2014
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.098798
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Could thermal sensitivity of mitochondria determine species distribution in a changing climate?

Abstract: For many aquatic species, the upper thermal limit (T max ) and the heart failure temperature (T HF ) are only a few degrees away from the species' current environmental temperatures. While the mechanisms mediating temperature-induced heart failure (HF) remain unresolved, energy flow and/or oxygen supply disruptions to cardiac mitochondria may be impacted by heat stress. Recent work using a New Zealand wrasse (Notolabrus celidotus) found that ATP synthesis capacity of cardiac mitochondria collapses prior to T H… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

8
67
2

Year Published

2014
2014
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
6
1

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 74 publications
(77 citation statements)
references
References 48 publications
8
67
2
Order By: Relevance
“…There have been some measurements of the effects of temperature on aerobic metabolism at the cellular level in animals (Somero and DeVries, 1967;Hoskins and Aleksiuk, 1973;Jorjani and Ozturk, 1999) and some data sets conform well to the Arrhenius equation and others do not. Similar patterns occur for measurements of oxygen consumption by isolated mitochondria (van den Thillart and Modderkolk, 1978;Somero et al, 1996;Weinstein and Somero, 1998;Hardewig et al, 1999;Abele et al, 2002;Somero, 2002;Johnston et al, 1994;Fangue et al, 2009;Hilton et al, 2010;Iftikar et al, 2010Iftikar et al, , 2014Iftikar and Hickey, 2013). For example, Fig.…”
Section: Effects Of Temperature At the Level Of Single Proteinssupporting
confidence: 70%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…There have been some measurements of the effects of temperature on aerobic metabolism at the cellular level in animals (Somero and DeVries, 1967;Hoskins and Aleksiuk, 1973;Jorjani and Ozturk, 1999) and some data sets conform well to the Arrhenius equation and others do not. Similar patterns occur for measurements of oxygen consumption by isolated mitochondria (van den Thillart and Modderkolk, 1978;Somero et al, 1996;Weinstein and Somero, 1998;Hardewig et al, 1999;Abele et al, 2002;Somero, 2002;Johnston et al, 1994;Fangue et al, 2009;Hilton et al, 2010;Iftikar et al, 2010Iftikar et al, , 2014Iftikar and Hickey, 2013). For example, Fig.…”
Section: Effects Of Temperature At the Level Of Single Proteinssupporting
confidence: 70%
“…Proton leak allows protons to move across the mitochondrial inner membrane via pathways other than the ATP synthase, thus dissipating the proton motive force and driving oxygen consumption without generating ATP. Substantial amounts of data suggest that the thermal sensitivities of ATP generation and proton leak differ (Hardewig et al, 1999;Hilton et al, 2010;Iftikar et al, 2010Iftikar et al, , 2014Iftikar and Hickey, 2013) because of increases in proton permeability due to changes in membrane fluidity at higher temperatures (Seebacher et al, 2010;Zukiene et al, 2010). As a result, proton leak represents an increasing fraction of oxygen consumption as temperature rises (Hilton et al, 2010;Seebacher et al, 2010;Iftikar and Hickey, 2013) causing reductions in the efficiency of mitochondrial ATP production with increasing temperature.…”
Section: Metabolism Aerobic Scope and Climate Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two different ratios were calculated to evaluate the functionality and the quality of the mitochondrial preparations used in the experiment: (i) the P/L ratio (CI-OXPHOS/CI-LEAK), which is usually taken as a good indicator of mitochondrial quality and of mitochondrial coupling (Gnaiger, 2009;Iftikar et al, 2014); and (ii) the cytochrome c effect (CIc-OXPHOS/CI-OXPHOS) to evaluate the structural integrity of the outer mitochondrial membrane (Kuznetsov et al, 2008).…”
Section: Substrate-uncoupler-inhibitor Titration (Suit) Protocol For mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, due to the complexity of the thermal acclimation process, the different components of mitochondrial metabolism affected by temperature are not clear, as they may depend on the time course and the intensity of the thermal exposure (Hazel, 1972(Hazel, , 1995Sidell, 1983;Blier and Guderley, 1993;St-Pierre et al, 1998;Guderley, 2004;Itoi et al, 2003;Kraffe et al, 2007;Iftikar et al, 2014;Jayasundara et al, 2015). For example, in isolated mitochondria from the red muscle of rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, a temperature increase from 5 to 9°C over 2 days (Bouchard and Guderley, 2003) or from 5 to 15°C over 3 days (Kraffe et al, 2007) did not significantly change rates of pyruvate oxidation (state 3 and state 4; oxygen consumption in presence and absence of ADP, respectively, when pyruvate is provided to the mitochondria).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation