Mitochondrial phenotypic flexibility enhances energy savings during winter fast in king penguin chicks

Author:

Monternier Pierre-Axel1,Marmillot Vincent1,Rouanet Jean-Louis1,Roussel Damien2

Affiliation:

1. CNRS; Université de Lyon, France;

2. CNRS; Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France

Abstract

Abstract Energy conservation is a key priority for organisms living in environments with seasonal shortages in resource supplies or spontaneously fasting during their annual cycle. The aim of the study was to determine whether the high fasting endurance of winter-acclimatized king penguin chicks (Aptenodytes patagonicus) would be associated with an adjustment of mitochondrial bioenergetics in pectoralis muscle, the largest skeletal muscle in penguins. The rates of mitochondrial oxygen consumption and ATP synthesis and mitochondrial efficiency (ATP/O ratio) were measured in winter-acclimatized chicks. We used pyruvate/malate and palmitoyl-L-carnitine/malate as respiratory substrates and results from naturally fasted chicks were compared to experimentally re-fed chicks. Bioenergetics analysis of pectoralis muscle revealed that mitochondria are on average 15% more energy efficient in naturally fasted than in experimentally fed chicks, indicating that fasted birds would consume fewer nutrients to sustain their energy demanding processes. We also found that moderate reductions in temperature from 38°C to 30°C further increase by 23% the energy coupling efficiency at the level of mitochondria, suggesting that king penguin chicks realize additional energy savings while becoming hypothermic during winter. It has been calculated that this adjustment of mitochondrial efficiency in skeletal muscle may contribute to nearly 25% of fasting-induced reduction in mass-specific metabolic rate measured in vivo. The present study shows that the regulation of mitochondrial efficiency triggers the development of an economical management of resources, which would maximize the conservation of endogenous fuel store by decreasing the cost of living in fasted winter-acclimatized king penguin chicks.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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