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Adaptation Mechanism Of The Adult Zebrafish Respiratory Organ To Endurance Training

View ORCID ProfileMatthias Messerli, View ORCID ProfileDea Aaldijk, View ORCID ProfileDavid Haberthür, Helena Röss, Carolina Garcia, Marcos Sande, Oleksiy Khoma, Fluri A.M. Wieland, Sarya Fark, View ORCID ProfileValentin Djonov
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/744300
Matthias Messerli
1University of Bern
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Dea Aaldijk
1University of Bern
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David Haberthür
1University of Bern
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Helena Röss
1University of Bern
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Carolina Garcia
1University of Bern
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Marcos Sande
1University of Bern
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Oleksiy Khoma
1University of Bern
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Fluri A.M. Wieland
1University of Bern
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Sarya Fark
1University of Bern
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Valentin Djonov
1University of Bern
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  • For correspondence: djonov@ana.unibe.ch
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Abstract

In order to study the adaptation scope of the fish respiratory organ and the O2 metabolism due to endurance training, we subjected adult zebrafish (Danio rerio) to endurance exercise for 5 weeks. After the training period, the swimmer group showed a significant increase in swimming performance, body weight and length. In scanning electron microscopy of the gills, the average length of centrally located primary filaments appeared significantly longer in the swimmer than in the non-trained control group (+6.1%, 1639 μm vs. 1545 μm, p=0.00043) and the average number of secondary filaments increased significantly (+7.7%, 49.27 vs. 45.73, p=9e-09). Micro-computed tomography indicated a significant increase in the gill volume (p=0.048) by 11.8% from 0.490 mm3 to 0.549 mm3. The space-filling complexity dropped significantly (p=0.0088) by 8.2% from 38.8% to 35.9%., i.e. making the gills of the swimmers less compact. Respirometry after 5 weeks showed a significantly higher oxygen consumption (+30.4%, p=0.0081) of trained fish during exercise compared to controls. Scanning electron microscopy revealed different stages of new secondary filament budding, which happened at the tip of the primary lamellae. Using BrdU we could confirm that the growth of the secondary filaments took place mainly in the distal half and the tip and for primary filaments mainly at the tip. We conclude that the zebrafish respiratory organ - unlike the mammalian lung - has a high plasticity, and after endurance training increases its volume and changes its structure in order to facilitate O2 uptake.

Summary statement Adult zebrafish show an increase of their gill volume after endurance training, likely to adjust for the in-creased oxygen demand measured with respirometry during swimming. Both first authors contributed equally to this work.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.
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Posted August 22, 2019.
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Adaptation Mechanism Of The Adult Zebrafish Respiratory Organ To Endurance Training
Matthias Messerli, Dea Aaldijk, David Haberthür, Helena Röss, Carolina Garcia, Marcos Sande, Oleksiy Khoma, Fluri A.M. Wieland, Sarya Fark, Valentin Djonov
bioRxiv 744300; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/744300
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Adaptation Mechanism Of The Adult Zebrafish Respiratory Organ To Endurance Training
Matthias Messerli, Dea Aaldijk, David Haberthür, Helena Röss, Carolina Garcia, Marcos Sande, Oleksiy Khoma, Fluri A.M. Wieland, Sarya Fark, Valentin Djonov
bioRxiv 744300; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/744300

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