High affinity and temperature sensitivity of blood oxygen binding in Pangasianodon hypophthalmus due to lack of chloride-hemoglobin allosteric interaction

Author:

Damsgaard Christian1,Phuong Le My12,Huong Do Thi Thanh2,Jensen Frank B.3,Wang Tobias1,Bayley Mark1

Affiliation:

1. Zoophysiology, Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark;

2. College of Aquaculture and Fisheries, Can Tho University, Can Tho City, Vietnam

3. Department of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark; and

Abstract

Air-breathing fishes represent interesting organisms in terms of understanding the physiological changes associated with the terrestrialization of vertebrates, and, further, are of great socio-economic importance for aquaculture in Southeast Asia. To understand how environmental factors, such as high temperature, affect O2 transport in air-breathing fishes, this study assessed the effects of temperature on O2 binding of blood and Hb in the economically important air-breathing fish Pangasianodon hypophthalmus. To determine blood O2 binding properties, blood was drawn from resting cannulated fishes and O2 binding curves made at 25°C and 35°C. To determine the allosteric regulation and thermodynamics of Hb O2 binding, Hb was purified, and O2 equilibria were recorded at five temperatures in the absence and presence of ATP and Cl. Whole blood had a high O2 affinity (O2 tension at half saturation P50 = 4.6 mmHg at extracellular pH 7.6 and 25°C), a high temperature sensitivity of O2 binding (apparent heat of oxygenation Δ Happ = −28.3 kcal/mol), and lacked a Root effect. Further, the data on Hb revealed weak ATP binding and a complete lack of Cl binding to Hb, which, in part, explains the high O2 affinity and high temperature sensitivity of blood O2 binding. This study demonstrates how a potent mechanism for increasing O2 affinity is linked to increased temperature sensitivity of O2 transport and provides a basic framework for a better understanding of how hypoxia-adapted species will react to increasing temperatures.

Funder

Danish Ministry for Foreign Affairs (DANIDA)

Danish Research Council for Independent Research (FNU)

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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