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Evolved changes in the intracellular distribution and physiology of muscle mitochondria in high-altitude native deer mice.

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors used high-altitude adapted populations of deer mice to examine whether changes in mitochondrial physiology or intracellular distribution in the muscle contribute to hypoxia resistance.
Abstract
Key points Mitochondrial function changes over time at high altitudes, but the potential benefits of these changes for hypoxia resistance remains unclear. We used high-altitude-adapted populations of deer mice, which exhibit enhanced aerobic performance in hypoxia, to examine whether changes in mitochondrial physiology or intracellular distribution in the muscle contribute to hypoxia resistance. Permeabilized muscle fibres from the gastrocnemius muscle had higher respiratory capacities in high-altitude mice than in low-altitude mice. Highlanders also had higher mitochondrial volume densities, due entirely to an enriched abundance of subsarcolemmal mitochondria, such that more mitochondria were situated near the cell membrane and adjacent to capillaries. There were several effects of hypoxia acclimation on mitochondrial function, some of which were population specific, but they differed from the evolved changes in high-altitude natives, which probably provide a better indication of adaptive traits that improve performance and hypoxia resistance at high altitudes. Abstract High-altitude natives that have evolved to live in hypoxic environments provide a compelling system to understand how animals can overcome impairments in oxygen availability. We examined whether these include changes in mitochondrial physiology or intracellular distribution that contribute to hypoxia resistance in high-altitude deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus). Mice from populations native to high and low altitudes were born and raised in captivity, and as adults were acclimated to normoxia or hypobaric hypoxia (equivalent to 4300 m elevation). We found that highlanders had higher respiratory capacities in the gastrocnemius (but not soleus) muscle than lowlanders (assessed using permeabilized fibres with single or multiple inputs to the electron transport system), due in large part to higher mitochondrial volume densities in the gastrocnemius. The latter was attributed to an increased abundance of subsarcolemmal (but not intermyofibrillar) mitochondria, such that more mitochondria were situated near the cell membrane and adjacent to capillaries. Hypoxia acclimation had no significant effect on these population differences, but it did increase mitochondrial cristae surface densities of mitochondria in both populations. Hypoxia acclimation also altered the physiology of isolated mitochondria by affecting respiratory capacities and cytochrome c oxidase activities in population-specific manners. Chronic hypoxia decreased the release of reactive oxygen species by isolated mitochondria in both populations. There were subtle differences in O2 kinetics between populations, with highlanders exhibiting increased mitochondrial O2 affinity or catalytic efficiency in some conditions. Our results suggest that evolved changes in mitochondrial physiology in high-altitude natives are distinct from the effects of hypoxia acclimation, and probably provide a better indication of adaptive traits that improve performance and hypoxia resistance at high altitudes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Circulatory mechanisms underlying adaptive increases in thermogenic capacity in high-altitude deer mice

TL;DR: Adaptive increases in thermogenic capacity in high-altitude deer mice involve integrated functional changes across the O2 cascade that augment O2 circulation and extraction from the blood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Life Ascending: Mechanism and Process in Physiological Adaptation to High-Altitude Hypoxia.

TL;DR: It is explained how changes at interacting steps of the O2 transport pathway contribute to plastic and evolved changes in whole-animal aerobic performance under hypoxia, resulting in counter-gradient patterns of altitudinal variation for key physiological phenotypes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physiological and genomic evidence that selection on the transcription factor Epas1 has altered cardiovascular function in high-altitude deer mice.

TL;DR: A demographically-informed selection scan is used to show that Epas1 variants have experienced a history of spatially varying selection, suggesting that differences in cardiovascular function and gene regulation contribute to high-altitude adaptation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of physiological performance capacities and environmental adaptation: insights from high-elevation deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus)

TL;DR: Information is synthesized on naturally occurring variation in physiological performance capacities and how it relates to environmental adaptation in deer mice to discuss how evolved changes in aerobic exercise capacity and thermogenic capacity have contributed to adaptation to high elevations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Naked mole rat brain mitochondria electron transport system flux and H+ leak are reduced during acute hypoxia

TL;DR: The results indicate that NMR brain ETS flux and H+ leak are reduced in a balanced and regulated fashion during acute hypoxia, which matches whole-animal metabolic rate depression.
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Reactive oxygen species generated at mitochondrial complex III stabilize hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha during hypoxia: a mechanism of O2 sensing.

TL;DR: Findings reveal that mitochondria-derived ROS are both required and sufficient to initiate HIF-1α stabilization during hypoxia and that catalase abolishes hypoxic response element-luciferase expression during Hypoxia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitochondrial Autophagy Is an HIF-1-dependent Adaptive Metabolic Response to Hypoxia

TL;DR: This study demonstrates that mitochondrial autophagy is induced by hypoxia, that this process requires the Hypoxia-dependent factor-1-dependent expression of BNIP3 and the constitutive expression of Beclin-1 and Atg5, and that in cells subjected to prolonged hypoxIA, mitochondrial autphagy is an adaptive metabolic response which is necessary to prevent increased levels of reactive oxygen species and cell death.
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