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First published online June 29, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 2403-2409 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.000281
Commentary |
Gill remodeling in fish a new fashion or an ancient secret?
Physiology Programme, Department of Molecular Biosciences, University of Oslo, PO Box 1041, N-0316 Oslo, Norway
e-mail: g.e.nilsson{at}imbv.uio.no
Accepted 6 March 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: crucian carp, hypoxia, respiration
| Pros and cons of having gills |
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Indeed, several problems are likely associated with a large lamellar surface area:
Consequently, for a particular species or population, it can be argued that natural selection should produce an optimal lamellar area that is matched to oxygen demands as closely as possible. In addition, the drawbacks of having large gills with a large lamellar surface area means that any trait that increases oxygen needs will need to have a fitness value that is high enough to compensate for these problems.
| Altering the functional respiratory area the old fashioned way |
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When fishes change their oxygen needs or are faced with variations in the
water oxygen concentration, they have long been known to have two strategies
to meet these challenges: (1) to alter gill ventilation (i.e. the water flow
over the gills) by adjusting the volume and frequency of buccal pumping, or
(2) to alter their functional respiratory surface area, i.e. the extent to
which the lamellae are perfused with blood. In hypoxia, for example, fishes
increase both the water flow over the gills (e.g.
Hughes and Saunders, 1970
) and
the functional respiratory surface area
(Booth, 1979
;
Soivio and Tuurala, 1981
). The
latter can be done by increasing the blood pressure to open up more of the
lamellar vasculature (lamellar recruitment) through vasoconstriction on the
efferent (outgoing) side of the gill vasculature and/or by dilating afferent
(incoming) lamellar arterioles (Davis,
1972
; Booth, 1978
;
Farrell et al., 1980
;
Taylor and Barrett, 1985
).
During periods of low oxygen need, much of the gill blood flow may pass
through channels embedded in the body of the gill filaments relatively far
from the water (Pärt et al.,
1984
). The functional respiratory surface area can probably also
be regulated by changing the thickness of the vascular space inside the
lamellae through contracting or relaxing the pillar cells within the lamellae
(Sundin and Nilsson, 1998b
;
Stensløkken et al.,
2006
). Pillar cells are contractile column-like cells linking the
two epithelial sheets that make up the outer surfaces of the lamellae.
Numerous neural and humoral substances have been linked to the regulation of
gill blood flow, including acetylcholine, adrenaline, adenosine, endothelin,
serotonin, prostaglandins, and most recently, hydrogen sulfide
(Sundin et al., 1995
;
Sundin and Nilsson, 1996
;
Sundin and Nilsson, 1997
;
Evans et al., 2005
;
Stensløkken et al.,
2002
; Stensløkken et
al., 2006
; Olson et al.,
2006
).
| Morphological remodeling of gills the new fashion? |
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However, over the last few years, it has become clear that at least some
fishes have much more drastic means for adjusting the gill structure. Thus,
changes in environmental variables such as water oxygen content and
temperature can cause fish to dramatically change the morphology of their
gills in a rapid and reversible manner. The first fish found to have such
abilities was the crucian carp Carassius carassius
(Sollid et al., 2003
), and
subsequent studies have indicated that at least four fish species can make
these striking adjustments.
When I took my first look at the gills of a crucian carp under a microscope, I got quite worried. I could not find any lamellae. After examining a larger sample of crucian carp from our aquarium facility, I was soon under the impression that I had spent much of my scientific career unknowingly studying severely malformed or diseased fish. All the crucian carp in our storage tanks appeared to show the same features: sausage like filaments without any protruding lamellae (Fig. 1A,B). This happened just a few weeks before I was to move from Uppsala (Sweden) to Oslo (Norway). Consequently, when I arrived in Oslo, one of the first things I did was to examine some crucian carp that my new Norwegian colleagues were keeping. These Norwegian fishes had gills that looked exactly the same as those from Uppsala, and I found some comfort in discovering that more scientists than me had unknowingly been studying malformed fish. However, there was also the possibility that this is what crucian carp gills actually look like. To cut a long story short, the odd looking gills of the crucian carp became a MSc project for Jørund Sollid, and in 2005 he defended his PhD on the same subject.
|
20°C) aerated water, while hypoxia (water
[O2]=68% of air saturation)
(Fig. 1C) or increased
temperature (
25°C) (Fig.
1D) makes these gills transform into `normal' gills with
protruding lamellae. The process was found to be reversible, and a few days in
relatively cold normoxic water will make them regain the sausage-like
morphology (Sollid et al.,
2003| Mechanisms of gill remodeling in crucian carp |
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With regard to the molecular mechanisms involved, the first possibility we
examined was that the ILCM cells sense hypoxia and a rise in temperature
through an increased level of the hypoxia inducible factor 1-alpha
(HIF-1
). This transcription factor has been shown to be responsible for
numerous cellular responses to hypoxia (for a review, see
Nikinmaa and Rees, 2005
). We
therefore cloned HIF-1
from crucian carp and, in collaboration with
Mikko Nikinmaa's group, measured the level of HIF-1
(mRNA and protein)
in the gills of crucian carp exposed to hypoxia at various temperatures. The
results were ambiguous. HIF-1
did indeed increase in concentration
(both as protein and mRNA) in response to hypoxia
(Sollid et al., 2006
), but we
subsequently found that HIF-1
also increases in concentration with
falling temperature during normoxic conditions
(Rissanen et al., 2006
). This
does not fit well with the finding that high temperature stimulates apoptosis
in the ILCM. Thus, if HIF-1
is involved, it is unlikely to be the only
signal for reducing the ILCM, and another mechanism has to be initiating the
apoptosis induced by a rise in temperature. Moreover, the mRNA level of
inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), an enzyme induced by HIF-1
and
known to trigger apoptosis (Dimmeler and
Zeiher, 1997
), was found to be unaffected by hypoxia in crucian
carp gills (Sollid et al.,
2006
). This seems to rule out a role for iNOS in inducing
apoptosis in the ILCM.
Thus, at present we have no good evidence for any particular molecular mechanisms responsible for inducing the gill remodeling in crucian carp. In fact, we do not even know if the signal is sensed by the ILCM cells themselves or if the cells receive a signal from elsewhere in the body. The latter possibility is a bit difficult to reconcile with their anatomical location. The ILCM cells are situated outside the lamellar epithelium and we have not observed any blood vessels in the ILCM in light microscopic and transmission electron microscopic examinations. We also find it unlikely that the ILCM is innervated, but this remains to be examined. Therefore, it is not clear if the fish has any humoral or neural means of signaling to the ILCM cells that they should start dividing or undergo apoptosis. Still, it is tempting to suggest that the signal comes from the fish. As mentioned previously, a low oxygen level in the water and a high temperature have a common denominator: they increase the demand on the gills for oxygen uptake. An insufficient oxygen uptake could, for example, be sensed through a fall in blood oxygen levels.
Moreover, the apparent lack of vasculature in the ILCM also presents another unanswered question: how do these cells receive nutrients for their energy metabolism? At present, we have to admit that most questions regarding the nature and regulation of the ILCM remain to be answered. A first aim will be to characterize the cells that make up the ILCM.
| Pros and cons of gill remodeling |
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Thus, having to rely on anaerobic glycolysis is energetically very costly
for this fish and puts it in danger of running out of fuel, even if it has
enormous glycogen stores (Hyvärinen
et al., 1985
; Vornanen and
Paajanen, 2006
). Therefore, it must be beneficial for the crucian
carp to make the period where it utilizes anaerobic glycolysis as short as
possible. This could be the reason why crucian carp remain physically active
at low oxygen levels, and even in anoxia
(Nilsson et al., 1993
;
Nilsson, 2001
), since this
will allow them to seek out oxygen throughout the habitat. Limiting the
anaerobic period could also be a major selection pressure for remodeling the
gills. The anoxic period in the winter must be preceded by hypoxia. Here, gill
remodeling in the direction of increased lamellar surface area will allow the
crucian carp to maintain aerobic ATP production for a longer period. Sollid et
al. (Sollid et al., 2003
;
Sollid et al., 2005a
) showed
that crucian carp with protruding lamellae were able to run aerobic metabolism
at significantly lower oxygen levels than when the lamellae were imbedded in
an ILCM.
In line with its extreme hypoxia tolerance, the crucian carp blood contains
haemoglobin with an extremely high O2 affinity. Sollid et al.
(Sollid et al., 2005a
) found
that crucian carp haemoglobin is 50% saturated with O2 already at a
PO2 of 0.8 or 1.6 mmHg
(=P50 at 10°C and 20°C, respectively), which
appears to be a record low P50 for a vertebrate
haemoglobin. In addition to being useful for oxygen uptake at very low water
PO2, this high O2 affinity may be a
prerequisite for the extensive gill remodeling displayed by the crucian carp.
In normoxic water, the high oxygen affinity probably allows the haemoglobin to
accumulate enough O2 even over relatively long diffusion distances
between water and blood, thereby allowing this fish to fully cover its
lamellae with a cell mass.
During the summer and autumn, a lack of protruding lamellae should allow the fish to shift parts of its energy budget from osmoregulatory tasks to building up glycogen stores (assuming the water temperature is not so high that it would make the lamellae protrude). Large glycogen stores would reduce the risk of the fish running out of fuel during the anoxic period in the winter. Similarly, in the spring, when water oxygen levels are restored and it is time to spawn, reducing the lamellar surface area will mean that the crucian carp can devote more energy into producing gametes, which will directly promote its fitness.
In addition, having a small lamellar surface area for most of the year is likely to make the crucian carp less vulnerable to pathogens and toxic substances that may enter the body over the gills.
|
| More fishes do it |
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Another possibility that struck us was that gill remodeling could have been overseen in goldfish because they are traditionally kept and studied at room temperature (2025°C). At such a high temperature, crucian carp also have `normal' gills with protruding lamellae. We tested this possibility in some pretty goldfish imported from a dealer in Singapore and acclimated to 25°C, by chilling down their water to 15°C for 5 days and subsequently to 7.5°C for 5 days. While goldfish at 25 and 15°C showed `normal' gills with protruding lamellae (Fig. 3A), those that had been at 7.5°C for 5 days had acquired filaments virtually without protruding lamellae (Fig. 3B), being strikingly similar to those of crucian carp kept below 20°C. Clearly, like crucian carp, goldfish are able to remodel their gills, and the reason that this had been overlooked is probably that no one has previously examined the gills of goldfish held at a low temperature.
|
At an APS Conference in Virginia Beach in October 2006, Patricia A. Wright
(University of Guelph) announced that her research group had found gill
remodeling in the mangrove killifish Kryptolebias marmoratus in
response to air exposure. This small cyprinidont fish was found to have an
ILCM that reacted strongly to air exposure by increasing in volume to fill up
most of the interlamellar space within a week. The process was found to be
reversible and seemed to increase the ability of the killifish to take up
oxygen from air, possibly by stabilizing the lamellae so that they would not
stick together (Ong et al.,
2007
). This killifish is an excellent air breather that frequently
ventures into the terrestrial environment. Histologically, the change in gill
structure displayed by the killifish, involving a dynamic ILCM and a
maintained lamellar structure (Fig.
4), appears to be very similar to that displayed by the cyprinids.
Thus, reversible and adaptive gill remodeling is not exclusive to
cyprinids.
An additional example of gill remodeling is provided by Arapaima
gigas, a giant Amazonian fish, which starts off its life as a water
breather with `normal' gills with protruding lameallae. Later in life, it
becomes an obligate air breather, using its swimbladder for oxygen uptake,
while simultaneously developing gills without protruding lamellae
(Brauner et al., 2004
).
However, in this fish, gill remodeling is a developmental change that is
unlikely to be reversible. Moreover, histological examination of A.
gigas gills at different life stages indicate a more profound
reorganization of gill structure where the lamellae are no longer present.
Thus, its cellular mechanisms for changing the gill morphology are possibly
different from those operating in the cyprinids and cyprinodonts.
Finally, it should be mentioned that the exposure to aluminum in acid water
can cause gross morphological changes in gills, which are generally considered
to be pathological, but it cannot be excluded that they may reflect protective
changes. In largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides, an enormous
hypertrophy and vacuolization of the epithelial cells on the lamellae occurs
(Leino and McCormick, 1993
),
while in brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis, undifferentiated cells
and mucous producing cells have been seen filling up the interlamellar space
after 710 days of aluminum exposure at pH 5.2, while these cells
disappeared as the gill morphology showed a surprising recovery after a
further week of aluminum exposure (Mueller
et al., 1991
). In the latter case, the cell mass filling up the
interlamellar space may have provided a protective function as the fish
appeared to acclimate to the aluminum, and the histology was not totally
unlike that of crucian carp lamellae embedded in a ILCM.
| New fashion or ancient secret? |
|---|
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Arguably, many fish species would benefit from remodeling their gills to match oxygen uptake capacity with oxygen needs in the face of changing environmental conditions. However, to cover the lamellae almost completely with a cell mass in cold, well-oxygenated water, as the crucian carp and goldfish do, is unlikely to be an option for most fishes, as it possibly demands an extremely high blood oxygen affinity. Moreover, gill remodeling is probably quite costly, considering the apoptotic and mitotic processes involved. Thus, doing this many times a week in response to short-term changes in the habitat could be energetically unfavorable. This relatively slow and drastic mechanism is probably best suited for responding to relatively long-lasting changes in the environment, like annual wintertime hypoxia (as in crucian carp), or week-long expeditions into the terrestrial environment (as in the killifish). Adjusting gill ventilation and blood flow patterns in the gills are probably the mechanisms of choice for matching the functional respiratory surface area to short-term variations in ambient oxygen levels, temperature and oxygen needs.
Still, considering the potential benefits that gill remodeling may have for both survival and fitness, one may speculate that a capacity for some degree of gill remodeling is widespread among fishes. If it is less extensive than in crucian carp, it could have easily been missed by fish physiologists. Moreover, if gill remodeling occurs under conditions where we rarely keep the fish, then even extensive gill remodeling, like that shown by goldfish at 7.5°C, may be overlooked.
| Acknowledgments |
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