Structure, function and molecular adaptations of haemoglobins of the polar cartilaginous fish Bathyraja eatonii and Raja hyperborea

Author:

Verde Cinzia1,De Rosa M. Cristina2,Giordano Daniela1,Mosca Donato2,De Pascale Donatella1,Raiola Luca1,Cocca Ennio1,Carratore Vitale1,Giardina Bruno2,Di Prisco Guido1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Protein Biochemistry, C.N.R., Via Marconi 12, I-80125 Naples, Italy

2. Institute of Biochemistry and Clinical Biochemistry and C.N.R. Institute of Chemistry of Molecular Recognition, Catholic University, I-00168 Rome, Italy

Abstract

Cartilaginous fish are very ancient organisms. In the Antarctic sea, the modern chondrichthyan genera are poorly represented, with only three species of sharks and eight species of skates; the paucity of chondrichthyans is probably an ecological consequence of unusual trophic or habitat conditions in the Southern Ocean. In the Arctic, there are 26 species belonging to the class Chondrichthyes. Fish in the two polar regions have been subjected to different regional histories that have influenced the development of diversity: Antarctic marine organisms are highly stenothermal, in response to stable water temperatures, whereas the Arctic communities are exposed to seasonal temperature variations. The structure and function of the oxygen-transport haem protein from the Antarctic skate Bathyraja eatonii and from the Arctic skate Raja hyperborea (both of the subclass Elasmobranchii, order Rajiformes, family Rajidae) is reported in the present paper. These species have a single major haemoglobin (Hb 1; over 80% of the total). The Bohr-proton and the organophosphate-binding sites are absent. Thus the haemoglobins of northern and southern polar skates appear functionally similar, whereas differences were observed with several temperate elasmobranchs. Such evidence suggests that, in temperate and polar habitats, physiological adaptations have evolved along distinct pathways, whereas, in this case, the effect of the differences characterizing the two polar environments is negligible.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

Reference45 articles.

1. Functional adaptations of oxygen-transport proteins;Terwilliger;J. Exp. Biol.,1998

2. Haemoglobin: Structure, Function, Evolution, and Pathology;Dickerson,1983

3. Fishes of the Southern Ocean;Gon,1990

4. Antarctic Fish Biology: Evolution in A Unique Environment;Eastman,1993

5. Molecular adaptation of Antarctic fish haemoglobins;di Prisco,1998

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