Lecture #6 Flashcards

1
Q

Explain the “lip mechanism” used by the Tambaqui to increase O2 uptake, and the experiment that established its importance

A
  • during exposure to hypoxia, the lower lip becomes very expanded and facilitates O2 uptake from the surface water by skimming
  • fish swims along surface of the water to allow oxygen to diffuse into the highly vascularized lip
  • measured blood oxygen content in normoxia, hypoxia with the fish surfacing, and hypoxia where the fish is not allowed to surface
  • ~30% difference between allowed to surface or not, showing the lip skimming contributes significantly
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2
Q

Explain the changes in oxygen uptake mechanisms experienced by Arapaima as it grows larger.

A
  • as it grows, the skin gets thicker, then the gill lamellae get greatly reduced, then the Air Breathing Organ (ABO) develops
  • oxygen can diffuse across the skin
  • as it ages, the skin gets thicker (so this no longer works) but the fish can breathe using the gill lamellae
  • then, as the oxygen demand continues to increase, the gills are not sufficient so the lamellae gets reduced and the ABO develops instead (some oxygen still from gills)
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3
Q

Why is the Arapaima considered an obligate air breathing fish?

A
  • it will drown after 10 minutes if it is denied access to air
  • cannot take up enough oxygen using gills alone
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4
Q

Painted turtle: why is there massive accumulation of lactate during anoxia? Where is lactate accumulated? What are the two mechanisms that prevent lethal acidification?

A
  • lactate builds up because the turtle converts pyruvate to lactate in order to regenerate NAD+ and continue with fermentation to produce ATP
  • uses Monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) to transport H+ and lactate from the cell to the blood
  • the lactate accumulates in blood plasma and in the shell
  • Mechanisms:
    1. calcium and carbonate from the shell are exported to neutralize the lactate and H+ (CO2+H20, CaLactate)
    2. lactate and H+ move into the shell and are stored there
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5
Q

What happens to lactate during recovery from anoxia?

A
  • lactate is oxidized into pyruvate, producing 15 ATP
  • excess ATP used to convert pyruvate to glucose and store it as glycogen (gluconeogenesis)
  • lactate levels go back to normal
  • important energy stored in the bonds, so it would be wasteful to expel it during low-oxygen conditions just because it couldn’t be extracted yet
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6
Q

What process produces H+ that can result in harmful acidification during oxygen limitation?

A

ATP hydrolysis

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