AI Article Synopsis

  • Homeoviscous adaptation (HVA) helps fish manage thermal stress by adjusting their membrane lipid composition, with significant differences observed between Antarctic and non-Antarctic species.
  • Research focused on four Perciformes fish revealed consistent lipid compositions across three Antarctic species, while the New Zealand species had notably different lipids.
  • The study examined how Antarctic fish acclimate to temperature changes, finding that thermal acclimation at higher temperatures (up to 6 °C) led to changes in membrane lipid saturation, indicating a potential vulnerability to global warming in species that evolved in stable cold environments.

Article Abstract

Homeoviscous adaptation (HVA) is a key cellular response by which fish protect their membranes against thermal stress. We investigated evolutionary HVA (long time scale) in Antarctic and non-Antarctic fish. Membrane lipid composition was determined for four Perciformes fish: two closely related Antarctic notothenioid species ( and ); a diversified related notothenioid Antarctic icefish (); and a New Zealand species (). The membrane lipid compositions were consistent across the three Antarctic species and these were significantly different from that of the New Zealand species. Furthermore, acclimatory HVA (short time periods with seasonal changes) was investigated to determine whether stenothermal Antarctic fish, which evolved in the cold, stable environment of the Southern Ocean, have lost the acclimatory capacity to modulate their membrane saturation states, making them vulnerable to anthropogenic global warming. We compared liver membrane lipid composition in two closely related Antarctic fish species acclimated at 0 °C (control temperature), 4 °C for a period of 14 days in and 28 days for and 6 °C for 7 days in both species. Thermal acclimation at 4 °C did not result in changed membrane saturation states in either Antarctic species. Despite this, membrane functions were not compromised, as indicated by declining serum osmolality, implying positive compensation by enhanced hypo-osmoregulation. Increasing the temperature to 6 °C did not change the membrane lipids of However, in thermal acclimation at 6 °C resulted in an increase of membrane saturated fatty acids and a decline in unsaturated fatty acids. This is the first study to show a homeoviscous response to higher temperatures in an Antarctic fish, although for only one of the two species examined.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5961637PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4765DOI Listing

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