Abstract
Over a decade has passed since Powell et al. (Respir Physiol 112:123–134, 1998) described and defined the time domains of the hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) in adult mammals. These time domains, however, have yet to receive much attention in other vertebrate groups. The initial, acute HVR of fish, amphibians and reptiles serves to minimize the imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. If the hypoxia is sustained, a suite of secondary adjustments occur giving rise to a more long-term balance (acclimatization) that allows the behaviors of normal life. These secondary responses can change over time as a function of the nature of the stimulus (the pattern and intensity of the hypoxic exposure). To add to the complexity of this process, hypoxia can also lead to metabolic suppression (the hypoxic metabolic response) and the magnitude of this is also time dependent. Unlike the original review of Powell et al. (Respir Physiol 112:123–134, 1998) that only considered the HVR in adult animals, we also consider relevant developmental time points where information is available. Finally, in amphibians and reptiles with incompletely divided hearts the magnitude of the ventilatory response will be modulated by hypoxia-induced changes in intra-cardiac shunting that also improve the match between O2 supply and demand, and these too change in a time-dependent fashion. While the current literature on this topic is reviewed here, it is noted that this area has received little attention. We attempt to redefine time domains in a more ‘holistic’ fashion that better accommodates research on ectotherms. If we are to distinguish between the genetic, developmental and environmental influences underlying the various ventilatory responses to hypoxia, however, we must design future experiments with time domains in mind.
Keywords: Time domains, Acclimation/acclimatization, Hypoxic ventilatory response
Introduction
What are time domains and why consider them?
For most animals, the first response to environmental hypoxia is avoidance, followed quickly by an acute physiological response that minimizes the imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. If the hypoxia is sustained a suite of secondary adjustments occur giving rise to a more long-term balance (acclimatization) that allows the behaviors of normal life. These adjustments are, presumably, the raw material on which natural selection acts to produce physiological adaptations.
The extent to which ectothermic vertebrates respond to hypoxia and the manner in which they respond vary tremendously among species. What underlies these responses is the need to match oxygen delivery to the oxygen requirements of the mitochondria. Ventilation is the first step in the cascade that underlies this process. A wide spectrum of hypoxic ventilatory responses (HVR) have been reported for hypoxia-tolerant and intolerant species living in different habitats using different gas exchange organs to support different levels of metabolic demand.
As noted previously (Powell et al. 1998; Perry et al. 2009), the HVR arises from a complex interplay of many distinct processes. As a consequence, the HVR is dynamic and the nature of the response varies over time in a manner that, at least in part, depends on the nature of the stimulus (pattern and intensity of the hypoxic exposure) and the components of the HVR (e.g. respiratory volume or breathing frequency). In mammals, where emphasis has been placed on careful examination of these time-dependent changes, it has become clear that the responses are manifestations of distinct adjustments at multiple sites in the ventilatory control circuit ranging from the sensory inputs to the final motor output. Because some responses are sufficiently long-lasting after a hypoxic exposure to affect future responses to recurring bouts of hypoxia, reflecting a degree of memory or functional plasticity in the system, subtle differences in experimental protocols can elicit different combinations of time-dependent processes (Powell et al. 1998; Perry et al. 2009). If we are to distinguish between the genetic, developmental and environmental influences underlying physiological diversity, then it is critical that we carefully note which HVRs are being compared.
The ventilatory time domains defined from studies on adult mammals
In their 1998 review, Powell et al. (1998) proposed a common terminology for different components of the isocapnic HVR in adult mammals. Factors that decrease arterial O2 content independent of O2 partial pressure (e.g. anemia, carbon monoxide) were not considered, nor were other factors that alter ventilatory drive, such as the decrease in CO2 with hyperventilation from hypoxia. At that time, the list included mechanisms arising during or following brief hypoxic exposures (the acute response, short-term depression, short-term potentiation), mechanisms identifiable during or following episodic hypoxic exposures (progressive augmentation, long-term facilitation), and mechanisms identifiable during or following prolonged hypoxic exposures (hypoxic ventilatory decline, ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, ventilatory deacclimatization from hypoxia and hypoxic desensitization) (Fig. 1).
Note that the acute response was the response occurring in the first few breaths following changes in O2 levels at the peripheral chemoreceptors. The other short-term responses, occurring in seconds to minutes, involved mechanisms not dependent on changes in levels of gene expression or protein synthesis. Longer term responses to intermittent or chronic hypoxic exposure may involve mechanisms ranging from neurophysiological or neurochemical changes in the ventilatory control pathways, to subsequent changes in other aspects of respiratory drive, as well as changes occurring at other levels of the O2 transport cascade [e.g. the oxygen carrying capacity of red blood cells, modulation of cardiac function (particularly cardiac shunt) and vascular tone].
Of particular note, many of these terms are difficult to apply to ectothermic vertebrates as the precise conditions under which these terms were defined are violated in studies of animals under more natural conditions. These terms all refer to changes in the HVR due to hypoxia per se (i.e. not to concomitant changes in drive from other sources) and each arose from a distinct and identifiably different mechanism. These are discussed in detail elsewhere (Powell et al. 1998). In virtually all studies of ectothermic vertebrates subsequent changes in respiratory drive accompany the HVR and these include not only the decreases in CO2 occurring as a result of the hypoxia induced increases in ventilation (the more natural condition), but also the decreases in metabolic rate that occur with hypoxia in many species. The latter has been termed the hypoxic metabolic response (HMR) (Barros et al. 2001; Powell and Fu 2008) and to add to the complexity of the situation: the HMR has now also been shown to include time-dependent processes (Bishop et al. 2000; Seifert and Mortola 2002).
Temperature must also be considered when describing the time domains of the HVR of ectothermic vertebrates. Taking Q 10 effects (fold increase/decrease in the rate of change of reactions with a 10°C increase/decrease in temperature) into account, the time courses of the components of the HVR would be expected to be slower in ectothermic vertebrates than in mammals. Therefore, it is the mechanisms behind the time-dependent changes in ventilation rather than the time courses per se in ectothermic vertebrates that must be carefully considered in order to draw parallels to the time domains observed in mammals and to reflect on evolutionary trend in the HVR.
The need to consider time-dependent changes in the HVR of ectothermic vertebrates
Over the past decade comparative physiologists have accepted the need to consider phylogeny when making comparisons between species involving the longest of time domains associated with physiological responses, physiological adaptation (Garland and Carter 1994; Garland and Adolph 1994). Not as much attention, however, has been paid to changes occurring over the shorter time domains associated with acute responses, with acclimatization to chronic or intermittent hypoxia, or during development.
Ectothermic vertebrates differ enormously in their hypoxia tolerance from resistance to anoxia in Crucian carp (Cyprinus carpio) and western painted turtles (Chrysemys picta bellii) (Glass et al. 1990; Lomholt and Johansen 1979; Ultsch and Jackson 1982) to high sensitivity to hypoxia in tuna, trout and soft-shelled turtles (Bushnell and Brill 1992; Crocker et al. 1999; Hughes and Sunders 1970; Perry and Gilmour 1996). A rich literature describes many aspects of this physiological diversity (Shelton et al. 1986; Wang et al. 1998; Gargaglioni and Milsom 2007; Perry et al. 2009). There is also extreme variation in the experimental protocols used to determine the physiological responses to hypoxia with differences in the rate of change in the inspired gas composition, duration and intensity of the hypoxic exposure, the components of the HVR being examined (e.g. respiratory volume or breathing frequency) and the methods by which they were measured. For ectothermic vertebrates, this is further compounded by effects of temperature, diet, digestive status and perceived predation risk (Perry et al. 2009). Given this, the purpose of this review is to provide an overview of these diverse patterns within the framework of the time domains of the HVR. Wherever possible, this review also provides information about the developmental aspects of the HVR, an important consideration in ectotherms. This review is also set within the framework of the hierarchical levels of the O2 transport cascade and takes into consideration the levels of the ventilatory control circuit at which these responses occur.
Fish
Environmental hypoxia is often encountered in aquatic environments (Diaz and Breitburg 2009) and the HVR is arguably the most important physiological response that maintains blood gas homeostasis in fish during oxygen lack (Perry et al. 2009; Gamperl and Driedzic 2009). As mentioned earlier, in analyzing the ventilatory responses of any animal to hypoxia per se one should ideally maintain arterial levels of CO2/pH constant to eliminate the confounding effects of reducing the ventilatory drive as the hyperventilation induces hypocapnia. As other authors have indicated (Gilmour 2001; Perry et al. 2009), there is a respiratory alkalosis produced by the hyperventilation in fish and some species have been shown to be very sensitive to such small changes in arterial acid–base status (Gilmour 2001). Furthermore, elevation of red blood cell pH resulting from even a modest respiratory alkalosis can increase the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen via the Bohr effect and increase arterial O2 content (Jensen 1991; Jensen et al. 1998). In most fish, however, arterial PCO2 levels are usually only a few mmHg above those of their environment as CO2 is readily eliminated at the gills (see Perry and Gilmour 2006 for a review) thus effects of hypoxia alone on the ventilatory response (without the complicating factor of large changes in CO2 seen in other terrestrial vertebrates) can be more easily assessed.
Responses to acute hypoxia in fish
Fish can encounter brief exposures to hypoxia either spatially (in the middle of large schools of fish (McFarland and Moss 1967), or moving through a water column) or temporally (seasonal changes in eutrophication) (Val and De Almeida-Val 1995). The initial response of fish to hypoxia has been reviewed recently (Perry et al. 2009) and while there is much interspecific and intra-specific variation in the response, in general most species increase total gill ventilation by increasing ventilation amplitude with no or small increases in ventilatory frequency (Perry et al. 2009). There is large inter- and intra-species variability in this regard, however, with species that normally breathe episodically increasing ventilation frequency as they switch to continuous ventilation (Glass and Soncini 1999; Leite et al. 2007; Lomholt and Johansen 1979; Reid et al. 2003; Vulesevic et al. 2006) and other species increasing ventilation frequency in moderate hypoxia but ventilation amplitude in more severe hypoxia (Kinkead et al. 1991). The magnitude of the response is generally a hyperbolic increase in ventilation with decreasing levels of PO2 (Fritsche and Nilsson 1993; Perry and Gilmour 2002; Perry and Wood 1989; Shelton et al. 1986). The shape of the response generally reflects the position of the hemoglobin-O2 (HbO2) equilibrium curve as well as the discharge characteristics of the peripheral O2 chemoreceptors (Burleson and Milsom 1995).
In mammals the primary mechanism responsible for the acute response is the increase in afferent discharge due to neurotransmitter release from peripheral chemoreceptors (the glomus cells of the carotid body). In fish the peripheral chemoreceptors appear to be neuroepithelial cells within the gills and orobranchial cavity. A subset of these have been shown to depolarize in response to hypoxia and to contain serotonin (Burleson et al. 2006; Jonz et al. 2004) and have been found in all species of fish studied to date (Coolidge et al. 2008; Saltys et al. 2006; for a more detailed review see Table 5.7 in Perry et al. 2009). In mammals the synaptic input from the chemoreceptors is “gated” in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) in the medulla such that the immediate response differs depending on the phase of the ongoing respiratory cycle during which the afferent input arrives (Eldridge and Milhorn 1986). Whether this also occurs in fish is unknown although afferent nerve discharge from the peripheral chemoreceptors projects to a central sensory area homologous to the mammalian NTS (Sundin et al. 2003; Turesson and Sundin 2003).
While the ventilatory responses to hypoxia may be initiated very rapidly (within a breath or two) (Bamford 1974; Kinkead et al. 1991), typically in most studies, the time course over which environmental hypoxia was produced was sufficiently slow that it is hard to distinguish whether all of the short-term time domains (seconds to minutes) that have been described in mammals (the acute response, short-term potentiation and short-term depression) also occur in fish. Although scarce, data for fish do suggest that the acute response and short-term potentiation take place. For instance, in Amia calva rapidly exposed to moderate hypoxia (47 mmHg) at 20°C (McKenzie et al. 1991) there was an immediate (within 1 min) increase in both respiration amplitude and frequency, followed by a plateau in the response (1–2 min), followed by a progressive increase in ventilation amplitude and frequency that developed (2–15 min) (Fig. 2). Taking into account a Q 10 of 2–3, the time course of this increase in ventilation in Amia likely reflects the short-term potentiation in mammals that develops within 1 min. Until the mechanisms underlying these changes in fish are examined, however, this must remain speculative. Short-term potentiation is also manifest as a slow return of ventilation to original levels following return to normoxia but no studies yet have investigated the off response of fish exposed to hypoxia in any detail.
Responses to intermittent hypoxia in fish
Intermittent hypoxia is common in many aquatic environments. Fluctuations in water PO2 occur in small, shallow bodies of water due to the depletion of oxygen from animals respiring at night when photosynthesis stops. For example, intermittent hypoxia occurs in tidal pools where PO2 drops (sometime to almost anoxic levels) over a few hours and remains low until the next tide (Truchot and Duhamel-Jouve 1980). Similar fluctuations in PO2 have been reported in temporary lakes within the flood plains of the Amazon (Val and De Almeida-Val 1995). In the marine environment some deep sea fishes undergo daily migrations to the photic zone to feed, often traversing the oxygen minimum layer twice daily (Gordon 1969).
In mammals, short episodic hypoxic exposures (1–5 min) can produce progressive augmentation (increasingly greater responses to the same stimulus) and long-term facilitation (a slowly developing post-stimulus increase in breathing). Surprisingly, only a small number of studies have looked at HVRs of fish under fluctuating oxygen conditions. The length of the hypoxic exposures during each bout was generally much greater in these studies than in those in mammals (in order to more accurately reflect situations in the wild). None of the studies measured the changes in all components of the breathing pattern or of respiratory drive (including the HMR), however, precluding any detailed assessment of time domains (Taylor and Miller 2001). Thus, no conclusions can be drawn at this time.
Responses to prolonged hypoxia in fish
Seasonal variations in oxygen availability are seen in shallow temperate lakes (Val and De Almeida-Val 1995) or in hypoxic upwelling events in coastal marine systems where hypoxia can persist for months (Chan et al. 2008). Studies that look at changes in breathing frequency and amplitude over periods of time longer than a couple of hours in fish, however, are few, and for those that have, often the data are not presented at a fine enough scale to determine the presence of time domains. In most studies, the acute response appears to be sustained for hours to days and suggests that the hyperventilatory response to hypoxia is independent of the length of exposure (Borch et al. 1993; Florindo et al. 2006; Forgue et al. 1989; Glass et al. 1990; Thomas and Hughes 1982a, b) (Fig. 3a, d, e). Interestingly, this is despite accompanying a maintenance or increase in Hb-O2-binding affinity and blood O2 carrying capacity during prolonged exposure to hypoxia (Nikinmaa 2001; Perry and Wood 1989; Wood and Johansen 1972) (Fig. 4). That said, there is some indication that time domains exist in adult fish and their apparent absence in many studies may reflect a lack of resolution (see next section).
Hypoxic ventilatory decline in fish
It has been proposed that the hypoxic ventilatory decline that occurs in mammals with sustained hypoxia serves to conserve energy as breathing is energetically costly (Neubauer et al. 1990) and this strategy might also be beneficial for fish. The proposed mechanisms behind this decline in total ventilation in mammals are thought to be changes in ventilatory sensitivity and/or in central ventilatory drive. Most studies show a lack of response (Fig. 3a, d, e), however, a few studies have documented decreases in ventilation over periods of a few hours during sustained hypoxia. For example, tambaqui (Colossoma macropomum) exposed to severe hypoxia (10–20 mmHg) initially exhibit the typical hyperventilation response, but ventilation amplitude then started to decrease slowly over the next 6 h of the exposure (Florindo et al. 2006; Rantin and Kalinin 1996) (Fig. 3b). Carp exposed to anoxia for 24 h at 6°C exhibited an initial fivefold rise in ventilation frequency over the first 2 h and then a ventilatory “roll-off” to initial levels over the next 14 h (Stecyk and Farrell 2002) (Fig. 3c). A similar response occurred at higher temperatures, however, over a shorter time course (see “The effects of temperature in ectotherms”). As in the studies on tambaqui, the level of hypoxia was severe and the decrease in ventilation frequency was probably at least in part due to a metabolic depression as well as to time-dependent changes in the ventilatory response. These studies are the best evidence for the presence of hypoxic ventilatory decline in fish but if this is the hypoxic ventilatory decline, then this phenomenon that occurs within 5–30 min of hypoxic exposure in mammals takes several hours to develop in fish, a time course that could be explained by temperature differences alone.
Changes with similar time domains have been seen at the cellular level providing a possible explanation for the mechanisms behind these time-dependent changes in ventilation. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) serves as a cellular regulator in order to match ATP supply and demand within the cell. During low oxygen availability, AMP activates AMPK which in turn inhibits anabolic processes and activates catabolic processes in the cell maintaining [ATP] stable. In goldfish, AMPK in the liver is activated after 30 min of exposure to hypoxia, decreased partially after about 3 h and increased again after 8 h of hypoxic exposure (Jibb and Richards 2008) (Fig. 3f). AMPK activity returned to pre-exposure levels after 12 h of exposure. Therefore, it is possible that the partial decrease in total ventilation of fish exposed to hypoxia for several hours represents a reduction in energy requirement at the cellular level regulated by AMPK and this in turn translates into a constant ventilatory convection requirement.
Ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia in fish
The impact of chronic hypoxia on hypoxic sensitivity (ΔV w/ΔPO2) is variable in fish. In flounder (Platichthys flesus) gill ventilation increased twofold after a 3-week acclimatization to hypoxia (30 mmHg) compared to fish acutely exposed to the same level of hypoxia (Kerstens et al. 1979) (Fig. 5). Similarly, channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) exposed to moderate hypoxia for 7 days increased resting breathing frequency and ventilatory sensitivity to hypoxia (Burleson et al. 2002) (Fig. 5). In other species, however, no changes or reduced ventilation/sensitivity have also been reported (C. carpio, Lomholt and Johansen 1979; Lampetra fluviatilis, Nikinmaa and Weber 1984; Danio rerio, Vulesevic et al. 2006). These differences might reflect differences in coping strategies between species or simply could be due to differences in the time and severity of the hypoxic acclimation. No studies to date have looked at the off response (the change in ventilation on return to normoxia) of fish exposed to chronic hypoxia.
To the extent that changes occur in sensitivity, these may reflect plasticity at the chemoreceptor level. Thus, zebrafish (D. rerio) exposed to chronic hypoxia (35 mmHg, 60 days) exhibited hypertrophy and changes in morphology (Jonz et al. 2004), but not proliferation of serotonin containing neuroepithelial cells (Jonz et al. 2004; Vulesevic et al. 2006).
The mechanisms behind VAH in mammals involve changes in plasticity at both the chemoreceptor level and the level of the central nervous system. The latter include changes in gene expression mediated by hypoxia inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) (Powell and Fu 2008). Similar changes in gene expression have also been shown in fish exposed to 10% oxygen saturation for up to 6 days and they likely involve regulation by HIF-1α (Gracey et al. 2001). This suggests that changes in gene expression and their mechanisms are conserved between vertebrate classes and are critical for acclimatization to chronic hypoxia. In fish these changes reflect tissue specific and time-dependent decreases in the expression of genes involved in protein synthesis, cell growth, proliferation and muscle contractility and increases in expression of genes involved in ATP metabolism and glycolysis (Gracey et al. 2001).
Developmental changes in the HVR in fish
The developmental strategies of fishes vary greatly but generally the embryos are small and covered in an egg capsule called a chorion. Fish embryos encounter hypoxia often as they are normally buried under gravel where dissolved oxygen levels are low (Youngson et al. 2004) and their large yolk sacks hinder them from escaping this environment. During early development the surrounding chorion is thought to limit oxygen diffusion to the embryo (Rombough 1998; Ciuhandu et al. 2007). Fish embryos obtain their oxygen by diffusion across the skin. When embryos are small diffusion is sufficient to meet oxygen requirements because the skin surface is large and diffusion distances are small. As the embryos grow the ratio of surface area to volume decreases and at ~100 mg the surface area of the skin becomes limiting for gas exchange and gills take over as the major organ for respiratory gas exchange (Rombough and Moroz 1997).
All fish studied to date (Arctic char, trout and zebrafish) develop irregular breathing movements soon after hatching and the breathing movements become regular later in development (Holeton 1971; McDonald and McMahon 1977; Jonz and Nurse 2005; Turesson et al. 2006). Fish larvae display an acute HVR soon after hatching and this response becomes more robust later in development (Holeton 1971; McDonald and McMahon 1977). Furthermore, fish larvae reared in hypoxia develop a regular breathing pattern earlier than fish reared in normoxia (McDonald and McMahon 1977).
At hatch, gill filaments are present, but they are small and tightly packed and, as development continues, the filaments become more spread out on the gill arch and lamellae develop (McDonald and McMahon 1977; Jonz and Nurse 2005). Interestingly, although neuroepithelial cells are present at the time of hatch in zebrafish, they become innervated only just before the time of complete yolk reabsorption (after a hypoxic hyperventilatory response develops), indicating that this oxygen-sensing pathway becomes functional only closer to emergence (Jonz and Nurse 2005). It has also been shown that there is a central switch in receptor-mediated ventilatory control with the late onset of dependence on glutamatergic transmission (NMDA receptor-mediated) just before branchial respiration begins (Turesson et al. 2006). It is not at all clear what receptors are active early in development before the neuroepithelial cells are innervated and what non-NMDA receptor mechanisms are responsible for the central integration of the hypoxic response at this time.
Thus it would appear that time-dependent changes in the HVR arise during development in fish. It will be interesting to examine when this occurs in different species, and how this compares to the changes seen in amphibian tadpoles (see “Developmental changes in the HVR of larval amphibians”). It must be kept in mind, however, that determining the onset of time-dependent changes in the HVR (acclimation) during development, are confounded by developmental changes in oxygen requirements.
The HVR in fish exhibiting aquatic surface respiration or air breathing
Some fish have evolved ways to increase their oxygen supply when faced with aquatic hypoxia by exhibiting aquatic surface respiration or air breathing. Fish employing aquatic surface respiration can use the oxygen enriched layer at the surface of the water–air interface to obtain more oxygen during gill breathing. Facultative air breathing fish normally use their gills to supply their oxygen needs, however, when water becomes hypoxic, they have the ability to come to the surface and supplement their oxygen needs by gulping air. They employ a variety of air breathing organs, including modified gas bladders, suprabrachial chambers, or modifications of the digestive system (Graham 1997). The typical response to hypoxia of both fish employing aquatic surface respiration and facultative air breathing is an initial increase in gill ventilation. However, if the increase in gill ventilation is not sufficient to meet oxygen needs then aquatic surface respiration or air breathing increases (Hedrick et al. 1994; Rantin and Kalinin 1996). In the latter case, gill breathing is also inhibited, which is thought to prevent loss of oxygen to the hypoxic aquatic environment (Johansen et al. 1970). In these instances, there may be time-dependent changes in the threshold at which the ventilatory responses will alter arterial PO2 at any given level of aquatic PO2 making further interpretation of the mechanisms underlying time-dependent changes in breathing extremely difficult. It is unclear whether obligate air breathers respond to aquatic hypoxia; in some studies fish show an increase in air breathing (Babiker 1979; Glass et al. 1986; Jesse et al. 1967; Johansen and Lenfant 1967) while in other studies on the same species they show no response (Johansen and Lenfant 1968; Perry et al. 2005; Sanchez et al. 2001). In all genera of lungfish, aerial hypoxia stimulates air breathing (Jesse et al. 1967; Johansen and Lenfant 1968; Babiker 1979; Pack et al. 1990; Sanchez et al. 2001; Perry et al. 2005, 2008) and this was also the case in terrestrialized (cocooned) Protopterus dolloi (Perry et al. 2008). These results are in contrast to data obtained from aestivating toads (see “Consequences of circadian and circannual cycles in ectotherms”). There are, however, no studies of the time domains of the air breathing response to aerial hypoxia in aquatic or aestivating air breathing fish.
Tetrapods
As with fish, investigating the HVR in ectothermic tetrapods is complicated by the influence of variable body temperature and hypoxia-induced metabolic suppression (see below). An additional complication arises from the undivided hearts in amphibians and reptiles that give rise to cardiac shunts that are under autonomic control and change consistently with ventilation (Wang et al. 1997). In combination with the direct influence of changes in body temperature and hypoxia-induced metabolic suppression, cardiac shunts influence arterial blood oxygen levels.
Consequences of cardiac shunts in tetrapods
Because of the undivided ventricle, amphibians and reptiles are capable of producing both left-to-right (L–R or systemic to pulmonary) and right-to-left (R–L or pulmonary to systemic) shunts. An L–R shunt represents recirculation of pulmonary venous blood (oxygen rich) into the pulmonary circulation. This shunt does not directly affect arterial oxygen levels, but the rise in pulmonary blood flow can “steal” systemic output, and thus, lower oxygen delivery to the systemic tissues (Wang and Hicks 2002). In the presence of a R–L shunt, on the other hand, oxygen poor venous blood bypasses the lungs, and re-enters the systemic circulation without being oxygenated. The shunted systemic venous blood, therefore, decreases arterial oxygen saturation resulting in arterial hypoxemia and reductions in tissue oxygen delivery. Furthermore, in animals with L–R cardiac shunts, the arterial blood gases do not directly reflect lung gas composition. This uncoupling of lung and blood gases, which normally does not occur in birds and mammals, implies that changes in the cardiac shunt pattern can contribute to the regulation of arterial blood gases. In the presence of shunts, the arterial PO2 and PCO2 are determined by the gas contents of arterial and venous blood, the magnitude of the shunt and the respective blood gas affinities and capacities (for reviews see Hicks and Wang 1996; Wood 1982, 1984; Wang and Hicks 1996). Because cardiac shunts affect arterial blood gas content, there exists the potential, not possible in birds and mammals, to alter the direction and magnitude of cardiac shunting as a means to regulate arterial blood gas composition independently of lung ventilation (e.g. Burggren et al. 1989; Wang et al. 1997). Furthermore, Wang and Hicks (1996) argued, theoretically, that changes in cardiac shunts may be a more powerful determinant of arterial PO2 than changes in lung ventilation (Fig. 6). By increasing arterial PO2 these shunts reduce the need for the HVR and any time-dependent changes in shunt fraction will contribute to the time-dependent changes in the HVR. Unfortunately, the sensory mechanisms that may regulate cardiac shunts have not been studied in detail and it remains a major challenge to understand how cardiovascular and ventilatory control mechanisms are integrated in the control of arterial oxygen delivery in amphibians and reptiles (Wang et al. 1997).
Amphibians
Amphibians are the first vertebrates to successfully invade terrestrial habitats. Extant members of the three orders of Amphibia—Gymnophiona, Caudata and Anura—represent a monophyletic group comprising approximately 6,000 species (Hillman et al. 2009). Among the three groups, the respiratory physiology of the Anura (frogs) has received far more attention that either Caudata (salamanders) or Gymnophiona (caecilians). A confounding feature with examining HVRs of all three groups is the radical change that occurs with development in the majority of these animals. Most amphibians have larval forms that are entirely “aquatic” (see Burggren and Just 1992) whereas following metamorphosis, adult forms may range from entirely aquatic to completely terrestrial. Aquatic larval or adult amphibians are more likely than their terrestrial counterparts to experience bouts of hypoxia on a daily or seasonal basis. Terrestrial adult amphibians would not normally experience environmental hypoxia except in situations such as burrowing (estivation). Estivating/burrowing animals undergo reductions in metabolic rate (Glass et al. 1997; Guppy and Withers 1999) and ventilation (Boutilier et al. 1979), but compensatory adjustments in ventilation to hypoxia during estivation have not been examined. Nonetheless, amphibians regularly experience large fluctuations in arterial PO2, resulting from intermittent breathing patterns (brief ventilatory periods, intermixed with variable periods of apnea) exacerbated by a variable intra-cardiac shunt.
Responses to acute hypoxia in amphibians
Caecilians
Few studies have investigated the effects of hypoxia on ventilation in this group (see Jared et al. 1999 for review). With the exception of one lungless aquatic species (Atretochoana eiselti; Nussbaum and Wilkinson 1995), all caecilians use lung ventilation and cutaneous diffusion to exchange respiratory gases. Acute exposure to aquatic hypoxia as low as 40 mmHg had no effect on lung ventilation in the aquatic caecilian T. natans although exposure to the same level of hypoxia in the aerial environment resulted in a significant increase in respiratory frequency, primarily due to a decrease in non-ventilatory periods (apneas), with no change in respiratory volume (Gardner et al. 2000). Because aquatic caecilians likely use their lungs for buoyancy as well as gas exchange, changes in respiratory volume may be used primarily for buoyancy control while respiratory frequency adjustments are used solely for regulating gas exchange. Nothing else is known about the HVR in this group. Because many caecilians are fossorial and/or aquatic (Jared et al. 1999), and possibly experience extended periods of hypoxia, it would be interesting to examine the HVR and its time domains in this understudied group of amphibians.
Salamanders
There have also been only a few studies of the HVR of salamanders. The aquatic, neotenous axolotl, Ambystoma mexicanum, exhibited a significant increase in gill ventilation and air breathing frequency in response to 1 h of hypoxia (~22 mmHg) indicating a robust acute HVR (McKenzie and Taylor 1996). External and internal bolus injections of sodium cyanide (NaCN) also stimulated both gill ventilation and air breathing in this species, suggesting that oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptors contributing to the HVR monitor both the water and blood (McKenzie and Taylor 1996). In the plethodontid salamander, Desmognathus fuscus, graded hypoxia caused an increase in buccal activity, which is thought to provide additional gas exchange despite the absence of lungs (Sheafor et al. 2000). These studies indicate that the short-term HVR in salamanders is typical of amphibians and other vertebrates. To our knowledge, longer time domains of the HVR in salamanders have not been investigated. The time domains associated with gill versus air breathing responses have not been studied either.
Anurans
All anurans, with the exception of the recently discovered lungless frog, Barbourula kalimantanensis (Bickford et al. 2008), use lungs for gas exchange as adults. In anurans, four basic breath types have been identified: buccal oscillations, balanced breaths, inflation breaths and deflation breaths (Jones 1982; Wang 1994; de Jongh and Gans 1969; West and Jones 1975; MacIntyre and Toews 1976; Vitalis and Shelton 1990; Sanders and Milsom 2001). The pattern in which these breaths are combined varies tremendously amongst anuran species, in part due to differences in metabolic rate and respiratory drive, and any discussion of ventilation in anurans must necessarily address the variability in breathing patterns seen in this group (see reviews by Shelton et al. 1986; Boutilier 1988; Milsom et al. 1999; Jørgensen 2000; Gargaglioni and Milsom 2007). In normoxia, the typical breathing pattern consists of buccal oscillations interrupted by single breaths or bouts of episodic breathing consisting of two or more lung breaths in succession. When metabolic rate is low and animals are undisturbed, the periods of apnea between breaths or episodes may be extensive. Apneas of up to 8 h have been recorded in resting toads [Bufo marinus (=Rhinella marina)] resulting in arterial PO2 of <20 mmHg (Coelho and Smatresk 2003). This suggests that arterial hypoxemia does not necessarily provide a strong ventilatory stimulus under resting conditions and that blood gases are only loosely coupled to ventilation. It has been suggested that part of this loose coupling of ventilation to blood gases may be a consequence of the use of ventilation to drive lymph movement in anurans (Hedrick et al. 2007; Hillman et al. 2010).
Acute exposure (minutes) to moderate levels of hypoxia (0.10–0.15 ) in resting anurans causes an immediate increase in ventilation (Kruhøffer et al. 1987; Wang et al. 1994; Branco and Glass 1995; Withers and Hillman 1983). In some studies this was mediated primarily by increases in tidal volume (Gamperl et al. 1999; Gargaglioni and Branco 2000) or buccal amplitude (a proxy for tidal volume, see Wang 1994; Smatresk and Smits 1991). In other studies, it was due to an increase in breathing episodes and lung inflation cycles (Pinder and Burggren 1986; Rocha and Branco 1998; Hou and Huang 1999; Gargaglioni and Branco 2000). Typically, progressive hypoxia produces a decline in buccal oscillations and an overall increase in lung ventilation that returned to normal following the hypoxic exposure (Boutilier and Toews 1977). However, Rana pipiens exposed to complete anoxia show an acute short-term depression leading to cessation of breathing within 30 min (Rose and Drotman 1967).
Lung ventilation is stimulated by hypoxic hypoxia rather than reductions in oxygen hemoglobin carrying capacity induced by anemia (Wang et al. 1994; Andersen et al. 2003) or exposure to carbon monoxide (Branco and Glass 1995) indicating that arterial PO2, and not oxygen content, is the primary stimulus for ventilation. The oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptors that stimulate breathing are located in the carotid labyrinth, the aortic arch and pulmocutaneous artery (West and Van Vliet 1992; Burggren and Pan 2009; Van Vliet and West 1992; Wang et al. 2004; Kusakabe 1991, 1992; Kusakabe et al. 1993). Denervation of the carotid labyrinth alone in Xenopus laevis failed to abolish the HVR (Jones and Chu 1988), suggesting that the other two sites are capable of producing a full response. Neuroepithelial bodies, containing putative oxygen-sensing cells, have also been found in the lungs of amphibians, suggesting that the oxygen composition of respiratory gas may also be monitored (Goniakowska-Witalinska et al. 2009). More recently, it has been suggested that central O2 sensitive chemoreceptors may also be involved in this response (see next section) (Reid 2006; McAneney and Reid 2007).
The nucleus isthmi (NI), a bilateral mesencephalic structure, has been shown to play a role in reducing the acute HVR in the toad Bufo paracnemis. Lesioning the NI in toads had no effect on resting ventilation, but when toads were exposed to hypoxia (5 or 7% O2), both tidal volume and breathing frequency increased significantly more than in sham-operated animals (Gargaglioni and Branco 2000), suggesting that the NI has a descending inhibitory influence on the HVR. The inhibitory influence of the NI appears to involve nitric oxide (NO) as blocking NO synthesis in the NI mimicked the effects of NI lesions (Gargaglioni and Branco 2001).
Responses to prolonged hypoxia in anurans
The role of prolonged or chronic exposure to hypoxia on ventilatory responses has been given very little attention in anurans. Although the acute response to hypoxia in anurans is typically a ventilatory increase, hypoxic exposure of post-metamorphic or adult brainstems in vitro is characterized by a short-term respiratory depression (Winmill et al. 2005; Fournier and Kinkead 2006, 2008; Fournier et al. 2007). In isolated brainstems from post-metamorphic and adult bullfrogs, exposure to severe hypoxia (98% N2/2% CO2) caused a reduction in fictive ventilation that occurred within about 30 min (Winmill et al. 2005). This hypoxic ventilatory decline appears to be mediated, in part, by ATP and/or adenosine since blocking K(ATP) channels and adenosine receptors delayed the onset of hypoxic ventilatory decline by about 60 min (Hedrick and Chen 2009) (Fig. 7a). The hypoxic ventilatory decline of adult brainstems also contains a noradrenergic component that acts via GABA/glycine pathways (Fournier et al. 2007) (Fig. 7b) and may arise from the locus coeruleus (Fournier and Kinkead 2008) indicating that cells within the locus coeruleus may sense O2 as well as CO2, as previously demonstrated (Noronha-de-Souza et al. 2006). These data may indicate that there is an interactive balance between stimulation of ventilation mediated by peripheral chemoreceptors and central respiratory depression due to stimulation of central chemoreceptors (possibly at multiple sites) taking place during prolonged hypoxia (Reid 2006).
In adult cane toads chronic (10 days) exposure to hypoxia (~70 mmHg) did not affect resting breathing frequency, but blunted the HVR, a result opposite of that found in mammals, suggesting that adult amphibians do not undergo ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia (Gamperl et al. 1999; McAneney et al. 2006) (Fig. 5). Blood gases were not measured in this study, however, making it difficult to establish whether similar changes occurred in and as in control animals. However, isolated brainstems from these animals also showed a blunted response to hypoxia as well as to changes in pH/CO2 (McAneney and Reid 2007). The latter was abolished by midbrain transection, again illustrating a descending inhibitory role of higher brain structures on ventilatory activity produced by the medulla (McAneney and Reid 2007). Chronic exposure to hypoxic hypercapnia (10% O2/3.5% CO2), also blunted the ventilatory response to hypoxia in intact animals (Srivaratharajah et al. 2008). In isolated brainstems from these toads, respiratory frequency was augmented due to an increase in the number of breathing episodes/minute (Srivaratharajah et al. 2008). Overall these results indicate that anuran amphibians do not exhibit ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, as seen in some fish and mammals, although it is clear that prolonged hypoxic (and hypercapnic) exposure modifies the ventilatory responses to subsequent exposures to hypoxia, indicating that respiratory plasticity does occur in anurans.
Finally, toads (Bufo bankorensis) collected from populations at higher elevations (ca. 3,000 m) exhibit significantly more ventilatory periods and increased total inspired volume compared with lowland conspecifics when exposed to severe hypoxia (PO2 = 40 mmHg; Hou and Huang 1999) indicating a small degree of increased hypoxic sensitivity may occur over generations.
Developmental changes in the HVR of larval amphibians
Anuran tadpoles are capable of using skin, gills and lungs for gas exchange and previous work with bullfrog tadpoles [Rana catesbeiana (=Lithobates catesbeianus)] indicates that all three sites are utilized to acquire oxygen (Burggren and West 1982). Studies with bullfrog tadpoles have shown that hypoxia produces increases in both gill and lung ventilation (West and Burggren 1982) and the general view is that the relative importance of lung ventilation for oxygen acquisition in normoxia and hypoxia increases with development; however, there are some discrepancies between studies in terms of the acute HVR. For example, Burggren and Doyle (1986) reported that hypoxia increased gill ventilation in tadpoles up to stage XIV (Taylor and Kollros 1946 staging), but had no significant effect on lung ventilation frequency in tadpoles younger than stage XX. In a more recent study, however, animals of all stages increased ‘surfacing events’ in response to hypoxia (Crowder et al. 1998). The data from the latter study indicate that bullfrog tadpoles are facultative air breathers up to stage XXII when the gills regress. They subsequently become obligate air breathers (Crowder et al. 1998). The discrepancies between the two studies may be due to methodological differences: the study by Burggren and Doyle (1986) used animals that were instrumented to record buccal pressures while the animals in the Crowder et al. (1998) study were not instrumented and data were collected by direct observation.
Ventilatory responses to hypoxia by larval bullfrogs are mediated primarily by oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptors located on the first gill arch (Jia and Burggren 1997a, b) as the initial ventilatory response (i.e. <20 s) to hypoxia or central injection of NaCN in larval bullfrogs, is abolished by ablation of the first gill arch (Jia and Burggren 1997a, b) regardless of the age of the animals. The presence of oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptors on the first gill arch in the tadpoles has been confirmed by recording afferent neural activity from the first gill arch in response to hypoxia (Straus et al. 2001).
Exposure of tadpoles (L. catesbeianus) to chronic hypoxia (PO2 = 70–80 mmHg, 4 weeks) produced profound changes in the morphology of the respiratory system including a reduction in the gill/water gas barrier and an increase in lung volume (Burggren and Mwalukoma 1983). Chronic hypoxia in adult bullfrogs did not elicit similar morphological changes in the respiratory system indicating either that significant morphological changes to the respiratory system occur with aquatic hypoxia (tadpoles) rather than aerial hypoxia (adults), or that such changes can only occur early in development. How these morphological changes in response to chronic hypoxia affect the HVR remains unknown.
More recent experiments have focused on the possible role of oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptors within the central nervous system in tadpoles. Hypoxic exposure of the pre-metamorphic bullfrog brainstem in vitro produces a brief stimulation of lung ventilation (Fournier and Kinkead 2008) followed by a hypoxic ventilatory decline that requires approximately 3 h to develop in the pre-metamorphic brainstem (Winmill et al. 2005), but is more rapid in the post-metamorphic brainstem (described above). Maintenance of respiratory-related activity during brainstem hypoxia was due to anaerobic metabolism since the addition of iodoacetic acid to block glycolysis significantly shortened the time respiratory activity could be maintained prior to respiratory depression. The initial increase in lung ventilation in response to hypoxia was mimicked by noradrenaline application (Fournier et al. 2007) and abolished by application of the α1-adrenergic antagonist prazosin (Fournier et al. 2007) or transection of the brainstem at the level of the locus coeruleus, suggesting that structures within the midbrain are responsible for the hypoxic ventilatory decline of the isolated tadpole brainstem (Fournier and Kinkead 2008). Moreover, the initial hypoxic ventilatory decline of the isolated brainstem could be abolished by application of bumetanide, a selective Na+/K+/2C1− co-transporter antagonist, suggesting that intact Na+/K+/Cl− co-transport is necessary for the excitatory component of the central O2 chemoreflex (Fournier and Kinkead 2008).
Recent studies have examined ventilatory plasticity in response to intermittent hypoxia in tadpoles (Simard et al. 2003). In bullfrog tadpoles, intermittent hypoxia (45 mmHg PO2, 12 h/day, 2 weeks) did not modify the acute ventilatory response to hypoxia despite a significant increase in metabolic rate of animals exposed to intermittent hypoxia compared with control animals (Simard et al. 2003). Although intermittent hypoxia did not affect the acute ventilatory response to hypoxia, it did augment the acute ventilatory response to hypercarbia (Simard et al. 2003) indicating that respiratory plasticity does occur in response to intermittent hypoxia in tadpoles.
Reptiles
Reptiles uniformly possess an ectothermic, metabolic strategy, associated with low demands for oxygen at rest and relatively low aerobic scopes (Bennett and Dawson 1976). Extant reptiles, although paraphyletic in origin, are represented by a rather diverse group of animals, including Crocodylia (alligators, crocodiles), Testudines (turtles, tortoises and terrapins) and Lepidosaurians (lizards, snakes and amphisbaenids). This vertebrate group occupies an important phylogenetic position in vertebrate evolution as the stem group from which both the birds and mammals have arisen. Although modern reptiles have evolved independently for over 300 million years, the morphological and functional traits found within these species are the best representations of the ancestral phenotypes that gave rise to the basic functional features found in modern mammals and birds. The picture they present is a complex one as both the structure and function of their cardiovascular and ventilatory systems vary considerably among the different groups (Perry 1983; Hicks 1998).
Reptiles are found in a variety of aquatic and terrestrial habitats, distributed over a wide geographic range, from sea level to high altitude (from sea snakes and marine iguanas to various high altitude skinks lizards and chameleons). However, except for a few high altitude species (Naya et al. 2008), most extant reptiles rarely encounter environmental hypoxia. In spite of this, as with amphibians, most reptiles regularly experience large fluctuations in arterial PO2, resulting from intermittent breathing patterns (brief ventilatory periods, intermixed with variable periods of apnea) exacerbated by a variable pulmonary-systemic (R–L; pulmonary bypass) cardiac shunt.
Ventilatory patterns in reptiles
At rest, all reptiles are aspiration breathers, with expiration and inspiration being active (Wang et al. 1998). However, the precise mechanisms generating air flow into the lungs can be diverse; ranging from utilization of limb movements in testudines, contractions of hypaxial muscles in lizards and snakes, to the hepatic piston mechanism of crocodilians (Gans 1970; Wood and Lenfant 1976; Gans and Clark 1976; Clark et al. 1978; Liem 1985).
The “typical” ventilatory pattern exhibited in reptiles can be described as intermittent, consisting of either single breaths separated by periods of apnea of variable duration or short ventilatory bursts (several breaths) interspersed again, with variable apneic periods (for reviews see Milsom 1988, 1990, 1991). Although earlier studies suggested that aquatic species tended to show longer apnea durations compared to terrestrial species, there are many exceptions and no generalizations probably exist. Given these intermittent ventilatory patterns, numerous studies have demonstrated that whenever minute ventilation increases, either in response to changes in temperature, metabolism, or exposure to hypoxia, the increases result predominantly from a reduction of the non-ventilatory periods (e.g. Glass and Johansen 1976; Glass et al. 1985; Milsom 1988, 1991).
Response to hypoxia in reptiles
As discussed for anurans, the vast majority of studies on ventilatory control and the HVR in reptiles have been confined to relatively brief (minutes to hours) exposures to hypoxia. In general, when exposed to hypoxia reptiles increase breathing frequency by shortening the duration of the non-ventilatory periods (apnea), but increases in tidal volume, particularly at more severe levels of hypoxia, also contribute to the HVR (e.g. Milsom 1991; Wang et al. 1998). There is a large intra-species variability in this regard, however. Because this group is relatively hypoxia tolerant, the reptilian HVR is typically hyperbolic in shape and levels of O2 below 10% are often required to elicit a response. This threshold, however, is markedly temperature sensitive and increased temperature drastically increases sensitivity (e.g. Glass et al. 1983). While the HVR has been characterized in most major groups of reptiles, the studies have typically consisted of a series of progressive exposures to increasingly more severe hypoxia and, in most studies, the data have been averaged over time courses that make it difficult to distinguish whether any of the other short-term (seconds to minutes) time domains that have been described in mammals occur (short-term potentiation and short-term depression). Furthermore, virtually nothing is known about the mechanisms associated with intermittent hypoxia (progressive augmentation, long-term facilitation), or the mechanisms identifiable during or following prolonged hypoxic exposures (hypoxic ventilatory decline, ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, ventilatory deacclimatization from hypoxia and hypoxic desensitization). Given the absence of this information, we can only provide a brief overview of the current state of the field.
Regulation of arterial O2 in reptiles involves peripheral chemoreceptors (e.g. Jones and Milsom 1982; Milsom and Burleson 2007). The central vascular tree in reptiles and its innervation vary tremendously between groups and the O2 chemoreceptors distributed throughout this area have not been studied in much detail in most species. It seems, however, that all groups possess the equivalents of both carotid and aortic bodies (Milsom and Burleson 2007) and there is strong evidence for oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptors on the pulmonary artery throughout the reptiles also (Adams 1958, 1962; Benchetrit et al. 1977; Ishii et al. 1985a; Ishii and Ishii 1986). For example, groups of glomus-like cells are found in the adventitia of the carotid artery in turtles and lizards (Kobayashi 1971; Kusakabe et al. 1988). In turtles similar cells have also been found in the aortic arch and pulmonary artery. These glomus-like cells may contain catecholamines or serotonin (Kobayashi 1971; Ishii et al. 1985b; Chiba and Yamaguchi 1973). In snakes or crocodilians, no structures resembling glomus cells or specific neurotransmitters related to the HVR have been identified. This remains a potential fruitful area of research.
Although the precise cellular basis underlying O2 chemoreception and accompanying transmitter release from glomus cells is far from understood, changes in PO2 are thought to be the specific stimulus. The PO2 within the glomus cells is determined by oxygen delivery (the product of blood flow and blood O2 content) and O2 consumption of the chemoreceptor structure. A chemoreceptor can, therefore, sense blood O2 content if hemoglobin bound O2 participates in O2 delivery to the receptor (Lahiri et al. 1980, 1981). In reptiles and amphibians, the ventilatory responses to hypoxia at different temperatures are well correlated with arterial O2 content (Glass et al. 1983) and this correlation has fostered the hypothesis that the arterial chemoreceptors in these animals are sensitive to arterial O2 content, or alternatively hemoglobin oxygen saturation (reviewed by Boggs 1995). However, in testudines experimental reductions in blood oxygen carrying capacity do not affect the HVR (Wang et al. 1997). One possible explanation that could reconcile these observations would be that O2 sensing involves a heme protein with similar temperature-dependent oxygen-binding characteristics as hemoglobin (Boggs 1995).
Response to hypoxemia in reptiles
Several species, particularly freshwater turtles, have the capacity to alter the magnitude of their R–L shunt. During non-ventilatory periods, the level of R–L shunt can increase to levels that are >90% of the total cardiac output (Hicks and Wang 1998). During such periods, the arterial oxygen content is greatly diminished, with arterial oxygen approaching mixed venous levels. Interestingly, these large R–L shunts are initiated within minutes of apnea and continue throughout the prolonged non-ventilatory period. Thus internally generated hypoxemia does not appear to stimulate ventilation (Wang et al. 1997). It remains a mystery, therefore, as to why exposure to moderate environmental hypoxia elicits a significant increase in minute ventilation with significant reduction in the non-ventilatory periods, whereas the ventilatory control system appears to be insensitive to internally generated hypoxemia (through the development of R–L shunt). Obviously this paradoxical finding results from some complex integration between the cardiovascular and ventilatory control areas of the brain and remains an area that warrants further investigation.
Developmental changes in the HVR of juvenile reptiles
To our knowledge there are no data on developmental changes in the HVR of reptiles.
The effects of temperature in ectotherms
While physiological processes tend to be temperature dependent; studies on mammals and birds overlook the effects of temperatures on the time domains of the HVR because the body temperatures of these animals are maintained constant. It is expected, however, that if body temperatures change, the lengths of the individual time domains would change in an inverse manner due to a changes in activity at the cellular level (altered enzyme activity and metabolic rate). Other than its effect on response rates, temperature may also alter time domains in other ways.
The effects of temperature on the oxygen supply and demand of fish are twofold: first, the oxygen content of water varies inversely with temperature and secondly, oxygen consumption varies proportionally with temperature. Therefore, an increase in temperature causes increases in resting ventilation rates as well as in responses to hypoxia and vice versa. These changes are not totally straightforward, however. Carp (C. carpio) acclimated to 10 and 20°C and exposed to mild to moderate hypoxia show no time-dependent changes in total ventilation volume (Glass et al. 1990) (Fig. 8a), while carp acclimated to the same temperatures but exposed to severe hypoxia do show time-dependent changes (Stecyk and Farrell 2002) (Fig. 8b). These time domains exhibited by carp exposed to severe hypoxia were also inversely related to acclimation temperature.
Ventilatory responses to hypoxia in amphibians and reptiles are also highly temperature dependent. Invariably, the hypoxic threshold for elevated ventilation increases as body temperature rises (Jackson 1971, 1973; Glass et al. 1983; Kruhøffer et al. 1987; Dupre et al. 1989; Rocha and Branco 1998; Gamperl et al. 1999; Bicego-Nahas et al. 2001) (Fig. 9). Over a broad range of body temperatures the hypoxic ventilatory threshold seems to correlate well with arterial O2 content or HbO2 saturation in a number of species. This observation has lead to the speculation that the ventilatory response to hypoxia is determined by arterial O2 content or HbO2 saturation [possibly acting via an O2 sensing heme protein with similar temperature-dependent oxygen-binding characteristics as hemoglobin (Boggs 1995)]. The reduction in HVR with declining body temperatures has been documented in numerous ectothermic vertebrates (frogs, toads, lizards and turtles) as well as heterothermic mammals and birds (Heistand et al. 1950; Shelton et al. 1986; McArthur and Milsom 1991; Boggs 1995).
Consequences of the hypoxic metabolic response in ectotherms
Ectotherms in general are more prone to suppress metabolism in hypoxia than mammals and use this strategy along with changes in ventilation in order to match oxygen supply to oxygen demand. The net result should be higher levels of tissue and/or venous PO2 for any given level of arterial PO2. Whenever possible, reductions in overall metabolic demands during periods of moderate to severe hypoxia result in part from behavioral reductions in preferred body temperature, decreasing aerobic demands of the tissues via the “Q 10 effect”. In addition, at a constant body temperature, animals can actively down-regulate ATP demands. Together, the reduction in aerobic demand lessens the potentially detrimental effects of hypoxia on overall oxygen transport.
Hypoxic-induced behavioral reduction of preferred body temperature was initially described in the plains minnow, Hybognathus placitus (Bryan et al. 1984) and independently discovered in squamate reptiles (Hicks and Wood 1985). In the latter study, four phylogenetically diverse species of lizards each exhibited significant reductions in preferred body temperature following exposure to environmental hypoxia (inspired O2 <85 mmHg). This hypoxia-induced reduction in body temperature has subsequently been measured in many different species of ectothermic animals (Branco et al. 1993, 2000; Bicego-Nahas et al. 2001; Wood 1991).
The hypoxic-induced behavioral reductions in body temperature are due to changes in thermal set point(s) (Cabanac 1975) and are most likely a regulated response to reduced oxygen delivery (Wood 1991; Steiner and Branco 2002). This response, which is opposite to fever, has been termed anapyrexia by some (Cabanac and Massonnet 1980; Steiner and Branco 2002) and as the “hypoxic metabolic response” by others (Barros et al. 2001; Powell and Fu 2008). The latter seems more appropriate since, to add to the complexity of the situation, the HMR has now also been shown to incorporate time-dependent processes (Bishop et al. 2000; Seifert and Mortola 2002) and to parallel the HVR in many ways. The precise mechanism(s) responsible for this response remains poorly understood. Steiner and Branco (2002) have suggested that several putative mediators such as arginine vasopressin (AVP), lactate, adenosine, histamine, endogenous opioids, NO, CO, and the cyclic nucleotides cAMP and cGMP acting in the central nervous system are involved in the response. Regardless of mechanism, the lowering of thermal set-points and the corresponding reduction of metabolic demands is a phylogenetically universal response to limited oxygen supply.
Hypoxia-induced active down-regulation of ATP demands at constant body temperature has also been described in several ectothermic species (Jackson 1968; West and Boutilier 1998; Buck and Pamenter 2006). Most studies on metabolic down-regulation in reptiles have focused on aquatic species, particularly freshwater turtles, and the mechanisms that enable these animals to survive extended periods of anoxia. When exposed to acute anoxia, freshwater turtles reduce heat production by as much as 85% within hours (Jackson and Schmidt-Nielsen 1966; Jackson 1968). Hicks and Wang (1999) also investigated the effects of progressive hypoxia on oxygen consumption in the turtle, Trachemys scripta at 25°C. In this study, the animals were anaesthetized and artificially ventilated for precise control of inspired gases and measurement of arterial and venous blood gases, pH, and cardiac output. Reductions in inspired O2, and the subsequent fall in arterial and venous PO2 and O2 content resulted in a significant reduction in oxygen consumption (73% of the normoxic value). In all animals, the reduction in oxygen consumption at the lowest inspired O2 was rapidly reversed upon return to normoxia. The underlying mechanism(s) remains unknown although indirect evidence suggests that it is not due to O2 limitation since metabolic rate could still be increased with 2,4-dinitrophenol injections. The HMR is likely due, in part, to suppression of ATP-consuming activities, for example downregulation of Na+ pump activity, and various synthetic pathways (Buck and Hochachka 1993; Hochachka and Lutz 2001).
The net result is that in all ectotherms there is a reported tendency for ventilation to fall as arterial O2 tensions fall below the P crit for a species (the critical PO2 at which a species switches from being an oxyregulator to an oxyconformer; i.e. the threshold PO2 at which metabolic suppression first occurs) (see Perry et al. 2009 for review). Presumably as long as time-dependent changes in the HVR are only considered at O2 tensions above the P crit of a species, this should not be an issue. At O2 tensions below the P crit of a species, however, things become quite complex.
Consequences of circadian and circannual cycles in ectotherms
Time of the day has been shown to affect the ventilatory response to hypoxia, in mammals (Stephenson et al. 2000; Jarsky and Stephenson 2000; Mortola and Seifert 2002; Mortola 2004), birds (Woodin and Stephenson 1998), and reptiles (Reyes and Milsom 2009) (Fig. 10). It is unclear what the mechanisms underlying day-night changes in ventilatory responses are, although interesting species specific differences are apparent. Circadian changes in respiratory sensitivity are independent of circadian changes in metabolism, activity or temperature (Reyes and Milsom 2009) and may be due to changes in the sensitivity of the peripheral arterial chemoreceptors per se. However, there may also be changes in the levels of baseline blood gases due to daily changes in the magnitude of the cardiac shunt and, to add to the complexity, similar changes in baseline blood gas tensions initiated from different baseline blood gas levels may give rise to different responses due to the non-linearity of the HVR (the same change in blood gases may not amount to the same change in stimulus when starting from different baselines).
Amphibians and reptiles also show seasonal differences in their ventilatory response to hypoxia, independent of changes in temperature. The effects of seasonal acclimatization on the HVR have been examined for the toad B. paracnemis (Bicego-Nahas et al. 2001) and the bullfrog L. catesbeianus (Rocha and Branco 1998). Summer-acclimatized toads exhibited a significant increase in ventilation in response to hypoxia at 25°C compared with winter animals (Bicego-Nahas et al. 2001). Contrary to this, bullfrogs acclimatized to winter conditions had a lower hypoxic threshold and exhibited a significant increase in breathing frequency compared with summer-acclimatized animals when both were exposed to 10% O2 at 25°C (Rocha and Branco 1998). Because winter bullfrogs had a higher resting and lower resting ventilation, the results may suggest an interactive effect of CO2 in the HVR that accounts for the different responses between the two groups of animals (Mayhew 1965; Bennett and Dawson 1976; Gregory 1982; Ultsch 1989; Zari 1999; Bicego-Nahas et al. 2001). In turtles, on the other hand, it would appear that winter reductions in both the temperature corrected resting ventilation and in the ventilatory response to hypoxia take place as a result of a carefully coordinated fall in metabolism (Reyes and Milsom 2009) (Fig. 10).
These circadian and circannual effects add yet another level of complexity to interpretation of changes in the HVR and the HMR during prolonged exposures to hypoxia. To what extent changes seen during prolonged hypoxic exposures (hypoxic ventilatory decline, ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, ventilatory deacclimatization from hypoxia and hypoxic desensitization) reflect circadian or circannual changes and to what extent they are independent of them remains unknown. This raises the further question of whether or not circadian and circannual rhythms in O2 sensitivity show time-dependent changes during chronic hypoxic exposures reflecting metaplasticity in the system.
Summary
The HVR is an ancestral trait. Oxygen is much less soluble in water than in air and hypoxia is far more common in aquatic environments. As a result, aquatic organisms must ventilate far more to obtain the same oxygen (their air convection requirement is an order of magnitude larger) and in the process rapidly excrete CO2. Thus while the primary drive to breathe for aquatic organisms is the need to obtain oxygen, for terrestrial organisms it becomes the need to eliminate CO2. Thus, in the phylogenetic progression from fish to terrestrial animals we see a reduction from O2 sensing at multiple internal and external sites throughout the gills and their associated blood vessels to one internal site only in birds and mammals (the carotid bodies) and an overall reduction in hypoxia tolerance. Given this trend it is surprising how little we know of the time domains of the HVRs in ectothermic vertebrates. In this review we have attempted to provide an overview of the existing literature on the topic within the framework of the hierarchical levels of the O2 transport cascade and the levels of the ventilatory control circuit at which they occur.
It becomes apparent that to define time domains for ectotherms in an environmentally relevant fashion requires modification to the terms as they have been rigorously defined for mammals. For mammals, these terms all refer to changes in the HVR due to hypoxia per se (i.e. not to concomitant changes in drive from other sources) (Powell et al. 1998). In studies of animals under more natural conditions, however, subsequent changes in respiratory drive accompany the HVR and these include not only the decreases in CO2 occurring as a result of the hypoxia induced increases in ventilation (the more natural condition), but also the decreases in metabolic rate that occur with hypoxia in many species. We propose that to accommodate more typical experiments in ectotherms we expand the terms to incorporate changes in both the primary and secondary processes that effect ventilation. One must keep in mind, however, that it is the mechanisms behind the time-dependent changes in ventilation rather than the time courses per se that must be carefully considered in order to draw parallels to the time domains observed in mammals and to reflect on evolutionary trends in the HVR.
Virtually all ectotherms have an immediate acute response to hypoxia of some sort. This is the response occurring in the first few breaths following changes in O2 levels at the peripheral chemoreceptors. The challenge for quantifying this response in ectotherms is determining when the signal at the peripheral chemoreceptors has stabilized. In aquatic organisms, it is difficult to produce an immediate acute change in O2 levels and for terrestrial ectotherms that breathe episodically, between the long apneas and the time it takes to turn over and stabilize gases in large saccular lungs, it can also take a prolonged period for arterial gas levels to stabilize. All of these factors must be taken into account in determining when the acute response is over and effects of the other short time domains begin.
Short-term depression and potentiation, as defined in mammals, are responses occurring in seconds to minutes, involving mechanisms not dependent on changes in levels of gene expression or protein synthesis (Powell et al. 1998). Short-term potentiation appears to be present in ectotherms (in fish at least) (Table 1). It may occur to either breathing frequency or tidal volume. At present it is not clear, however, whether the secondary increases in breathing that occur over these time periods are due to direct effects of hypoxia per se or the secondary changes in CO2/pH, metabolism or intra-cardiac shunt. There have been few reports of anything similar to short-term depression to date although it has been documented in post-metamorphic and adult anuran brainstems in vitro (Winmill et al. 2005; Fournier and Kinkead 2006, 2008; Fournier et al. 2007).
Table 1.
Group | Time domain | Variable | Direction | Time course | Species | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fish | STP | V amp/V f | Increase | 5–15 min | Amia calva | McKenzie et al. (1991) |
HVD | V amp | Decrease | 1–6 h | Colossoma macropomum |
Rantin and Kalinin (1996) Florindo et al. (2006) |
|
HVD | V f | Decrease | 1–12 h | Cyprinius carpio | Stecyk and Farrell (2002) | |
VAH | V amp | Increase | 7–21 days |
Platichthys flesus Ictalurus punctatus |
Kerstens et al. (1979) Burleson et al. (2002) |
|
Amphibians | STD | Fictive | Decrease | 30 min | Rana catesbeiana |
Winmill et al. (2005) Fournier et al. (2007) |
HVD | V amp/V f | Decrease | 30–180 min |
Bufo paracnemis Rana catesbeiana Lithobates catesbeianus |
Gargaglioni and Branco (2000) Winmill et al. (2005) Fournier et al. (2007) |
|
VAH | V f | Decrease | 7–10 days | Bufo marinus |
Gamperl et al. (1999) McAneney et al. (2006) Srivaratharajah et al. (2008) |
STP short-term potentiation, STD short-term depression, HVD hypoxic ventilatory decline, VAH ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, fictive fictive ventilation
Repeated responses to intermittent hypoxia have not been described in any ectotherms and so it is not known whether progressive augmentation or long-term facilitation occur in this group. Given the widespread occurrence of intermittent hypoxia in some aquatic environments, this warrants further investigation.
Longer term responses to prolonged hypoxic exposure (hypoxic ventilatory decline, ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, ventilatory deacclimatization from hypoxia and hypoxic desensitization) (Fig. 1) may involve mechanisms ranging from neurophysiological or neurochemical changes in the ventilatory control pathways (Powell et al. 1998), to subsequent changes in other aspects of respiratory drive, as well as changes occurring at other levels of the O2 transport cascade [e.g. the oxygen carrying capacity of red blood cells, modulation of cardiac function (particularly cardiac shunt and vascular tone)]. There is good evidence of hypoxic ventilatory decline occurring in some (but not all) ectotherms (Table 1) although, again, the time course of these events is slower than those seen in carefully controlled studies in mammals. Ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia also appears to be present in some fish and amphibians although the direction of the changes seen in each group is opposite raising questions about the mechanisms involved (and the need for yet another term) (Table 1).
If we are to distinguish between the genetic, developmental and environmental influences underlying the various ventilatory responses to hypoxia, then it will be critical to design future experiments with the shortcomings of the existing literature in mind. Careful attention must be given to the rate of onset of hypoxia, the length and intensity of the hypoxic exposure, the components of the HVR being examined (e.g. respiratory volume vs. breathing frequency) and the time course over which data are averaged. For ectothermic vertebrates, it is especially critical to pay attention to the effects of temperature since onset time and duration of different time domains of the HVR may vary with Q 10. It is important to measure changes in metabolic rate since hypoxic metabolic suppression is so common in ectotherms. Finally, for those species capable of intra-cardiac shunting, it must be remembered that this may be as important a strategy for dealing with hypoxia as the HVR itself and that changes in shunting will lead to changes in the need for a ventilatory response. The study of time domains of the HVR and HMR in ectotherms are other areas ripe for future research.
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to our funding agencies, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Danish Research Council, the National institute Institutes of Health (MSH: NIH SO6 GM48135) and the National Science Foundation (JWH: NSF IOS-0922756 and MSH: NSF IOS-0843082) for their continuing support.
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Contributor Information
Cosima Porteus, Phone: +1-604-8225799, FAX: +1-604-8222416, Email: ciuhandu@zoology.ubc.ca.
Michael S. Hedrick, Phone: +1-510-8853471, FAX: +1-510-8854747, Email: michael.hedrick@csueastbay.edu
James W. Hicks, Phone: +1-949-8246386, FAX: 1-949-8242181, Email: jhicks@uci.edu
Tobias Wang, Phone: +11-45-89422601, FAX: +11-45-86194186, Email: tobias.wang@biology.au.dk.
William K. Milsom, Phone: +1-604-8222310, FAX: +1-604-8222416, Email: milsom@zoology.ubc.ca
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