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First published online March 16, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 1170-1182 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.002188
Persistent effects of incubation temperature on muscle development in larval haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus L.)
1 Fisheries and Oceans Canada, St Andrews Biological Station, 531 Brandy
Cove Road, St Andrews, NB, E5B 2L9, Canada
2 Department of Biology and Canadian Rivers Institute, University of New
Brunswick, PO Box 5050, Saint John, NB, E2L 4L5, Canada
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: martelldj{at}mar.dfo-mpo.gc.ca)
Accepted 23 January 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: development, larva, muscle, temperature, myofibre
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
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Muscle growth occurs through hyperplasia (an increase in fibre number) and
hypertrophy (increase in fibre size)
(Kundu and Mansuri, 1990
;
Johnston, 1999
;
Mommsen, 2001
). Both processes
are dependent upon the recruitment from progenitor stem cell populations
(Koumans and Akster, 1995
;
Johnston, 2001
;
Stoiber et al., 2002
), which
are distinct for fast and slow muscle
(Devoto et al., 1996
).
Compared to post-natal muscle development and growth in mammals and birds,
fish continue to demonstrate hyperplasia of muscle tissue as an important
avenue of muscle growth in post-embryonic larval and adult phases until long
into mature adult life (Weatherley et al.,
1988
; Koumans and Akster,
1995
; Johnston et al.,
1998
; Patruno et al.,
1998
; Mommsen,
2001
). In addition, fish develop different muscle types within
discrete myotomal zones and follow a multi-stage process that begins in the
embryo. The embryonic stage of fish muscle differentiation and development
involves different progenitor cell populations, the activation of morphogenes
such as Shh that regulate developmental patterning and events as well as
inducing muscle regulatory factors (MRF)
(Shilo, 2001
), and the spatial
and temporal sequential expression of MRFs
(Rescan, 2005
). In the late
embryo, new myofibres are recruited in discrete dorsal and ventral germinal or
proliferation zones (Koumans and Akster,
1995
; Galloway et al.,
1998
; Stoiber et al.,
2002
), which soon thereafter become depleted of progenitor cells.
This `stratified' hyperplasia (Rowlerson
and Veggetti, 2001
; Rescan,
2005
) represents the second phase of muscle development and
growth. Subsequent muscle growth proceeds through hypertrophy and mosaic
hyperplasia in which new fibres are recruited throughout the spatially
separated myofibre zones in the myotome
(Johnston et al., 1996
;
Stoiber et al., 2002
;
Rowlerson and Veggetti, 2001
;
Rescan, 2005
).
Fish muscle is remarkably plastic in its response to changes in
environmental conditions, primary among which is temperature
(Johnston, 1993
;
Johnston, 2001
;
Johnston et al., 1997
;
Johnston et al., 1998
;
Martell et al., 2006
). This
plasticity often involves directional changes in the number and size of red
and white myofibres (Johnston,
2001
; Stoiber et al.,
2002
; Johnston and Hall,
2004
), changes in the frequency
(Johnston, 2001
) and
periodicity of each type of myofibre recruitment
(Brodeur et al., 2003
;
Johnston, 2006
), and changes
in the myogenic progenitor cell populations
(Johnston, 2006
). At the
cellular level, changes in temperature may also bring about variation in
myofibril (Johnston, 2001
;
Johnston, 2006
;
Martell et al., 2006
) and
mitochondrial densities (Johnston,
1993
; Galloway et al.,
1998
; Sänger and Stoiber,
2001
; Johnston and Hall,
2004
). Minor shifts in temperature have been shown to have
significant effects on development in rapidly growing embryonic and larval
phases (Blaxter, 1992
;
Kamler, 1992
;
Johnston, 2001
;
Johnston, 2006
;
Johnston and Hall, 2004
) such
that temperature variation during embryogenesis can differentially affect fast
and slow muscle development and growth
(Johnston et al., 1998
;
Stoiber et al., 2002
;
Johnston and Hall, 2004
;
Johnston, 2006
). Studies have
also revealed that these changes can persist through ontogeny, affecting
subsequent production of somatic tissue (i.e. growth)
(Johnston and Hall, 2004
;
Martell et al., 2005
;
Martell et al., 2006
),
swimming style, and performance (Johnston
et al., 2001
; Johnston and
Temple, 2002
; Johnston and
Hall, 2004
; Johnston,
2006
). For example, increased incubation temperature affected the
time taken to complete metamorphosis and the proportion of muscle fibre types
present in the post-metamorphic juvenile turbot (Scophthalmus maximus
L.) (Calvo and Johnston,
1992
). Studies on larval haddock (Melanogrammus
aeglefinus L.) (Martell et al.,
2005
; Martell et al.,
2006
) and herring (Clupea harengus L.)
(Johnston, 1993
) have also
shown that different incubation temperatures affected shifts in developmental
trajectories for different tissues, such as the eye, gut, notochord, muscle
and nervous system, such that some were advanced and others retarded with
respect to each other.
Very few studies have attempted to examine the phenotypic ramifications of
resultant changes in muscle structure (cellularity) beyond early exogenous
feeding (Johnston, 2006
).
Fewer still are studies that have controlled for post-hatch temperature
conditions to examine the ramifications of temperature differences during
embryonic development (Johnston,
2006
). From our previous studies of haddock development over
different temperatures, it is clear that incubation temperature affected
general developmental rates, tissue-specific development, yolk absorption and
growth (Martell et al., 2005
;
Martell et al., 2006
), and
that these effects persisted throughout larval and early juvenile phases.
These changes may have a large potential impact upon larval function and
capability (i.e. predator avoidance, prey capture, swimming performance, etc.)
and, through these, survival. We considered it necessary next to examine how
changes in muscle development, so crucial to larval function and growth, are
manifested and how they are related to changes observed in earlier studies. We
hypothesize that differences in incubation temperature will result in
considerable and persistent alterations in larval haddock muscle phenotype and
that the effects will differ between superficial and deep myotomes. A novel
reductionist/integrative experimental approach that consisted of a series of
interrelated and nested studies (see also
Martell et al., 2005
;
Martell et al., 2006
) was
undertaken to investigate how temperature variation during embryogenesis can
affect phenotypic plasticity in haddock. The commercially desirable gadid
haddock inhabits broad regions of the North Atlantic in waters that range from
113°C (Scott and Scott,
1988
). Whether the result of climate change
(Jobling, 1997
;
Kennedy and Walsh, 1997
;
Rombough, 1997
), natural
environmental variation (Johnston,
2006
), or changes in aquaculture protocols
(Aiken, 2003
), haddock are
likely exposed to subtle changes in temperature during their embryonic
development.
The present study will examine and integrate analyses of cellularity and
fine-scaled cell-size distributions in both superficial and deep myotomes at
multiple incubation temperatures over several crucial early life history
phases and muscle developmental stages. This approach will yield a more
complete picture of the reaction norm
(Johnston, 2006
), permitting a
more thorough interpretation of muscle developmental strategy through ontogeny
and its impacts on larval muscle phenotype.
| Materials and methods |
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95% four-cell and
5%
eight-cell stage. The rearing system consisted of twelve 5 l flow-through
incubators divided into four replicates for each of three temperatures,
4°C, 6°C and 8°C (±0.5°C) (see
Martell et al., 2005
120 000 fertilized zygotes was divided evenly among the twelve
rearing units. Once 50% hatch was observed, the contents of each incubator
were each carefully transferred to one of twelve 60 l flow-through
polypropylene tanks with seawater set to 6°C. Following tank transfer,
samples were collected according to procedures as detailed elsewhere
(Martell et al., 2005
Sampled free-embryos and larvae were anaesthetized with 0.1 mg
l1 tricaine methanesulfonate (Sigma-Aldrich Canada Ltd,
Oakville, Ontario, Canada) then fixed in seawater-buffered 4% formaldehyde.
Five fixed specimens were selected at random consistently from one of the four
replicate samples in each of the three larval grow-out temperature groups at
2, 7, 14, 21 and 28 d.p.h. (no 28 d.p.h. samples available from 8°C). Each
specimen was individually embedded in glycomethacrylate resin either
JB4+ (Polysciences Inc, Warrington, PA, USA) or Technovit 7100 (Energy Beam
Sciences, Agawam, Massachusetts, USA). Mounting procedures are detailed
elsewhere (Martell et al.,
2006
). Cross-sections (2 µm) were cut at the level of the
posterior gut using a Reichert-Jung Autocut 2040 microtome (Leica Canada,
Ontario, Canada). Adjacent sections were stained with 1% Toluidine Blue O
(Presnell and Schreibman,
1997
) and modified Paragon stain (see
Martin et al., 1966
;
Spurlock et al., 1966
).
Images of each section were taken in triplicate using a Nikon 990 camera mounted on a Zeiss Photomicroscope III (Zeiss Canada, ON, Canada). All triplicate image groups were subsequently stacked and averaged to eliminate random colour-channel noise and enhanced (for cell membrane contrast) in Adobe PhotoShop (v. CS) using software plug-ins from Fovea Pro and Optipix (Reindeer Graphics, Asheville, NC, USA). Outlines of all muscle cells on one side of the dorsal epaxial myotome were digitally traced over the high-resolution averaged images in PhotoShop using a graphics tablet (Wacom, Vancouver, WA, USA). Separate drawing layers were created for both the superficial single cells and the deep cells. Each cellular outline layer was subsequently processed to create detached outlines of each cell, calibrated for magnification, and all cells counted and measured for equivalent diameter and area using Fovea Pro.
Statistics
The number and equivalent diameters of superficial and deep muscle cells,
as measured by image analysis procedures, were log transformed and analyzed
over time (categorical factor) by saturated two-way Model I ANOVA
(P=0.05) and, due to significant interactions among factors,
subsequently by one-way Model I ANOVA using GLM procedures (JMP software, SAS
Institute, Cary, NC, USA). Tukey post-hoc multiple comparisons
(P=0.05) were employed following ANOVA analyses. Equivalent diameters
of superficial and deep muscle cells were binned into 2.5 µm categories for
each specimen at each temperature and sampling period. The resulting frequency
distributions were analyzed using a series of one-way ANOVAs (P=0.05)
due to significant interactions among the main effects temperature, time and
frequency class, with post-hoc Tukey HSD tests (P=0.05)
(i.e. among frequency classes at temperature and day, among temperatures at
day and frequency class, among days at temperature and frequency class). Total
muscle cross-sectional area for each sampled larva was calculated as the sum
of the products of cell number and mean cell area for each myofibre type.
These data were analyzed by temperature and time using a saturated two-way
ANOVA (P=0.05) and, due to a significant interaction between factors,
subsequently by two one-way ANOVAs (i.e. by temperature and by time).
Regressions of mean equivalent deep cell diameters as a function of total deep
cell number were fitted to a logarithmic function of the form
ln(D)=b+m(N) (where D represented the mean
equivalent deep muscle cell diameter and N, the total number of deep
muscle cells), using least-squares methods (JMP software). Regression slopes
among temperature treatments were compared statistically using standard
methods (Zar, 1999
).
| Results |
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0.5 d.p.h. in the 8°C treatment embryos but not until
2.7 d.p.h. in the 4°C embryos. Similarly, the proliferation zone
between the superficial and deep muscle cells was first distinguished at
1.4 d.p.h. in 8°C embryos but not until about
2.7 d.p.h. at
4°C. The appearance of these two ontogenetic events was inversely
proportional to incubation temperature and occurred just prior to exogenous
feeding at 8°C, but following exogenous feeding at 4°C, and
corresponded to a general delay in the timing of cellular proliferation with
decreased temperature. Unlike the deep muscle proliferation zone, small
superficial muscle fibres, when observed late in the experiment, were found
exclusively in the proliferation zone located at the horizontal myoseptum,
interior of the lateral line (Fig.
3).
|
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|
Superficial myofibres
There was no significant difference in myofibre mean equivalent diameters
among temperature groups (Fig.
4A) except at 21 d.p.h. (F2,16=7.33,
P=0.006), wherein the 8° group had a significantly greater mean
myofibre diameter than that in the 6°C group (Tukey, P=0.05). The
mean diameter of the 4°C treatment was not significantly different from
either the 6° or 8°C treatments. There was a significant change in
mean equivalent diameter over time in the 6°C group
(F4,23=4.57, P=0.007); however, overall this was
neither consistent nor directional as there was an initial significant
decrease in diameter followed by an increase at 21 d.p.h. (Tukey HSD,
P=0.05). The 8°C group also showed a significant
(F3,15=6.78, P=0.004) and directional increase in
diameter over time with the final 21 d.p.h. sample having the greatest mean
diameter over time (Tukey HSD, P=0.05).
|
Numbers of superficial cells (Fig. 4B) increased with temperature (F2,53=4.62, P=0.014) and over time (F3,53=23.58, P<0.0001) for the first 21 d.p.h. (i.e. over four sampling periods). The 6°C treatment had significantly greater numbers of superficial cells than the 4°C treatment beyond 7 d.p.h. At day 28, the 6°C treatment was also significantly greater than the 4°C treatment (F1,10=6.15, P=0.033). However, the temperature effect was not directly proportional as the numbers of myofibres in the 8°C group was not significantly different from either the 4°C or 6°C (Tukey, P=0.05).
The multiple analyses of myofibre diameter frequency distributions among
temperatures, days and frequency classes
(Fig. 5) were integrated and
revealed general trends among experimental groups. There was the tendency for
the superficial myotome to be composed of a greater number of myofibres in the
larger size-classes and of a broader range of fibre sizes that were
proportional to both temperature and time. This was especially apparent in the
6°C and 8°C groups. Within each frequency distribution, by temperature
and day, the peak of the distribution was significantly different from the
`shoulders' of the distribution, which were also significantly different from
the outer distribution classes (Tukey HSD, P=0.05). The equivalent
diameters at the distribution maxima at all temperatures and days were found
to occur at
15 µm (mode between frequency class 12.515 µm
and 1517.5 µm), although the distributional range increased over
time. The 4°C distributions exhibited no significant difference over time
in any frequency class and there was no observed significant increase in
distribution range. In the 6°C treatment at 14 d.p.h., the frequencies
expressed in the 1012.5 µm and 12.515 µm classes were
significantly greater compared to earlier samples (Tukey HSD,
P=0.05). Following this, at 21 and 28 d.p.h., frequencies in the
larger size classes (i.e. >20 µm) displayed a significant increase over
time. The distributions in the 8°C fish were also observed to have
significant maxima (P<0.05) at 12.5 µm but this was found at 2
and 14 d.p.h., while it shifted to 15 µm at 7 and 21 d.p.h. For both
6°C and 8°C treatments there was a significant and gradual increase in
distributional breadth or range and in the number of larger myofibres over
time (Tukey, P=0.05) (arrows on
Fig. 5). This was especially
apparent in the 6°C treatment at 28 d.p.h.
|
Deep myofibres
Immediately following hatch, mean muscle cell diameter was greatest in the
8°C treatment at 2 d.p.h. (F2,10=4.6,
P=0.038) and 7 d.p.h. (F2,12=5.5,
P=0.02) and decreased with reduced temperature (Tukey,
P=0.05) (Fig. 6A).
However, this pattern was reversed in later ontogeny with the largest mean
cell diameters found the 4°C treatment at both 21 d.p.h.
(F2,16=12.22, P=0.0006) and 28 d.p.h.
(F1,9=33.67, P=0.0003) (no 8°C sample at 28
d.p.h.). This pattern reversal (i.e. negative effect of temperature on mean
myofibre diameter) confirmed the significant interaction between temperature
and time (F7,56=9.86, P<0.0001) first noted in
the initial two-way ANOVA. Analyses also showed that at 14 d.p.h., the
midpoint in the post-hatch experimental timeline, there was no significant
difference (P=0.66) in deep muscle mean diameters among temperature
groups. The data (Fig. 6A) also
displayed a trend of greater decrease in mean cell size with temperature such
that the highest temperature group showed the greatest rate and depth of
decline, further clarifying the significant interaction noted above. All
temperature groups showed a significant effect of time on mean cell size:
4°C (F4,19=6.73, P=0.0011), 6°C
(F4,22=51.31, P<0.0001), 8°C
(F3,15=32.08, P<0.0001).
|
Analysis of frequency distributions of deep muscle cell equivalent
diameters revealed that distributions contained one or two maxima that were
significantly greater (Tukey, P=0.05) than adjacent size classes
(Fig. 7). Higher temperature
resulted in an increase in the number of myofibres in the size classes, an
earlier appearance of both larger and smaller muscle cells, and an increased
distributional range. Specifically, analysis of frequencies by temperature
among frequency classes and days showed a trend of increased mean numbers of
myofibres in size class over time. Significant differences were found among
frequency maxima between days at each temperature beginning at 21 d.p.h. at
4°C, 14 d.p.h. at 6°C, and 7 d.p.h. at 8°C. Of importance was the
significant increase (P<0.05) in the numbers of the smallest cells
(07.5 µm in diameter) between 14 and 21 d.p.h. at 8°C,
21
d.p.h. at 6°C and
28 d.p.h. at 4°C. Analysis by day among size
classes and temperature revealed that the size distribution in the 8°C
group at 14 and 21 d.p.h. differed significantly from those of the 6°C and
4°C groups (which were similar statistically). At 28 d.p.h., however, the
distribution at 6°C differed significantly from that of 4°C. The
significant increases in frequencies in the 05 µm size classes
observed at 21 and 28 d.p.h. at 6°C were found to be similar to that
observed in 8°C at 14 and 21 d.p.h., respectively.
|
|
| Discussion |
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|
|
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Superficial myotome
Superficial muscle exhibited similar cellularity patterns among all
temperature groups, with an increase in cellular recruitment and, to some
extent, size across temperature and time
(Fig. 4A,B). A continuous
low-level recruitment of new small cells and growth of existing myofibres was
observed in all treatments over time, as illustrated by the consistent
unimodal distribution among temperature groups with larger cell size class
frequencies increasing over time (Fig.
5). This resulted in an increased distributional range in weeks 3
and 4 that also progressed with temperature (arrowed trends in
Fig. 5). Danube bleak also
displayed a unimodal pattern of cell size distributions unaffected by
embryonic temperature treatments (Stoiber
et al., 2002
), with a similar delay in the superficial
proliferation event until long after this was noted in deep muscle. Throughout
the present experiment, superficial epaxial muscle was maintained in a
monolayer extending from the dorsal apex to the horizontal myoseptum (Figs
1,
2,
3). There was no indication of
the subsequent retreat of the monolayer to form a wedge-shaped superficial
muscle zone at the level of the horizontal myoseptum, a characteristic of
superficial muscle development and prelude to gill functionality
(El-Fiky and Wieser, 1988
).
However, outside the time frame of the present study, the wedge-shaped
superficial proliferation zone was present in haddock muscle at 50 d.p.h.
(sample not large enough to be included within this study). The superficial
monolayer is thought to act as the medium for gas exchange during early
ontogeny until the gills have developed sufficiently to take over this
function. This development has been reported to be a function of larval size
(El-Fiky and Wieser, 1988
;
Koumans and Akster, 1995
;
Rombough, 2002
) although Wells
and Pinder (Wells and Pinder,
1996
) concluded that gill development in Atlantic salmon was more
closely related to developmental phase than to size (mass). El-Fiky and Wieser
(El-Fiky and Wieser, 1988
)
also reported that the species that had the longest delay before exhibiting
free-swimming behaviour had the longest period wherein gill development was
delayed and the superficial layer served as the respiratory organ (El-Fiky et
al., 1987; Koumans and Akster,
1995
). This would imply that gill functionality was a requirement
for free-swimming behaviour. Given that the entire myotome is still
functioning aerobically in early larval phases
(El-Fiky and Wieser, 1988
;
Wieser, 1995
), the occurrence
of the superficial proliferation event may signal the development of a
juvenile/adult muscle structure, the advent of an anaerobic metabolic function
in the deep muscle zone (Wieser,
1995
), and an active free-swimming lifestyle. The slow continual
addition of cells and increase in mean cell size observed as a function of
increased temperature herein, may be simply proportional to and a function of
the increased growth rate also reported to be proportional to increased
incubation temperature (Martell et al.,
2005
). Thus, the observed increase in superficial muscle growth
with temperature would maintain the monolayer coverage with its crucial
respiratory function over the gradually increasing myotome volume.
Deep myotome
Deep myofibre zone development (Figs
1,
2) was affected significantly
by embryonic temperature (Fig.
6), such that the extent of the proliferation of small new
myofibres was positively influenced by increased incubation temperatures. In
addition, the onset of the major proliferative event
(Fig. 7) was advanced with
higher temperatures. Both of these responses were also directly proportional
to incubation temperature and were maintained despite the lack of temperature
differences in the post-hatch environment. Although modifications in larval
deep muscle cellularity as a function of incubation temperature change have
been reported widely in the literature they are consistent neither in
direction nor in pattern (reviewed by
Johnston, 2006
). This
inconsistency may be a consequence of a failure to properly establish the
reaction `norm' as discussed (Johnston,
2006
), but may also be a function of differences among the genomes
within such a diverse group of freshwater, anadromous and marine species.
Detailed analysis of the fine-scale cell-size distribution patterns herein
revealed that the temperature-related proliferation event strongly affected
both cellularity and cell size distributions (Figs
6,
7). This event was confined
primarily to the dorsal proliferation zones and was characteristic of the
`stratified hyperplasia' phase of muscle growth
(Rowlerson and Veggetti, 2001
;
Rescan, 2005
). The associated
reduction in mean cell size and increase in number as well as the bimodal
distribution of cell sizes (Fig.
7) was reflective of that proliferation. Bimodal distributions
associated with proliferation have also been reported for sea bass
(Ayala et al., 2000
), Atlantic
salmon (Johnston et al., 1999
;
Bjørnevik et al., 2003
),
and for Danube bleak (Stoiber et al.,
2002
). However, detailed analyses of the changes in the
distributions herein, indicated that the proliferation event was advanced by
approximately 7 days for each 2°C increment in incubation temperature
(illustrated by the arrow in Fig.
7). Muscle in herring (Vieira
and Johnston, 1992
), plaice (Pleuronectes platessa L.)
(Brooks and Johnston, 1993
),
sea bass (Ayala et al., 2000
)
and cod (Hall and Johnston,
2003
), and in culture
(Fauconneau and Paboeuf,
2001
), have exhibited increased proliferation in response to
increased incubation temperature. In addition, an embryonic stem cell line
(HEW) cultured from haddock reared for this study exhibited significantly
greater growth at increased temperatures (approx. threefold after 14 days;
4°C vs 12°C) (Bryson et
al., 2006
). However, the opposite effect following hatch was
observed for cod (Galloway et al.,
1998
), Atlantic halibut Hippoglossus hippoglossus L.
(Galloway et al., 1999
),
whitefish Coregonus lavaretus L.
(Hanel et al., 1996
) and
Atlantic salmon (Usher et al.,
1994
).
How do we reconcile these different observations? Is there a fundamental
strategy underlying both sets of responses? Increased incubation temperatures
for Atlantic salmon resulted in increased hyperplasia in later ontogeny
associated with increased growth (Higgins
and Thorpe, 1990
; Usher et
al., 1994
); also swim-up fry from Atlantic salmon embryos
incubated at greater temperatures grew faster during the post-exogenous
feeding phase (Peterson and
Martin-Robichaud, 1989
). Atlantic salmon expressed a differential
incubation temperature-related effect on muscle growth strategies such that at
hatch Atlantic salmon from lower incubation temperatures had more and larger
muscle fibres, but in alevins from greater incubation temperatures,
hyperplasia was the more dominant muscle growth process during the
endogenous-feeding phase (Johnston and
McLay, 1997
).
Lifestyle might be an important consideration in understanding overall
muscle growth strategy among fish species
(Usher et al., 1994
).
Specifically, this could refer to the length of the yolk-dependent stage, the
lack of a requirement for coordinated swimming activity, and the subsequent
requirement for swimming necessitated by the need for prey capture and
predator avoidance. These conditions are similar to lifestyle characteristics
argued to be of significance for superficial muscle growth (op.
cit.). Muscle growth differences among species and within species among
phenotypes may be a function of the duration of the yolk-dependent stage. The
three-stage yolk absorption process in embryonic and yolk-dependent haddock
was variously condensed and accelerated in a manner directly proportional to
incubation temperature (Martell et al.,
2005
). It may be that this advance triggered the earlier onset of
the hyperplastic event associated with increased incubation temperatures
observed herein (Fig. 7). In
species that have a long yolk-dependent stage, such as the 3090 days
for Atlantic salmon (Peterson et al.,
1977
) or the 50 days for halibut
(Galloway et al., 1999
),
significant recruitment of deep muscle fibres was observed either towards the
end of or following the complete absorption of the yolk
(Johnston and McLay, 1997
;
Galloway et al., 1999
). Within
this yolk-dependent larval stage, hypertrophy was the dominant process. In
those species with a very short yolk-dependent stage, such as 714 days
at 8°C to 4°C, respectively, for haddock
(Martell et al., 2005
), or
similarly in cod (Hall and Johnston,
2003
) and Danube bleak
(Stoiber et al., 2002
),
hyperplasia is the dominant growth process very soon after hatch and the end
of yolk-dependency. The initiation of exogenous feeding has been argued to be
a myogenic event, characterized by increased hyperplasia
(Stoiber et al., 2002
).
Species such as turbot (Gibson and
Johnston, 1995
) and curimatã-pacu Prochilodus
marggravii Walbaum (Brooks et al.,
1995
) hatch in a primitive developmental stage but possess a small
yolk. For these species, muscle hyperplasia is also delayed until after rapid
development and yolk utilization. We propose that comparisons among species
regarding muscle growth would be better made with respect to the depletion of
the yolk reserves and the onset of exogenous feeding.
Hyperplasia and growth strategy
The overall developmental strategy followed in response to differences in
temperature was also manifested in the significant differences among
logarithmic cellularity relationships (i.e. number vs size), which
illustrated a developmental strategy that favoured increased proliferation
(i.e. greater slope/hyperplasia) over hypertrophy at greater incubation
temperatures (Fig. 8). However
the question remains, what governed the preference of hyperplasia as the
favoured strategy for muscle development under situations of increased overall
growth and as a result of increased incubation temperatures? The
fastest-growing fish expressed the greatest hyperplasia
(Weatherley and Rogers, 1978
;
Weatherley et al., 1979
;
Weatherley et al., 1980
).
Nathanailides et al. (Nathanailides et
al., 1995
) proposed that larvae with fewer but larger fibres would
have less potential for subsequent hypertrophic growth compared to those with
more numerous and smaller cells. The increase in cellular recruitment
associated with increased temperature herein encapsulated a strategy of
increasing functional units in early ontogeny, upon which to build by
hypertrophy in subsequent life history. Hanel et al.
(Hanel et al., 1996
) reported
that, compared to hypertrophy, hyperplasia was an energetically more expensive
cellular growth process. In addition, overall production efficiency of protein
and new tissue increased with temperature, despite the increase in both
routine metabolic rates and cost of growth
(Hanel et al., 1996
;
Pedersen, 1997
). Higgins and
Thorpe (Higgins and Thorpe,
1990
), citing von Bertalanffy
(von Bertalanffy, 1960
),
argued that the decreased surface area:volume ratio associated with increased
cellular growth limited cellular physiological processes. They also noted,
citing Goss (Goss, 1966
), that
growth required to maintain organ physiological capacity within the growing
organism depended primarily upon the reproduction of its functional units,
such as cells or tissues. Weatherley and Rogers
(Weatherley and Rogers, 1978
)
proposed that the application of von Bertalanffy's hypothesis would result in
the fastest growth being achieved by means of hyperplasia, which was shown to
be correct (Higgins and Thorpe,
1990
; Weatherley et al.,
1979
; Weatherley et al.,
1980
). It was also argued that decreased energy intake, a function
of smaller body size and reduced temperature, would compromise nuclear
division (e.g. hyperplasia) but not necessarily hypertrophy
(Usher et al., 1994
). They
also proposed that protein synthesis associated with hypertrophy might be the
more efficient process by which to increase growth.
Immediately following hatch, individuals from greater temperature
treatments had the greatest mean superficial and deep fibre diameters but,
with the earlier onset of proliferation, had the smallest mean deep and
largest superficial fibre sizes by 28 d.p.h. In a concurrent study of haddock
development, it was found that myofibrillar densities in embryonic and larval
phases also decreased with increasing temperature
(Martell et al., 2006
). Arendt
proposed that the interaction between growth and development determined the
tissue-specific (i.e. muscle) developmental strategy
(Arendt, 2000
). Further, he
argued that either an earlier onset or later offset of differentiation would
produce smaller, and more numerous and but less mature, fibres in
faster-growing individuals. However, this rapid early muscle growth may limit
subsequent muscle growth in later ontogeny. In an analysis of total muscle
cross-sectional area in the post-hatch larvae herein, it was shown that
although there was no significant difference among temperature treatments
during the first 21 d.p.h., muscle did show significant growth in the last 7
days proportional to greater incubation temperature. Arendt also argued that
the reduced myofibre maturity (i.e. reduced or delayed myofibrilargenesis)
could result in a potential loss of muscle power compared to that of similarly
sized but slower-growing individuals
(Arendt, 2000
). Studies have
shown that compared to slower-growing conspecifics, faster-growing
individuals, which for transgenic salmon
(Farrell et al., 1997
)
expressed increased myofibre proliferation, exhibited reduced swimming
performance (Kolok and Oris,
1995
; Farrell et al.,
1997
; Arendt, 2000
;
Hill et al., 2000
). However,
herring reared at increased incubation temperatures, although possessing
reduced myofibril densities (Vieira and
Johnston, 1992
), showed greater fast-start swimming performance
and a `more developmentally advanced sub-carangiform style'
(Johnston et al., 2001
),
demonstrated by reduced yaw during normal swimming undulations. It remains to
be discovered in future studies how incubation temperature-affected
differences in muscle cellularity and maturity may affect muscle power, and
metabolic and swimming performance.
The change in muscle development associated with increased rearing
temperatures, as noted herein and previously
(Martell et al., 2006
),
synchronized with the advanced development of the eye, gut, blood cells and
notochord, and the increased growth rates and earlier depletion of the yolk
(Martell et al., 2005
), seem
to point to an earlier onset in the capability to feed exogenously and
avoid/escape predation. Perhaps as well, in higher energy environments the
acceleration of and advance in hyperplasia is energetically favoured and
results in a greater growth potential. These two points are worthy of much
further investigation in future studies.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
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