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First published online February 13, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, 593-597 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
doi: 10.1242/jeb.015024
Commentary |
The physiology of long-distance migration: extending the limits of endurance metabolism
Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
e-mail: jmweber{at}uottawa.ca
Accepted 15 December 2008
| Summary |
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Key words: natural doping, lipid metabolism, lipoprotein, membrane phospholipid, endurance exercise, cost of transport, animal energetics
| Introduction |
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| Energetics of long migrations |
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3- and 10-fold
lower than for flying and running, respectively) (see
Table 1). This simple argument
explains why the longest migrations of land mammals barely reach a few
thousand kilometers and can only be performed by large species such as
wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus, Liechtenstein) and caribou
(Rangifer tarandus, L.). However, it fails to clarify why the most
extreme migrations are achieved by birds rather than fish, a somewhat
perplexing observation, unlikely to be challenged even when the monitoring of
aquatic environments becomes more accessible. Soaring, rather than flapping
flight, can significantly reduce the energy gap between flying and swimming,
but this strategy is restricted to large birds and cannot explain the high
incidence of long migrations among small avian species. Theoretical analyses
suggest that birds outcompete fish because flying is a useful compromise
between running (with prohibitive cost of transport) and swimming (with low
maximal speed) (Alexander,
1998
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| Minimizing the cost of transport |
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| A record capacity to process lipids: a requirement for long migrations |
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O2,max) of
similarly sized mammals (Butler and
Woakes, 1990| Lipid mobilization |
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The capacity for lipolysis has not been determined in long-distance
migratory fish such as salmon. However, these endurance swimmers are probably
also able to mobilize fatty acids rapidly if the high lipolytic rates measured
in their sedentary trout relatives are taken as an indication
(Bernard et al., 1999
;
Magnoni et al., 2008b
). We
have proposed that all ectotherms could have this high capacity to provide
fatty acids of different chain length and saturation level, thereby allowing
them rapid homeoviscous adaptation when body temperature fluctuates. However,
more research is needed to determine whether the need to fuel endurance
swimming or to restructure membrane phospholipids is the main determinant of
lipolytic capacity in migrant fish.
| Lipid transport |
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Ironically, the molecular machinery for lipoprotein supply to working
muscles has been better characterized in insects than in any vertebrate. With
some of the highest mass-specific metabolic rates of any organism, migrant
lepidopteran and orthopteran insects have to support phenomenal lipid fluxes.
They achieve them by using a lipophorin shuttle for rapid transport of
diacylglycerol (DAG) between fuel reserves and flight muscles
(Van der Horst, 2003
). In the
fat body, high-density lipophorin (HDLp) is loaded with DAG and converted to
low-density lipophorin (LDLp) that, in turn, supplies DAG to the muscles. The
unloading of DAG in flight muscles regenerates HDLp, which returns to the fat
body to repeat the cycle.
In the absence of an adequate transporter, the hydrophobic nature of fatty
acids would preclude their efficient transfer across the cytosol. Therefore,
animals rely on a family of fatty acid binding proteins (FABPs) that
solubilize intracellular fatty acids and accelerate their movements. The
supply of fatty acids to muscle mitochondria depends on the presence of a
specific muscle FABP (M-FABP) that has been characterized in fish
(Londraville and Sidell,
1995
), birds (Guglielmo et
al., 1998
) and insects
(Haunerland and Spener, 2004
).
The expression of M-FABP in the muscles of migrants is seasonally modulated
from wintering values to much higher levels during migration
(Guglielmo et al., 2002a
).
| `Natural doping' to stimulate oxidative capacity |
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4500 km transatlantic trip from eastern Canada to South America,
requiring a 3 day flight at
60 km/h
(Maillet and Weber, 2006
20 to 40 g) by feeding on small burrowing
amphipods (Corophium volutator, Pallas) that contain very high levels
of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFAs)
(Fig. 1). This behaviour is
worthy of attention because the fatty acid composition of artificial diets has
been shown to influence the capacity for endurance exercise in a variety of
animals, including rats (Ayre and Hulbert,
1997
|
In the diet naturally consumed by the semipalmated sandpiper,
eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, n-3 20:5) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, n-3 22:6)
account for 45% of total lipids. Therefore, these birds boost the aerobic
capacity of their flight muscle by eating large amounts of n-3 PUFA that are
known to cause pharmacological-like effects in mammalian cells in
vitro. The exact molecular mechanisms are unknown, but natural doping
appears to be mediated by two processes: the incorporation of dietary n-3
PUFAs in membrane phospholipids and their binding to nuclear receptors. The
incorporation of PUFAs causes changes in membrane fluidity, permeability,
n-3/n-6 ratio and the local molecular environment that affect key membrane
proteins (Gerson et al., 2008
;
Guderley et al., 2008
). Among
others, these proteins include carnitine palmitoyl transferase
(Guo et al., 2005
),
Na+/K+-ATPase
(Turner et al., 2005
),
Ca2+/Mg2+-ATPase
(Swanson et al., 1989
), ion
channels (Leaf et al., 2005
)
and the insulin receptor (Corcoran et al.,
2007
) (Fig. 2). In
addition to their membrane effects, EPA and DHA are natural ligands for
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) that regulate the
expression of genes controlling fundamental aspects of lipid metabolism
(Fig. 3). Individual members of
the PPAR family regulate different genes, and their distribution varies among
tissues. Genes regulated by PPAR
and β are mostly concerned with
fatty acid oxidation and transport, whereas those regulated by PPAR
deal with lipid storage and adipocyte differentiation
(Feige et al., 2006
). The
semipalmated sandpiper is the first documented case of a long-distance migrant
using natural doping to prime its locomotory muscles for endurance exercise.
It provides a useful starting point to improve the understanding of exclusive
metabolic innovations in migrants. Some promising avenues for future work will
be to determine: first, the relative roles of changes in membrane composition,
PPAR-mediated effects or other unknown pathways in this doping response;
second, whether dietary n-3 fatty acids are used by different animals for the
same purpose; and finally whether alternative strategies have evolved in other
long-distance migrants.
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| Conclusions |
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| Footnotes |
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