for non-coding regions extends to differences in the gene expression of central metabolic enzymes. We studied two populations of cod, one from the North Sea and the other one from the Barents Sea, after acclimation to the same low (4°C) and high (10°C) temperatures. By comparing the patterns of gene expression in the genetically distinct populations the present data set extends our previous study on differences in enzyme capacities. We analysed maximum activities as well as transcript levels of CS and COX in liver and white muscle. Since no RNA probes were available for citrate synthase from cod we isolated and characterised a fragment of the citrate synthase gene from G. morhua.
| Materials and methods |
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salinity under a 12:12 h light-dark cycle
and were fed with shrimps and mussels twice a week. Fish were acclimated to
4.0±0.5°C (cold acclimated) and 10.0±0.5°C (warm
acclimated) for at least 6 weeks. Starting from 10°C, the temperature was
changed at a rate of 1°C day1 until the final
temperature was reached. Feeding was terminated 5 days prior to sample
preparation.
RNA-isolation
Animals were slightly anaesthetized with MS-222 (0.3 g
l1) before being killed. Samples from liver and white muscle
(lateral, taken from close behind the anus) were quickly removed and frozen
instantaneously in liquid nitrogen. For the quantitative isolation of total
RNA from frozen liver tissue the RNeasy kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) was used
according to the manufacturer's instructions. Total RNA from muscle was
isolated using the peqGold Trifast kit (Peqlab, Erlangen, Germany) based on
the method of Chomczynski and Sacchi
(Chomczynski and Sacchi, 1987
),
since this kit could be easily adapted to larger tissue sizes, as required for
tissues with low RNA contents. mRNA was purified from total RNA using the
Oligotex kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. RNA
quality was checked as described earlier
(Lucassen et al., 2003
).
Construction of probes and sequence determination
Species-specific probes for the quantification of RNA transcripts of
citrate synthase (CISY) and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) genes were
constructed by use of reverse transcription followed by polymerase chain
reaction (RT-PCR) as described earlier
(Lucassen et al., 2003
). For
CISY the primer pair CISY-F9/CISY-B16
(Lucassen et al., 2003
) was
used. For the mitochondrial-encoded COX subunit 2 (COX2) GmCOX2-F5
(5'-CCGCATCTTACTATTAAAGCAATGG-3') was designed as forward and
GmCOX2-B8 (5'-GGATTCAACTGGGACAACCATACG-3') as backward primers
according to the published mitochondrial sequence of G. morhua
(Johansen and Bakke, 1996
)
(GenBank X99772). Briefly, reverse transcription and PCR were performed as
described earlier (Lucassen et al.,
2003
). The citrate synthase fragment was amplified in 32 cycles
with an annealing temperature of 58°C (± 6°C) for 80 s. For the
COX2 fragment a touchdown program was used with an annealing temperature from
57 to 49°C (1°C per cycle) and a 12°C gradient, followed by
25 cycles at 52±6°C annealing temperature. After amplification a
final prolonged elongation step of 8 min at 72°C was introduced to prepare
the PCR fragments for the cloning. The gel-purified fragments were cloned with
the TOPO TA Cloning kit (Invitrogen, Karlsruhe, Germany) according to the
manual. After separation of some clones plasmids were isolated from overnight
cultures using the Qiaprep Spin Miniprep kit (Qiagen). To verify the presence
and size of inserts, the isolated plasmids were analysed by restriction
digestion with EcoRI. For each fragment the DNA sequence of positive
clones were determined for both strands by MWG-Biotech (Ebersberg, Germany).
Primer construction, assembling, analyses and alignments of the sequences were
performed using the MacVector 7.2 program package (Oxford Molecular Ltd,
Oxford, UK). The DNA sequence for citrate synthase has been submitted to
GenBank and can be obtained under the following accession number: GmCISY:
DQ059757.
Quantification of RNA
Gene-specific mRNA was quantified in ribonuclease protection assays (RPA)
performed with the RPA-III kit from Ambion (Austin, TX, USA), according to the
manufacturer's instructions. 10 µg total RNA was simultaneously hybridized
at 42°C to antisense probes for CS, COX2 and 18S-rRNA. For 18S-rRNA, a
commercial plasmid containing a highly conserved 80-bp fragment (pTRI RNA 18S,
Ambion) was used as reference. Probes (antisense) were synthesized by in
vitro transcription with T7 or T3 RNA Polymerase (Invitrogen)
(Lucassen et al., 2003
) and
labelled with [
-32P]uridine 5'-triphosphate (Amersham
Bioscience, Freiburg, Germany). To equalize protected fragment intensities, a
specific radioactivity of 1000 Ci mmol1 (1
Ci=3.7x1010 Bq) was used for CISY, 45 Ci
mmol1 for COX2 and about 0.1 Ci mmol1 for
18S-rRNA, respectively. After RNase treatment the RNA:RNA hybrids were
co-precipitated with yeast RNA (5 µg). The RNA was separated by denaturing
PAGE as described earlier (Lucassen et
al., 2003
), and radioactivity was detected and quantified using a
phosphor storage image system (FLA-5000; Fuji, Tokyo, Japan) and the AIDA
software package (raytest, Straubenhardt, Germany).
Protein isolation and enzyme assays
Frozen tissues were powdered under liquid nitrogen and homogenized briefly
in 9 vol. ice-cold buffer (20 mmol l1 Tris/HCl, pH 7.4, 1
mmol l1 EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100) with an Ultra Turrax.
Cellular debris was removed by 10 mincentrifugation at 1000 g
and 4°C. The supernatant was carefully transferred into a new tube,
avoiding co-transferring the upper lipid layer present in the liver
preparations. COX activity was determined according to published methods
(Moyes et al., 1997
) in 20
mmol l1 Tris/HCl, pH 8.0 containing 0.5% Tween 20 and 0.05
mmol l1 reduced cytochrome c. Cytochrome c
was reduced by the addition of excess sodium dithionite, which was removed by
G-25 gel filtration. The decrease in extinction at
=550 nm was
monitored in a thermostatted spectrophotometer (Beckman, Fullerton, CA, USA)
at 10.0°C. Enzyme activity in units per gram tissue was calculated using
an extinction coefficient (
550) for cytochrome c of
19.1 mol1 cm2. The extraction of CS followed the
protocol for COX with 75 mmol l1 Tris/HCl, pH 7.6, 1 mmol
l1 EDTA as extraction buffer. The powdered tissue was mixed
briefly with the ice-cold buffer using an Ultra Turrax. Homogenization was
completed by ultrasonic treatment for 5 min at 0°C (Branson Sonifier 450:
output control 8, duty cycle 50%). After centrifugation (10 min, 1000
g, 4°C) the extract was withdrawn from below the lipid
layer. CS activity was determined according to published methods
(Sidell et al., 1987
) in 75
mmol l1 Tris/HCl, pH 8.0, 0.25 mmol l1
5,5'-dithio-bis(2 nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), 0.4 mmol
l1 acetyl CoA, 0.4 mmol l1 oxalacetate.
The increase in extinction at
=412 nm was measured in a thermostatted
spectrophotometer at 10°C. Enzyme activity in units per gram tissue was
calculated using an extinction coefficient (
412) of 13.6
mol1 cm2 for the dye complex. Protein content was
measured in the extracts using the Bradford method
(Bradford, 1976
) and a BSA
standard.
Lipid extraction
Since tissue size, RNA content and protein concentration varied
considerably between individual livers, the lipid content was determined
according to a modified protocol (Folch et
al., 1957
). About 500 mg liver were extracted with a total of 20
vol. chloroform:methanol (2:1) using a glass homogenizer and a Teflon pestle
(1 min, 1200 r.p.m.). The extraction was completed by ultrasonic treatment for
5 min at 0°C (Branson Sonifier 450: output control 8, duty cycle 50%).
After centrifugation for 10 min at 3000 g the supernatant was
transferred into a weighted glass centrifugation tube and treated with 0.2
vol. 0.88% KCl. The phases were separated through centrifugation (10 min, 3000
g), and the upper water phase together with any traces from
the interphase was carefully removed from the glass tube. The solvent of the
lower phase was evaporated under N2 stream until no further
reduction in mass could be determined.
Statistics
Statistical significance was tested at the P
0.05 level using
analysis of variance (one-factor ANOVA) and the post hoc
StudentNewmanKeuls test for independent samples. Linear
regressions and squared correlation coefficients were calculated using
SigmaStat 3.0. Data were tested for outliers at the 95% significance level
using Nalimov's test (Noack,
1980
). Data are given as means ± s.e.m.
(N=56).
| Results |
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In liver, temperature acclimation had no effect on the transcript levels of the citrate synthase gene in either the North Sea or the Arctic populations (Fig. 2). However, transcript levels were lower by a factor of two in the Arctic cod than in the North Sea cod to begin with. Transcript levels of COX2 remained unchanged in the Arctic population upon thermal acclimation and increased only slightly (by a factor of 1.3) but significantly in the cold acclimated North Sea cod compared to any other group.
|
Analysis of enzyme activities
Maximum activities of citrate synthase and cytochrome c oxidase were
determined at 10°C in all experimental groups. According to
Fig. 3, both enzyme activities
rose significantly with acclimation to cold in white muscle of both
populations (Fig. 3). CS and
COX activities were highest in cold acclimated Arctic cod, so that significant
differences between the populations became apparent upon cold acclimation. At
(warm) control temperatures no such difference was detectable.
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| Discussion |
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Liver, which is a metabolically active tissue, and white muscle, which
represents the largest fraction of body mass, both have a large impact on
whole animal energy budget. Liver size and composition vary with growth rate,
temperature and season in cod (Holdway and
Beamish, 1984
; Pelletier et
al., 1994
) and liver is used for lipid storage, especially in
gadoids. In the present study, hepatosomatic indices increased with cold
acclimation in both populations and were highest in NEAC at 4°C
(Table 1). The increase in
liver size was accompanied by increments in total lipid content. In
consequence, other tissue components were effectively diluted when evaluated
on a per g fresh mass basis. Lower levels of mass-specific total RNA
(Table 1) and protein (data not
shown) were found in cold acclimated fish, similar to findings by Pelletier et
al. (Pelletier et al., 1994
).
These results imply that higher lipid contents in the cold have reduced the
available space for the metabolically active fraction (total protein, enzymes,
RNA, etc.) of the hepatocytes. Comparison of the liver data at the whole
animal level is therefore essential for an evaluation of metabolic capacities.
This comparison revealed enhanced liver sizes, resulting in enhanced liver
metabolic capacities in the cold (see below). Since all fish were of
comparable body size and mass, no further consideration of allometric scaling
was needed (Pelletier et al.,
1993
; Lannig et al.,
2003
). HSI and condition factors
(Table 1) were lower in the
present study than found in the literature for growing fish but showed the
same trends with respect to temperature effects
(Holdway and Beamish, 1984
;
Lannig et al., 2003
).
Potential effects of high growth rates on mitochondrial activities, which have
been described for white muscle in some fish species (cf.
Guderley, 1998
), should not
have influenced our data. Indeed, no correlation between condition factors and
muscle enzyme activities could be detected.
Effects of cold on mitochondrial enzymes
In ectothermic animals, long-term temperature shifts lead to compensatory
changes in the levels of glycolytic and mitochondrial enzymes
(Pörtner, 2002b
;
Guderley, 2004
). An extensive
literature links cold temperatures with enhanced aerobic capacities in tissues
of fish including cod (Lannig et al.,
2003
), particularly in skeletal muscle. At the whole animal level
these adjustments enhance functional capacity and alleviate the threat of
functional hypoxia in the cold
(Pörtner, 2002b
). The
present paper compares acclimation phenomena in cod at the temperature of
optimal growth for both populations (10°C)
(Pörtner et al., 2001
;
Fischer, 2002
), which is close
to mean habitat temperature for NSC, and at 4°C, which is the normal
habitat temperature for NEAC but close to the lower temperature boundary for
NSC. Increased capacities for CS and COX were found upon cold acclimation in
white muscle of both populations, indicating higher aerobic capacities in the
cold. However, whereas both enzymes displayed similar activities in both
populations when acclimated to 10°C, the cold adapted population displayed
increased capacities relative to the southern population when acclimated to
cold. These results are in line with the view that metabolic cold compensation
is present, especially in cold eurythermal animals (cf.
Pörtner et al., 1998
;
Pörtner et al.,
2000
).
For total liver, the capacities for CS increased upon cold acclimation,
whereas COX activities remained constant
(Fig. 4). Similar to the
present data, previous findings in cod and eelpout showed that liver citrate
synthase activity rather than cytochrome c oxidase activity more
clearly reflected mitochondrial responses to cold exposure
(Lannig et al., 2003
;
Lucassen et al., 2003
).
Increased liver citrate synthase activities at constant levels of cytochrome
c oxidase activity, as found in both populations, would indicate a
relative increase in matrix over membrane functions in liver mitochondria.
Similar to these results the ratio of CS over COX activities in liver rose by
a factor of 2 in different populations of temperate eelpout
(Lucassen et al., 2003
).
In contrast, a fixed ratio of both enzymes was found in white muscle of
both cod populations studied here and might be mainly due to changes in
mitochondrial volume density without concomitant changes in mitochondrial size
and cristae surface density. These findings indicate a fixed ratio of matrix
to cristae enzymes in muscle. Similarly, a parallel rise in the activities of
both enzymes was seen in white and red muscle of trout during cold acclimation
(Battersby and Moyes, 1998
) and
in red and white muscle of striped bass by stereological analyses
(Egginton and Sidell, 1989
).
This pattern may thus be unifying and may mirror the key function of muscle
mitochondria in energy supply.
Accordingly, cold acclimation in eurythermal species may cause similar
relative changes in the tissue-specific capacities of metabolic functions.
Liver mitochondria especially might be involved in anabolic processes with
citrate synthase, providing excess citrate for example for lipid synthesis
(cf. Pörtner, 2002a
). In
line with this view, lipid content was found to be elevated in cod liver
during cold acclimation (see above). These considerations might imply that
energy requirements are only one factor shaping acclimation of liver to
seasonal cold. Shifting functional requirements for mitochondria in cold
versus warm acclimated tissues, especially liver, warrants further
investigation.
Despite the lack of phenotypic responses to cold with respect to COX
capacity, higher maximum activities were found in liver of the cold adapted
population regardless of acclimation temperature
(Fig. 4D). These results
indicate higher aerobic capacities in liver of the cold adapted population
which, however, is not reflected in largely elevated whole-animal oxygen
consumption rates in the warm (10°C)
(Fischer, 2002
). In the cold,
however, largely enhanced aerobic capacities in muscle might reflect higher
overall costs of mitochondrial maintenance in the cold adapted population and
a shift in whole animal energy budget, in line with elevated rates of oxygen
consumption in NEAC in the cold (see above).
Regulation of mitochondrial adjustments to cold
Investigation of RNA expression in relation to enzyme activities should
provide some insight into the sites and levels of the regulation of
mitochondrial proliferation and their involvement in the differentiation of
populations. mRNA levels of CS rose significantly with cold acclimation in
white muscle of both populations (Fig.
1), again displaying significant differences at the lower
acclimation temperature only. Therefore, increments of the functional protein
are closely related to increased transcript levels. This correlation becomes
evident when plotting normalized citrate synthase activities against
normalized mRNA levels (Fig.
5A; with fresh mass as the common denominator). For CS a
significant correlation between maximum activities and mRNA could be detected,
the slope of the regression line following the line of identity. Considering
the similarity of total RNA contents within and between the two populations a
fixed ratio between enzyme activity and specific mRNA levels reflects mostly
transcriptional control of CS levels in white muscle under steady state
conditions. Higher transcription rates or higher mRNA stability in NEAC than
in NSC would explain the observed patterns and may also reflect the presence
of different CS alleles in the two populations. A good example of such a
phenomenon is available for lactate dehydrogenase-B (LDH-B) in Fundulus
heteroclitus liver (Schulte et al.,
1997
; Schulte et al.,
2000
). Here the twofold difference in enzyme concentrations
between northern and southern populations was associated with a twofold
difference in both the abundance of the transcripts and the transcription rate
of the gene. These findings suggested that the concentration differences in
LDH-B enzyme were the result of changes at the level of transcription
(Crawford and Powers, 1992
).
Investigation of the 5' flanking region revealed remarkable differences
between fish populations and a role for stress-responsive elements in
mediating the modified transcription pattern
(Schulte et al., 1997
;
Schulte et al., 2000
). Further
studies of the flanking regions (both 5' and 3') of the CS gene in
cod are required to specify the reasons for the observed differences in
transcript levels between cod populations.
|
The expression of COX was investigated using the mitochondrial-encoded
subunit COX2. Considerable variability existed in the transcript levels for
muscle, and no clear temperature induced alterations were found. In liver the
transcript levels were remarkably stable, again showing only minor temperature
effects. No direct correlation could be detected when COX activities were
plotted against COX2 mRNA levels (Fig.
5B). Thus the increments in muscle COX activities were not
associated with elevated transcript levels, indicating that
mitochondrial-encoded COX2 mRNA was not limiting for setting activity levels.
Similarly, the differences between populations observed at the functional
level in liver were not paralleled by different transcript levels. Therefore,
transcriptional control of COX gene expression does not occur through
mitochondrial-encoded COX2. Instead, transcriptional control through other
probably nuclear-encoded subunits or post-translational control may dominate
the functional expression of COX. In support of this assumption, Battersby and
Moyes found evidence for regulation by nuclear-encoded genes
(Battersby and Moyes, 1998
)
and, similar to our findings in cod, no limitation of functional activities by
different mitochondrial-encoded transcripts. In line with these findings, the
expression of the nuclear-encoded COX4 subunit in boreal eelpout was found
more cold compensated than the mitochondrial-encoded subunits COX1 and COX2
(Hardewig et al., 1999
).
Further study is required to specify the role of the nucleus in setting COX
activity.
Furthermore, the modulation of membrane composition during thermal
adaptation has to be considered for membrane proteins like COX (cf.
Hazel, 1995
). Wodtke
demonstrated for carp red muscle that the specific activity of COX was
increased in cold acclimated membranes, merely through changes in lipid and
fatty acid composition (Wodtke,
1981a
; Wodtke,
1981b
). However, no evidence was found for homeoviscous adaptation
of mitochondrial membrane lipids in liver and heart of cold acclimated sea
bass Dicentrarchus labrax
(Trigari et al., 1992
). As a
consequence, cytochrome c oxidase activity per mg mitochondrial
protein was decreased at lower acclimation temperatures. Accordingly,
adaptation in membrane properties in cod muscle mitochondrial membranes may
suffice to explain the observed increase in COX activities and the maintained
functional activities in liver.
Conclusions and perspectives
Exclusively transcriptional control of CS levels was found in cod white
muscle and may typify tissues where energy requirements only define
mitochondrial functions. In liver a role of CS in anabolism may cause a more
complex regulatory pattern. Post-transcriptional control is likely involved in
phenotypic acclimation to moderate cooling, as seen for COX in this and in
previous studies in fish.
The observed differences in the expression of CS are indicative of differences between populations at the genome level, which relate to the differentiation at the functional level. These differences are operative at the cold end of the thermal tolerance window and may reflect the stable separation of both populations. Selection of regulatory loci may be involved in establishing higher aerobic capacities seen in the cold adapted population. Clearly, chromosomal analyses of the entire CS gene are required for an in-depth characterization of the genetic differences between both populations.
Enhanced expression capacity of aerobic genes in the cold may support
increased mitochondrial capacities and typify cold adapted eurytherms in
general, at least those which display significant metabolic cold compensation,
as seen in north eastern Arctic cod. Enhanced gene expression capacity may
provide the functional basis for the cold compensated capacity for aerobic
exercise suggested to exist in NEAC compared to North Sea cod
(Pörtner, 2002b
). This
occurs at the expense of reduced growth performance. Very likely, the genetic
differences reflected in our present data are only representative of a larger
array of genetic differences that underlie the observed functional patterns.
Therefore, future comparative studies in these populations using large-scale
genomic studies will be promising for elucidating the impact of abiotic
factors like temperature on functional and genetic differentiation of
populations. The hypothesis that eastern Atlantic cod extends its geographical
distribution over a larger latitudinal range than would be possible for one
genetically uniform population by differentiation into genetically and
functionally distinct populations, needs to be tested.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
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