|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online April 20, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 1641-1652 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.003319
Review Article |
Historical reconstructions of evolving physiological complexity: O2 secretion in the eye and swimbladder of fishes
School of Biological Sciences, The University of Liverpool, Biosciences Building, Crown Street, Liverpool, L69 7ZB, UK
e-mail: michaelb{at}liv.ac.uk
Accepted 12 March 2007
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key words: oxygen secretion, Root effect, rete mirabile, choroid, swimbladder, phylogenetic reconstruction
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Given the complexity of even a single cell and the emergence of new,
unpredictable features at each of the higher levels of biological
organisation, it is very difficult, if not impossible, to predict the working
of complex physiological systems solely from the underlying genotype. Closure
of the phenotypegenotype gap therefore appears a daunting task.
Biology, however, unlike physics, can be seen as having already found its
single unifying concept, or grand formula: namely evolutionary theory. Thus,
looking for the ultimate/evolutionary cause of a physiological mechanism in
addition to the proximate/mechanistic cause should help to understand the
distribution of particular physiological phenotypes and their associated
genotypes in organisms. Thus, the fundamental question for comparative
physiologists can be broadened from `How does it work?'
(Schmidt-Nielsen, 1997a
) to
`How did it come about to work like it does?'
(Sherwood et al., 2005a
).
This review uses the mechanism of oxygen secretion in fishes, which has
been intensively studied in the fish swimbladder for over 100 years, to
demonstrate the potential insights from such an evolutionary approach. The
long generation times of the study species preclude the use of experimental
evolution as a tool, and the analytical approach chosen here is essentially
historical, using the comparative method developed in evolutionary biology
(Garland et al., 2005
). This
relies on the availability of phylogenetic trees, which has been greatly
improved by the increased capacity and cost effectiveness of DNA sequencing in
the post-genomic era.
It is shown how a single, seemingly isolated and exotic, complex physiological mechanism has likely shaped the evolution of the entire respiratory physiology of a group comprising half of all living vertebrates and how it can explain the previously puzzling distribution of certain respiratory phenotypes, ranging from the molecular to whole-organism levels of organisation.
| Discovery of O2 secretion in fishes |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Mechanism of swimbladder O2 secretion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Swimbladder metabolism
Steen showed that the glandular swimbladder epithelium of the European eel
produces large amounts of lactic acid, which acidifies blood in the
swimbladder capillaries and causes a strong decrease in Hb O2
saturation (Steen, 1963b
). His
pioneering experiments have subsequently been substantiated and extended on
the same species in a series of publications by Kobayashi, Pelster and Scheid
(see review by Pelster and Scheid,
1992
). It is now clear that anaerobically produced CO2
from the pentose phosphate pathway significantly contributes to the
acidification. In fact, swimbladder metabolism in the European eel appears to
be almost completely geared to the production and release of acidic
metabolites in the form of lactic acid and CO2, with a minimum of
concomitant O2 consumption even in the presence of high oxygen
partial pressue (PO2) values
(Pelster, 1995
). As a result,
blood pH in swimbladder capillaries may drop to between pH 7.0 and 6.5 in
actively O2-secreting swimbladders
(Steen, 1963b
;
Kobayashi et al., 1990
).
Specialised Root effect Hbs
The effect of acidification on Hb O2 binding is particularly
strong in teleost fishes and involves a decrease in the affinity (Bohr effect)
as well as cooperativity of Hb O2 binding
(Perutz and Brunori, 1982
;
Brittain, 1987
;
Brittain, 2005
). The effect is
so strong in some fishes such as the Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) that
air-equilibrated blood or haemolysates, which are normally close to full Hb
O2 saturation, can release up to 80% of their bound O2
upon acidification below a certain threshold value of PCO2
or pH (Krogh and Leitch, 1919
;
Berenbrink et al., 2005
). This
phenomenon has been called the Root effect after one of the first people to
describe it (Root, 1931
;
Scholander and van Dam, 1954
;
Pelster and Weber, 1991
;
Pelster and Randall, 1998
).
The strength of the Root effect varies between species and can be measured by
the degree of acid-induced deoxygenation of functional Hb (i.e. not oxidised
or denatured) in blood or in solution at a high reference
PO2, which is conveniently taken as the
PO2 of air (e.g.
Farmer et al., 1979
;
Berenbrink et al., 2005
)
(Fig. 1). In air-equilibrated
blood or haemolysates of the European eel, the Root effect causes a maximal
reduction of Hb O2 saturation by
3050% upon
acidification (Steen, 1963a
;
Bridges et al., 1983
;
Berenbrink et al., 2005
) and
this effect persists at PO2 values higher than those found
in air (Steen, 1963a
;
Bridges et al., 1983
;
Pelster and Weber, 1990
). By
contrast, mammalian blood or Hb solutions from dog and rabbit or pig and man,
respectively, stay
95% saturated under similar conditions
(Bohr et al., 1904
;
von Ledebur, 1937
;
Berenbrink et al., 2005
).
|
Vascular counter-current exchange in the rete mirabile
As far as is known today, swimbladder O2 secretion is invariably
linked with the occurrence of an anatomical structure known as the swimbladder
rete mirabile. Earlier claims of O2 secretion in the absence of a
rete mirabile (Sundnes et al.,
1958
) have been refuted by subsequent careful anatomical studies
(Fahlen, 1959
). The
swimbladder rete mirabile comprises a vascular counter-current exchange system
that is interspersed in the blood supply of the acid-producing gas gland cells
of the swimbladder epithelium. Depending on species, it can comprise just a
few or up to several thousand arterial and venous, interdigitated capillaries
running in opposite directions, which provides an increased surface area for
cross-capillary diffusion exchange of gases and solutes between the arterial
supply and venous drainage of the swimbladder epithelium. For the paired
swimbladder retia of the European eel, Krogh estimated a total of 116 000
arterial and 88 000 venous capillaries with a total length of 464 and 352 m,
respectively, creating a surface area for arteriovenous exchange of 105
cm2 in a volume as small as a water drop (64 mm3)
(Krogh, 1922
).
Haldane first suggested that the rete mirabile might function as a
counter-current exchanger for CO2, increasing the
PCO2 of blood in the gas gland, which in turn would cause
the release of O2 from Hb and thereby increase
PO2 (Haldane,
1922
). However, a simple calculation shows that the O2
capacity of arterial blood on its own is not high enough to create
PO2 values of several hundred atmospheres, even if 100% of
the O2 bound to Hb were released into physical solution upon
acidification via the Root effect
(Jacobs, 1930
;
Scholander and van Dam, 1954
;
Brauner and Berenbrink, in
press
). Jacobs accordingly postulated that the rete mirabile also
functions as a counter-current exchanger for O2
(Jacobs, 1930
).
The unique vascular anatomy of the bipolar swimbladder rete mirabile in the
European eel has enabled measurements of gas and solute concentrations in
blood before and after passing the arterial and venous capillaries
(Steen, 1963b
;
Kobayashi et al., 1990
). These
classic studies have confirmed that the rete mirabile acts as a
counter-current exchanger for CO2 and lactate or lactic acid, and
that part of the Root effect can thereby already be elicited in arterial rete
capillaries (Pelster and Scheid,
1992
). Back-diffusion of O2 from venous to arterial
capillaries of the rete has not been demonstrated in these experiments,
presumably because the rate of O2 diffusion into the swimbladder
under the particular conditions was so large that the PO2
of the blood entering the venous part of the rete mirabile did not provide a
high enough diffusion gradient for counter-current O2 exchange
(Pelster and Scheid, 1992
).
Nevertheless, O2 back-diffusion in the rete mirabile has still to
be postulated for the many cases where the PO2 of
swimbladder gases exceeds the PO2 that can be
theoretically generated by the Root effect after acidifying arterial
blood.
| O2 secretion in the fish eye |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
| Open questions in the study of O2 secretion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
However, although the formidable physiological capacity for O2
secretion in the swimbladder has been known now for 200 years, many details of
the process are still unclear. For example, while several transport mechanisms
for acidbase equivalents across swimbladder gas gland cells have been
identified in the past decade, their interaction is only beginning to be
understood (Pelster, 2004
).
Similarly, while the importance of the vagus nerve for stimulating swimbladder
O2 secretion was demonstrated more than 100 years ago (e.g.
Bohr, 1894
), the regulatory
mechanisms controlling the acid production rate of gas gland cells are largely
unknown (Pelster, 2004
).
Likewise, 25 years after the explanation of the Root effect as an
exaggerated Bohr effect of human HbA
(Perutz and Brunori, 1982
),
this interpretation is now increasingly challenged, Thus, the search for the
molecular mechanism(s) of the Root effect still continues, despite the
sequencing, crystallographic characterisation and modelling of an increasing
number of fish Hbs with and without a Root effect. Earlier work tried to
explain the molecular mechanism of the Root effect by changes in one or very
few key amino acid residues in fish Hbs, which at low pH would greatly
stabilize the low O2 affinity T(ense)-state conformation of
haemoglobin over the high affinity R(elaxed)-state conformation
(Perutz and Brunori, 1982
).
This classical model assumed that the O2 affinities within the T-
and R-states were fixed. Subsequent studies of deep sea fish Hbs, which can
release O2 even at very high PO2 for
swimbladder filling, indicated the presence of two roughly equal fractions of
O2 or CO-binding sites with markedly different ligand binding
affinities (Noble et al.,
1986
). This was interpreted as subunit heterogeneity elicited by
low pH and explained the decrease in the cooperativity of Hb O2
binding found in many Root effect Hbs at low pH. In other words, after the
first half of subunits has been occupied, low pH appears to essentially block
further O2 binding to the other half of the subunits. At least in
tuna (Thunnus thynnus) Hb, the latter are probably the ß-chains
(Yokoyama et al., 2004
).
Many fishes further express several Hb isoforms in their red blood cells,
some of which may show a strong Root effect whereas others show none at all
(e.g. Pelster and Weber,
1990
). Thus, the overall maximal Root effect in red blood cells
can further be modulated by varying the fraction of these functionally
different Hbs.
With more and more structural and functional data now available, it is
increasingly clear that interspecific differences in the mechanism(s) of the
Root effect may exist. Thus, as in the Bohr effect of human Hb, the C-terminal
histidine of the ß-chains may be responsible for about 50% of the total
Root effect in Hb of common carp (Cyprinus carpio)
(Parkhurst et al., 1983
). On
the other hand, structural studies on Hbs of the Antarctic fishes
Trematomus (formerly Pagothenia) bernaccchii and
T. newnesi and on tuna Hb indicate the absence of a dominant role for
this residue in the Root effect (Ito et
al., 1995
; Yokoyama et al.,
2004
; Mazzarella et al.,
2006a
; Mazzarella et al.,
2006b
).
Similarly, the Root effect is generally seen as caused by a stabilisation
of the low O2 affinity T-state conformation of Hb by protons. Yet
in Hb of the spot (Leiostomus xanthurus), proton binding to the
R-state has been suggested to create positive-charge clusters, which
destabilise the high-affinity R-state and cause the switch to the T-state
(Mylvaganam et al., 1996
). The
major Hb of T. newnesi has a very similar R-state structure to spot
Hb but shows no Root effect, questioning the generality of this explanation
(Mazzarella et al., 1999
).
At least in T. bernacchii, tuna and HbC of T. newnesi, a
large part of the Root effect can be explained by the sharing of a proton and
formation of a strong hydrogen bond between two pairs of aspartyl residues of
the
and ß chains at low pH in the T-state but not R-state
conformation of the protein (Ito et al.,
1995
; Yokoyama et al.,
2004
; Mazzarella et al.,
2006a
). Recently, it has been suggested that this interaction of
aspartyl residues is the minimal permissive requirement for the Root effect in
fish Hbs and that several histidinyl residues, which may differ between
species, act as modulators of the Root effect afforded by the interaction of
the aspartyl residues (Mazzarella et al.,
2006a
; Mazzarella et al.,
2006b
).
The view is emerging that the mechanism of the Root effect is different
from that of the Bohr effect of human Hb and may be the result of several,
additive mechanisms, whose contribution can differ between species
(Yokoyama et al., 2004
;
Bonaventura et al., 2004
;
Brittain, 2005
;
Berenbrink et al., 2005
;
Berenbrink, 2006
;
Mazzarella et al.,
2006a
/b
??).
Notwithstanding gaps in our knowledge about all the intricacies of the
system, the mechanism of swimbladder O2 secretion has become a
standard example of a complex and integrated physiological system in textbooks
of animal physiology (Hill et al.,
2004
; Randall et al.,
2002
; Schmidt-Nielsen,
1997b
; Sherwood et al.,
2005b
; Willmer et al.,
2005
; Withers,
1992
).
| Steps in the evolution of O2 secretion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It appears highly unlikely that even the three basic components of the system originated simultaneously. If, however, the components evolved stepwise, what were the selective advantages for these steps, given that only the three components together allow O2 secretion? Is there a particular sequence in which the components had to be acquired, and which came first, the swimbladder or the ocular system?
Evolution of increased metabolic acid production
Differences in the capacity for lactic acid production are frequently
observed in different tissues of vertebrates, and a priori
there appears to be no reason why the retinal pigment cell epithelium or the
swimbladder epithelium should not be able to evolve a higher capacity for
lactic acid production, either to augment aerobic ATP production in the
metabolically active retina or to avoid diminishing gaseous O2
concentration and decreasing buoyancy in a swimbladder filled by
air-swallowing at the surface. Hence, the metabolic changes in the retina or
swimbladder epithelium may initially only have been of a quantitative nature,
not involving a fundamental change in metabolic pathways. Interestingly,
uncoupling between glycolysis and a lack of tissue oxygen is seen in several
other quite diverse vertebrate tissues such as the mammalian retina
(Winkler, 1981
) and the
rattlesnake tailshaker muscle (Kemper et
al., 2001
). This indicates that high lactic acid production rates
in the presence of ample oxygen may evolve more easily than one would predict
based on the much higher ATP yield per mole of glucose when pyruvate is
channelled into the citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation rather
than transformed to lactic acid. Because studies comparing the metabolism of
the retina or swimbladder of species with and without O2 secretion
are lacking, it is assumed in the following that the production and release of
acidic metabolites into the blood supply of the swimbladder or retina was not
a limiting step in the evolution of O2 secretion.
Evolution of a rete mirabile
Retia mirabilia occur in different anatomical locations in many vertebrate
groups, suggesting that this deviation from the normal vascular pattern arises
frequently, such that it may be genetically fixed by natural selection as soon
as it provides an animal with an advantage that ultimately increases its
fitness (Carey, 1973
;
Block et al., 1993
). Examples
include the heat-exchanging retia mirabilia in the head of some endothermic
teleosts and sharks or some birds and mammals that are employed in selective
brain heating or cooling, respectively
(Linthicum and Carey, 1972
;
Block and Carey, 1985
;
Jessen, 2001
). Other examples
include the vasa recta of the mammalian kidney, the vascular arrangement in
the placenta of some mammals, the heat-conserving retia mirabilia in the
extremities of several birds and mammals
(Scholander, 1958
) and the
rete mirabile in the spermatic cord of many mammals, which protects the testes
from overheating (Harrison and Weiner,
1949
).
The retial arteries of heat exchangers frequently have rather large
diameters, sometimes up to several hundred micrometres
(Block and Carey, 1985
). They
therefore appear poorly equipped for gas exchange with neighbouring veins
(Carey, 1973
). By contrast,
choroid and swimbladder retia mirabilia consist of smaller vessels of
capillary dimensions (Krogh,
1922
; Scholander,
1954
; Wittenberg and
Wittenberg, 1974
). Theory predicts that without a mechanism to
elevate tissue PO2, such gas-permeable retia mirabilia
risk shunting O2 away from the tissues, as blood from the
respiratory organ entering the arterial part of the rete has a higher
PO2 than blood leaving the tissues in the venous part of
the rete (Kobayashi et al.,
1989
). Under these circumstances, physically dissolved
O2 can diffuse down the arteriovenous concentration gradient across
the increased surface area of the rete mirabile, short-circuiting tissue
O2 supply. Thus, evolution of a gas-permeable rete mirabile before
the evolution of a Root effect appears disadvantageous.
Evolution of the Root effect
A Root effect without a swimbladder or choroid rete appears equally
disadvantageous. Like other water-breathing animals, teleost fishes generally
have a low capacity blood CO2/bicarbonate buffer system
(Heisler, 1986
). In addition,
their Hb, which usually constitutes the major non-bicarbonate buffer component
in the blood, has a reduced number of surface histidine residues compared with
that of most other vertebrates, which results in lower specific buffer values
of teleost Hbs (Jensen, 1989
;
Berenbrink et al., 2005
). Taken
together, this means that teleost blood is easily acidified under conditions
such as exercise-induced lactic acid production. In the presence of a Root
effect, there is the risk that the resulting drop in pH causes incomplete Hb
O2 saturation in the gills and impairs tissue O2 supply.
Quite unlike other vertebrates, some teleosts with a Root effect Hb are able
to protect their red blood cell pH and thereby Hb O2 saturation
under these conditions by ß-adrenergic activation of a
Na+/H+-exchanger (ßNHE) in their red blood cells
(Nikinmaa, 1992
;
Berenbrink and Bridges, 1994
).
However, others, like the European eel, are not
(Romero et al., 1996
). Thus,
without a rete mirabile in the swimbladder or eye, and the associated benefits
of ocular or swimbladder O2 secretion, the possession of a Root
effect appears not only superfluous but even dangerous.
Hence, the problem is that a rete mirabile and Root effect appear only beneficial when they occur together and that each alone seems disadvantageous. Accepting their simultaneous evolution as unlikely, which came first and what was the selective advantage? In this context it would obviously help to know when, relative to the Root effect, low Hb buffer values and the ßNHE evolved, because these two factors are likely to influence how seriously a Root effect might impair adequate Hb O2 loading in the gills under general acidosis.
| Phylogenetic trees and evolutionary reconstruction in comparative physiology |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
| Reconstructing the evolution of O2 secretion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
The above study also showed that any of the several secondary reductions of the Root effect only occurred when the choroid rete mirabile had been lost (Fig. 4B). This result was statistically highly significant and suggests that natural selection maintains the Root effect in species with a choroid rete mirabile. As discussed above, a rete mirabile without a Root effect is not only insufficient for O2 secretion but also carries the danger of short-circuiting normal tissue O2 supply by O2 back-diffusion. Thus, loss of the Root effect in species still possessing a choroid rete mirabile appears evolutionarily constrained not only because of the benefits of the Root effect in terms of O2 secretion but also because it ameliorates the inherent danger of possessing a gas-permeable rete mirabile.
The same considerations also lead to the prediction that the choroid (and
swimbladder) rete mirabile should only have evolved in species where the Root
effect was already present. In fact, this is exactly what has been found
(Berenbrink et al., 2005
).
Reconstruction of Root effect evolution in the teleost lineage indicates its
gradual increase from about 5% in their last common ancestors with
cartilaginous fishes and lobefinned fishes (e.g. sharks and lungfishes,
respectively; nodes a and b in Fig.
4A) to 15% in their last common ancestor with the most basal
ray-finned fish lineages, the Polypteriformes (reedfish and bichirs; c in
Fig. 4A). This is followed by
Root effects of
25% and then 40% in the last common ancestors of teleosts
with sturgeons and gars, respectively (d and e in
Fig. 4A). Importantly, in none
of these ancestors is a choroid or swimbladder rete mirabile
reconstructed.
If the Root effect did not originally evolve because of its function in ocular or swimbladder O2 secretion, what was its original selective advantage and how was its negative side effect, the danger of impaired Hb O2 saturation in the gills under general blood acidosis, compensated for?
It is possible that the blood gas transport characteristics in early
ray-finned fishes were not quite as vulnerable during acidosis as they are in
teleosts. This was not due to possession of a red blood cell ßNHE because
this mechanism only evolved in advanced teleost groups, after they had
diverged from the more basal teleost group of bonytongues (Osteoglossomorpha)
(Berenbrink et al., 2005
).
Decreased vulnerability against acidosis may rather have been due to higher
specific Hb buffer values in early ray-finned fishes. Thus, living members of
ancient ray-finned fish lineages, such as reedfish and sterlet, which already
show a small Root effect, still have elevated Hb buffer values compared with
living teleosts. The evolutionary reconstruction indeed confirms that the Root
effect originally evolved in the presence of high Hb buffer values. Thus, the
low blood pH values necessary to elicit the Root effect may rarely have been
achieved in early ray-finned fishes, because their buffer properties were more
similar to those of present-day sharks and lungfishes than to teleosts
(Berenbrink et al., 2005
;
Berenbrink, 2006
;
Brauner and Berenbrink, in
press
).
Because buffer properties of proteins are largely dependent on the number
of accessible surface histidine amino acid residues, their buffer properties
can be estimated from primary amino acid sequences and structural information.
For Hb, this approach is facilitated by (1) the conserved three-dimensional
structure of the globin fold and the contact sites between the globin monomers
and (2) the rich source of vertebrate Hb sequences in the protein and
nucleotide databases, such that a strong correlation between predicted and
measured Hb buffer values has been established
(Berenbrink et al., 2005
;
Berenbrink, 2006
).
Thus, an important and, until recently, largely unrecognised phenotype,
which bears on the basic characteristics of the blood gas transport system in
vertebrates, can be directly predicted from the genotype. This approach has
been used to estimate Hb buffer values in ancestral vertebrates as well as in
the elusive living coelacanth Latimeria chalumnae
(Berenbrink, 2006
).
Surprisingly, expanding the evolutionary reconstruction by using a larger
dataset of over 70 vertebrates indicates that, apart from ray-finned fishes,
other vertebrate groups such as passeriform birds have also undergone a
significant evolutionary decrease in Hb buffer values for as yet poorly
understood reasons (Berenbrink,
2006
).
It appears then that the negative aspect of the Root effect in ray-finned
fishes was less severe when it first originated than it was after Hb buffer
values had declined. But what was the selective advantage of the Root effect
and also of the decrease in Hb buffer values? As mentioned above, Root effect
Hbs are characterized by a strong decrease in Hb O2 binding
affinity and cooperativity with decreasing pH. It is the latter property that
sets the Root effect apart from the Bohr effect found in other vertebrate Hbs
(Brittain, 1987
) and that may
be primarily responsible for incomplete Hb saturation at low pH in
air-saturated blood or Hb solutions. However, the decrease in cooperativity is
most severe at low pH values (Brittain,
1987
), which may not be reached in vivo in the presence
of high Hb buffer values and without acid backdiffusion across a rete
mirabile. It is conceivable, therefore, that it was the decrease in Hb
O2 affinity with pH alone that was selected for in early ray-finned
fishes. Under this scenario, the associated decrease in O2-binding
cooperativity at lower pH was just a by-product without any physiological
consequences, and the well-known advantages of a strong Bohr effect for
efficient blood O2 transport were behind the evolution of Hb
properties in early ray-finned fishes. Indeed, the evolution of the Bohr
effect and the Root effect are strongly correlated in ray-finned fishes, and
evolutionary reconstruction suggests that the Bohr effect increased
independently in ray-finned fishes and lobe-finned fishes (including
tetrapods) from the rather low Bohr effect of their last common ancestor with
elasmobranchs (Berenbrink et al.,
2005
). This is consistent with the emerging view that the Root
effect is not just an exaggerated Bohr effect of human HbA
(Perutz and Brunori, 1982
) but
is largely based on an entirely different molecular mechanism
(Ito et al., 1995
;
Mylvaganam et al., 1996
;
Yokoyama et al., 2004
;
Bonaventura et al., 2004
;
Berenbrink et al., 2005
;
Berenbrink, 2006
; Mazzarelli et
al., 2006a; Mazzarelli et al., 2006b).
The mechanism for the BohrRoot effect in teleosts involves fewer
histidine residues than that in human HbA
(Yokoyama et al., 2004
;
Lukin and Ho, 2004
) and this
may have allowed an evolutionary decrease in Hb histidine content and thus Hb
buffer value in early ray-finned fishes. Such a reduction conceivably
increases the efficiency of a given acid load to elicit the Bohr effect, such
that already small increases in lactic acid or CO2 production rates
in a tissue can cause a relatively strong pH decrease and enhanced
O2 release via the Bohr effect
(Berenbrink et al., 2005
;
Berenbrink, 2006
).
To conclude the above section, the following steps that led to the origin
of the complex system of O2 secretion can be conceived. It started
with the evolution of a kind of Bohr effect in early ray-finned fishes by a
mechanism that was different from the mechanism in tetrapods and involved a
strong decrease in Hb O2 binding cooperativity at low pH values.
This was the Root effect, whose properties at low pH values were initially
probably not relevant, because the Hb of early rayfinned fishes had a high Hb
buffer capacity, and pH values low enough to cause significant Hb
deoxygenation, even at high PO2, may rarely have been
encountered. Subsequently, Hb buffer values gradually decreased, presumably
because this increased the efficiency by which an acid load changed Hb
O2 affinity in the tissues and allowed O2 off-loading.
Under these conditions, the apparently relatively facile mutation of a rete
mirabile in the blood supply of the retina was genetically fixed, because it
allowed back-diffusion of acid that was produced in the metabolically very
active retina and thereby made it possible to achieve low enough pH values to
depress not only Hb O2 affinity but also cooperativity. This
allowed a higher fraction of O2 to be released into physical
solution and improved retinal O2 supply. However, in parallel with
the advantages of ocular O2 secretion, the system had become more
vulnerable against general acidosis. This was likely the driving force for the
evolution of a red blood cell ßNHE in advanced, highly visual teleosts
that protected Hb O2 loading in the gills against the Root effect
under general acidosis (Berenbrink et al.,
2005
).
So, the widespread and extraordinary physiological capacity for
O2 secretion, which has been studied in relation to the swimbladder
and buoyancy regulation for 200 years, originally evolved in the eye of fishes
and for an entirely different purpose. Evolutionary reconstructions further
show that the mechanism for O2 secretion is closely linked to the
evolution of the Bohr effect and reduced Hb buffer values in teleost fishes
and to the occurrence of the unique ßNHE in their red blood cells. The
distribution of these features had previously been largely unexplained and,
since teleosts comprise about 24 000 described species
(Nelson, 1994
), it is true to
say that ocular O2 secretion has shaped the evolution of blood
respiratory gas transport characteristics of half of all living vertebrates
(Berenbrink et al., 2005
).
| Repeated evolution of swimbladder O2 secretion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In contrast to their close relatives, which do not have a swimbladder rete
mirabile (Fig. 3), members of
Albuliformes + Anguilliformes have extensively radiated in the deep sea
(Nelson, 1994
), suggesting
that the ability to control buoyancy by swimbladder O2 secretion
has obviated the need to travel to the surface and replenish swimbladder
volume by air intake through the oesophagus and has thereby allowed expansion
into this new habitat.
Swimbladder O2 secretion evolved in at least two more groups,
some Ostariophysi (e.g. carp relatives and loaches) and the euteleosts (e.g.
salmonids, cod, swordfish, perches; Fig.
3). Compared with their enormous species diversity, relatively few
species of the two groups have been investigated and phylogenetic
relationships within these groups are currently not well resolved
(Miya et al., 2003
;
Saitoh et al., 2003
). In
addition, swimbladder retia mirabilia or the entire swimbladder appear to have
been frequently lost (e.g. rainbow trout and swamp eel, respectively;
Fig. 3). It is therefore
difficult to identify exactly when and how often O2 secretion
evolved in Ostariophysi and Euteleosts and what the major selective advantages
may have been. For example, in some Ostariophysi, the volume of the
swimbladder is greatly reduced and it no longer appears involved in buoyancy
control. However, it is never completely lost, presumably because all
Ostariophysi have a mechanical connection between their swimbladder and the
inner ear, which aids in hearing
(Alexander, 1966
). Whatever the
selective advantage of a swimbladder may be for a given species, it can
generally be assumed that the predation risk from aquatic, aerial or wading
predators is reduced when air intake at the water surface can be avoided by
the ability to keep the swimbladder inflated through secretion of
O2.
In 200 years of research on the mechanism of O2 secretion, using
the Krogh principle and finding a suitable experimental model species has
perhaps been the single most significant step in advancing our knowledge of
the system. The availability of improved phylogenies in the post-genomic era
and the use of modern techniques for evolutionary reconstructions have now led
to the realisation that swimbladder O2 secretion evolved at least
four times independently and was influenced by changes in blood gas transport
characteristics that were connected to the earlier evolution of ocular
O2 secretion. Together with the frequent secondary loss of the
ocular and swimbladder mechanism, this allows the identification of teleost
species with every possible combination of presence and absence of the ocular
and swimbladder O2 secretion mechanism (see colour code in
Fig. 3). This raises the
exciting opportunity to compare related species pairs, which differ in the
presence of one of the mechanisms, to assess the relative importance of the
different components of the system for ocular and swimbladder O2
secretion. As an example of such an analysis, Berenbrink et al. have shown
that ocular O2 secretion is more significantly associated with
higher Root effects than swimbladder O2 secretion
(Berenbrink et al., 2005
).
This review indicates that the increasing availability of molecular phylogenetic trees for evolutionary reconstructions may be as important for understanding physiological diversity in the post-genomic era as the increase of genomic sequence information in model species.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Alexander, R. McN. (1966). Physical aspects of swimbladder function. Biol. Rev. 41,141 -176.[Medline]
Berenbrink, M. (1995). Die Kontrolle des intrazellulären pH in den Erythrozyten von Knochenfischen. II. Die Bedeutung der Pseudobranchien für den Säure-Base Haushalt des Blutes und die Sauerstoffkonzentrierung im Auge von Knochenfischen. [The control of intracellular pH in erythrocytes of bony fishes. II. The role of the pseudobranchs for the acidbase status of the blood and oxygen concentrating in the eye of bony fishes]. PhD thesis, University of Düsseldorf, pp. 77-164. Aachen: Shaker Verlag.
Berenbrink, M. (2006). Evolution of vertebrate haemoglobins: histidine side chains, specific buffer value and Bohr effect. Respir. Physiol. Neurobiol. 154,165 -184.[CrossRef][Medline]
Berenbrink, M. and Bridges, C. R. (1994). Catecholamine-activated sodium/proton exchange in red blood cells of the marine teleost Gadus morhua. J. Exp. Biol. 192,253 -267.[Abstract]
Berenbrink, M., Koldkjær, P., Kepp, O. and Cossins, A.
R. (2005). Evolution of oxygen secretion in fishes and the
emergence of a complex physiological system. Science
307,1752
-1757.
Biot, J. B. (1807). Sur la nature de l'air contenu dans la vessie natatoire des poissons. Mém. Phys. Chem. Soc. Arcueil 1,252 -281.
Block, B. A. and Carey, F. G. (1985). Warm brain and eye temperatures in sharks. J. Comp. Physiol. B 156,229 -236.[CrossRef][Medline]
Block, B. A., Finnerty, J. R., Stewart, A. F. R. and Kidd,
J. (1993). Evolution of endothermy in fish: mapping
physiological traits on a molecular phylogeny. Science
260,210
-214.
Bohr, C. (1894). The influence of section of
the vagus nerve on the disengagement of gases in the air-bladder of fishes.
J. Physiol. 15,494
-499.
Bohr, C., Hasselbalch, K. A. and Krogh, A. (1904). Über einen in biologischer Beziehung wichtigen Einfluss, den die Kohlensäurespannung des Blutes auf dessen Sauerstoffbindung übt. Skand. Arch. Physiol. 16,402 -412.
Bonaventura, C., Crumblis, A. L. and Weber, R. E. (2004). New insights into the proton-dependent oxygen affinity of Root effect haemoglobins. Acta Physiol. Scand. 182,245 -258.[CrossRef][Medline]
Brauner, C. J. and Berenbrink, M. (2007). Gas transport and exchange. In Primitive Fishes. Fish Physiology, vol. 27 (ed. D. J. McKenzie, A. P. Farrell and C. J. Brauner). Academic Press (in press).
Bridges, C. R., Hlastala, M. P., Riepl, G. and Scheid, P. (1983). Root effect induced by CO2 and fixed acid in the blood of the eel, Anguilla anguilla. Resp. Physiol. 51,275 -286.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bridges, C. R., Berenbrink, M., Müller, R. and Waser, W. (1998). Physiology and biochemistry of the pseudobranch: an unanswered question? Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 119A,67 -77.
Brittain, T. (1987). The Root effect. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 86B,473 -481.[CrossRef][Medline]
Brittain, T. (2005). Root effect hemoglobins. J. Inorg. Biochem. 99,120 -129.[CrossRef][Medline]
Carey, F. G. (1973). Fishes with warm bodies. Sci. Am. 228,36 -44.[Medline]
Fahlen, G. (1959). Rete mirabile in the gas bladder of Coregonus lavaretus. Nature 184,1001 -1002.[CrossRef]
Fänge, R. (1966). Physiology of the
swimbladder. Physiol. Rev.
46,299
-322.
Farmer, M., Fyhn, H. J., Fyhn, U. E. H. and Noble, R. W. (1979). Occurrence of Root effect hemoglobins in Amazonian fishes. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 62A,115 -124.[CrossRef][Medline]
Fletcher, L. B. and Crawford, J. D. (2001). Acoustic detection by sound-producing fishes (Mormyridae): the role of gas-filled tympanic bladders. J. Exp. Biol. 204,175 -183.[Abstract]
Garland, T., Jr, Bennett, A. F. and Rezende, E. L.
(2005). Phylogenetic approaches in comparative physiology.
J. Exp. Biol. 208,3015
-3035.
Haldane, J. S. (1922). Respiration. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Hall, F. G. (1924). The functions of the
swimbladder of fishes. Biol. Bull.
47, 79-126.
Harrison, R. G. and Weiner, J. S. (1949).
Vascular patterns of the mammalian testis and their functional significance.
J. Exp. Biol. 26,304
-316.
Heisler, N (1986). Comparative aspects of acid-base regulation. In AcidBase Regulation in Animals (ed. N. Heisler), pp. 397-450. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Hill, R. W., Wyse, G. A. and Anderson, M. (2004). Animal Physiology, p.591 . Sunderland, MA: Sinauer.
Hüfner, G. (1892). Zur physikalischen Chemie der Schwimmblasengase. Arch. Anat. Physiol., Physiol. Abth. 1892,54 -80.
Ito, N., Komiyama, N. H. and Fermi, G. (1995). Structure of deoxyhaemoglobin of the Antarctic fish Pagothenia bernacchii with an analysis of the structural basis of the Root effect by comparison of the liganded and unliganded haemoglobin structures. J. Mol. Biol. 250,648 -658.[CrossRef][Medline]
Jacobs, W. (1930). Untersuchungen zur Physiologie der Schwimmblase der Fische. Zeitschr. Vergl. Physiol. 11,565 -629.
Jensen, F. B. (1989). Hydrogen-ion equilibria
in fish hemoglobins. J. Exp. Biol.
143,225
-234.
Jessen, C. (2001). Selective brain cooling in mammals and birds. Jpn. J. Physiol. 51,291 -301.[CrossRef][Medline]
Jones, F. H. R. and Marshall, N. B. (1953). The structure and functions of the teleost swimbladder. Biol. Rev. 28,16 -83.[Medline]
Kemper, W. F., Lindstedt, S. L., Hartzler, L. K., Hicks, J. W.
and Conley, K. E. (2001). Shaking up glycolysis: sustained,
high lactate flux during aerobic rattling. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 98,723
-728.
Kobayashi, H., Pelster, B., Piiper, J. and Scheid, P. (1989). Significance of the Bohr effect for tissue oxygenation in a model with counter-current blood flow. Resp. Physiol. 76,277 -288.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kobayashi, H., Pelster, B. and Scheid, P. (1990). CO2 back-diffusion in the rete aids O2 secretion in the swimbladder of the eel. Resp. Physiol. 79,231 -242.[CrossRef][Medline]
Krogh, A. (1922). The Anatomy and Physiology of the Capillaries. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Krogh, A. and Leitch, I. (1919). The
respiratory function of the blood in fishes. J.
Physiol. 52,288
-300.
Krohn, H. and Piiper, J. (1962). Gassekretion in die Schwimmblase der Schleie Tinca tinca (L.) in Wasser mit erniedrigtem N2-Druck. Naturwissenschaften 49,428 -429.
Lapennas, G. N. and Schmidt-Nielsen, K. (1977).
Swimbladder permeability to oxygen. J. Exp. Biol.
67,175
-196.
Linthicum, D. S. and Carey, F. G. (1972). Regulation of brain and eye temperatures by the bluefin tuna. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 43A,425 -433.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lukin, J. A. and Ho, C. (2004). The structurefunction relationship of hemoglobin in solution at atomic resolution. Chem. Rev. 104,1219 -1230.[CrossRef][Medline]
Maddison, D. R. and Maddison, W. P. (2000). MacClade 4, analysis of phylogeny and character evolution. Version 4. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Assoc.
Mazzarella, L., D'Avino, R., di Prisco, G., Savino, C., Vitagliano, L., Moody, P. C. E. and Zagari, A. (1999). Crystal structure of Trematomus newnesi haemoglobin re-opens the Root effect question. J. Mol. Biol. 287,897 -906.[CrossRef][Medline]
Mazzarella, L., Bonomi, G., Lubrano, M. C., Merlino, A., Riccio, A., Vergara, A., Vitagliano, L., Verde, C. and diPrisco. G. (2006a). Minimal structural requirements for Root effect: crystal structure of the cathodic hemoglobin isolated from the Antarctic fish Trematomus newnesi. Proteins Struct. Funct. Bioinf. 62,316 -321.[CrossRef]
Mazzarella, L., Vergara, A., Vitagliano, L., Merlino, A., Bonomi, G., Scala, S., Verde, C. and diPrisco. G. (2006b). High resolution crystal structure of deoxy hemoglobin from Trematomus bernacchii at different pH values: the role of histidine residues in modulating the strength of the Root effect. Proteins Struct. Funct. Bioinf. 65,490 -498.[CrossRef]
Miya, M., Takeshima, H., Endo, H., Ishiguro, N. B., Inoue, J. G., Mukai, T., Satoh, T. P., Yamaguchi, M., Kawaguchi, A., Mabuchi, K. et al. (2003). Major patterns of higher teleostean phylogenies: a new perspective based on 100 complete mitochondrial DNA sequences. Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. 26,121 -138.[CrossRef][Medline]
Murphy, W. J., Eizirik, E., Johnson, W. E., Zhang, Y. P., Ryder, O. A. and O'Brien, S. J. (2001). Molecular phylogenetics and the origins of placental mammals. Nature 409,614 -618.[CrossRef][Medline]
Mylvaganam, S. E., Bonaventura, C., Bonaventura, J. and Getzoff, E. (1996). Structural basis for the Root effect in haemoglobin. Nature Struct. Biol. 3, 275-283.[CrossRef][Medline]
Nelson, J. S. (1994). Fishes of the world. Third edition. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Nikinmaa, M. (1992). Membrane-transport and control of hemoglobinoxygen affinity in nucleated erythrocytes. Physiol. Rev. 722,301 -321.
Nishihara, H., Hasegawa, M. and Okada, N.
(2006). Pegasoferae, an unexpected mammalian clade revealed by
tracking ancient retroposon insertions. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 103,9929
-9934.
Noble, R. W., Kwiatkowski, L. D., De Young, A., Davies, B. J., Haedrich, R. L., Tam, L.-T. and Riggs, A. F. (1986). Functional properties of hemoglobins from deep-sea fish: correlations with depth distribution and presence of a swimbladder. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 870,552 -563.[CrossRef][Medline]
Parkhurst, L. J., Goss, D. J. and Perutz, M. F. (1983). Kinetic and equilibrium studies on the role of the b147 histidine in the Root effect and cooperativity in carp haemoglobin. Biochemistry 22,5401 -5409.[CrossRef]
Pelster, B. (1995). Metabolism of the swimbladder tissue. In Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of Fishes, vol. 4 (ed. P. W. Hochachka and T. P. Mommsen), pp. 101-118. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
Pelster, B. (2004). pH regulation and swimbladder function in fish. Resp. Physiol. Neurobiol. 144,179 -190.[CrossRef]
Pelster, B. and Randall, D. J. (1998). The physiology of the Root effect. In Fish Physiology: Fish Respiration, vol. 17 (ed. S. F. Perry and B. L. Tufts), pp. 113-140. New York: Academic Press.
Pelster, B. and Scheid, P. (1992). Countercurrent concentration and gas secretion in the fish swim bladder. Physiol. Zool. 65,1 -16.
Pelster, B. and Weber, R. E. (1990). Influence
of organic phosphates on the Root effect of multiple fish haemoglobins.
J. Exp. Biol. 149,425
-437.
Pelster, B. and Weber, R. E. (1991). The physiology of the Root effect. In Advances in Comparative and Environmental Physiology, vol. 8 (ed. R. Gilles), pp. 51-77. Berlin: Springer.
Perutz, M. F. and Brunori, M. (1982). Stereochemistry of cooperative effects in fish and amphibian hemoglobins. Nature 299,421 -426.[CrossRef][Medline]
Piiper, J., Humphrey, H. T. and Rahn, H.
(1962). Gas composition of pressurized, perfused gas pockets and
the fish swim bladder. J. Appl. Physiol.
17,275
-282.
Randall, D. J., Burggren, W. and French, K. (2002). Eckert Animal Physiology, fifth edition, pp. 573-576. New York: W. H. Freeman.
Romero, M. G., Guizouarn, H., Pellissier, B., Garcia-Romeu, F. and Motais, R. (1996). The erythrocyte Na+/H+ exchangers of eel (Anguilla anguilla) and rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss): a comparative study. J. Exp. Biol. 199,415 -426.[Abstract]
Root, R. W. (1931). The respiratory function of
the blood of marine fishes. Biol. Bull.
61,427
-456.
Saitoh, K., Miya, M., Inoue, J. G., Ishiguro, N. B. and Nishida, M. (2003). Mitochondrial genomics of ostariophysan fishes: perspectives on phylogeny and biogeography. J. Mol. Evol. 56,464 -472.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schmidt-Nielsen, K. (1997a). Animal Physiology, fifth edition, p. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Schmidt-Nielsen, K. (1997b). Animal Physiology, fifth edition, pp. 452-458. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Scholander, P. F. (1954). Secretion of gases
against high pressure in the swimbladder of deep sea fishes II. The rete
mirabile. Biol. Bull.
107,260
-277.
Scholander, P. F. (1958). Counter current exchange. A principle in biology. Hvalrådets Skrifter 44,1 -24.
Scholander, P. F. and van Dam, L. (1954).
Secretion of gases against high pressure in the swimbladder of deep sea
fishes. I. Oxygen dissociation in blood. Biol. Bull.
107,247
-259.
Sherwood, L., Klandorf, H. and Yancey, P. H. (2005a). Animal Physiology, p.1 . Belmont, CA, USA: Thomson Brooks/Cole.
Sherwood, L., Klandorf, H. and Yancey, P. H. (2005b). Animal Physiology, p.506 . Belmont, CA, USA: Thomson Brooks/Cole.
Steen, J. B. (1963a). The physiology of the swimbladder in the eel Anguilla vulgaris. 1. The solubility of gases and the buffer capacity of the blood. Acta Physiol. Scand. 58,124 -137.[Medline]
Steen, J. B. (1963b). The physiology of the swimbladder in the eel Anguilla vulgaris. 3. The mechanism of gas secretion. Acta Physiol. Scand. 59,221 -241.[Medline]
Stipetic, E. (1939). Über das Gehörorgan der Mormyriden. Zeitschr. Vergl. Physiol. 26,740 -752.[CrossRef]
Sundnes, G., Enns, T. and Scholander, P. F. (1958). Gas secretion in fishes lacking rete mirabile. J. Exp. Biol. 35,671 -676.[Abstract]
Venkatesh, B., Erdmann, M. V. and Brenner, S.
(2001). Molecular synapomorphies resolve evolutionary
relationships of extant jawed vertebrates. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 98,11382
-11387.
Völkel, S. and Berenbrink, M. (2000). Sulphaemoglobin formation in fish: a comparison between the haemoglobin of the sulphide-sensitive rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and of the sulphide-tolerant common carp (Cyprinus carpio). J. Exp. Biol. 203,1047 -1058.[Abstract]
von Frisch, K. (1936). Über den Gehörsinn der Fische. Biol. Rev. 1936,210 -246.
von Ledebur, J. (1937). Beiträge zur Physiologie der Schwimmblase der Fische. V. Über die Beinflussung des Sauerstoffbindungsvermögens des Fischblutes durch Kohlensäure bei hohem Sauerstoffdruck. Zeitschr. Vergl. Physiol. 25,156 -169.[CrossRef]
Waser, W. and Heisler, N. (2005). Oxygen
delivery to the fish eye: Root effect as crucial factor for elevated retinal
PO2. J. Exp. Biol.
208,4035
-4047.
Willmer, P., Stone, G. and Johnston, I. (2005).Environmental Physiology of Animals, second edition , pp. 419-422. Malden, MA: Blackwell Science.
Winkler, B. S. (1981). Glycolytic and oxidative
metabolism in relation to retinal function. J. Gen.
Physiol. 77,667
-692.
Withers, P. C. (1992). Comparative Animal Physiology, pp. 754-756. Fort Worth: Saunders College Publishing.
Wittenberg, J. B. and Haedrich, R. L. (1974).
The choroid rete mirabile of the fish eye. II. Distribution and relation to
the pseudobranch and to the swimbladder rete mirabile. Biol.
Bull. 146,137
-156.
Wittenberg, J. B. and Wittenberg, B. A. (1962). Active secretion of oxygen into the eye of fish. Nature 194,106 -107.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wittenberg, J. B. and Wittenberg, B. A. (1974).
The choroid rete mirabile of the fish eye. I. Oxygen secretion and structure:
Comparison with the swimbladder rete mirabile. Biol.
Bull. 146,116
-136.
Yan, H. Y. and Curtsinger, W. S. (2000). The otic gasbladder as an ancillary auditory structure in a mormyrid fish. J. Comp. Physiol. A 186,595 -602.[CrossRef][Medline]
Yokoyama, T., Chong, K. T., Miyazaki, G., Morimoto, H., Shih, D.
T.-B., Unzai, S., Tame, J. R. H. and Park, S.-Y. (2004).
Novel mechanism of pH sensitivity in tuna hemoglobin. A structural explanation
of the Root effect. J. Biol. Chem.
279,28632
-28640.
![]()
CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?
Related articles in JEB:
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. M. Gilmour and S. F. Perry Carbonic anhydrase and acid-base regulation in fish J. Exp. Biol., June 1, 2009; 212(11): 1647 - 1661. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||