Extreme blood boosting capacity of an Antarctic fish represents an adaptation to life in a sub-zero environment.

Extreme blood boosting capacity of an Antarctic fish represents an adaptation to life in a sub-zero environment.

Brijs, Jeroen;Axelsson, Michael;Rosengren, Malin;Jutfelt, Fredrik;Gräns, Albin;
the journal of experimental biology 2019
282
brijs2019extremethe

Abstract

Blood doping, the practice of boosting the oxygen carrying capacity of blood, is an illegal strategy used by human athletes to enhance aerobic capacity and athletic performance. Interestingly, the practice of boosting blood oxygen carrying capacity is also naturally prevalent in the animal kingdom via the splenic release of stored erythrocytes. Here we demonstrate that an Antarctic notothenioid fish, the bald notothen (), is a master of this practice. Due to the sub-zero environment these fish inhabit, they sequester a large proportion of erythrocytes in the spleen during times of inactivity to reduce the energetic and physiological costs associated with continuously pumping highly viscous blood around the body. However, in response to metabolically demanding situations ( exercise and feeding), these fish contract the spleen to eject stored erythrocytes into circulation, which boosts blood oxygen carrying capacity by up to 207% ( exercise-induced increases of ∼40-60% in a range of other vertebrates and ∼5-25% in blood-doping athletes). By evaluating cardiorespiratory differences between splenectomized (unable to release erythrocytes from the spleen) and sham-operated individuals, we demonstrate the metabolic benefits ( aerobic scope increased 103%) and the cardiovascular trade-offs ( ventral aortic blood pressure and cardiac workload increased 12% and 30%, respectively) associated with the splenic blood boosting strategy. In conclusion, this strategy provides bald notothens with an extraordinary facultative aerobic scope that enables an active lifestyle in the extreme Antarctic marine environment, while minimizing the energetic and physiological costs of transporting highly viscous blood during times of reduced energetic demand.

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