Boyang Ding, Yuliang Zhao, Yanfeng Sun, Qian Zhang, Mo Li, Ghulam Nabi, Yuefeng Wu, Chuan Jiang, Dongming Li. 2021: Coping with extremes: lowered myocardial phosphofructokinase activities and glucose content but increased fatty acids content in highland Eurasian Tree Sparrows. Avian Research, 12(1): 44. DOI: 10.1186/s40657-021-00279-0
Citation: Boyang Ding, Yuliang Zhao, Yanfeng Sun, Qian Zhang, Mo Li, Ghulam Nabi, Yuefeng Wu, Chuan Jiang, Dongming Li. 2021: Coping with extremes: lowered myocardial phosphofructokinase activities and glucose content but increased fatty acids content in highland Eurasian Tree Sparrows. Avian Research, 12(1): 44. DOI: 10.1186/s40657-021-00279-0

Coping with extremes: lowered myocardial phosphofructokinase activities and glucose content but increased fatty acids content in highland Eurasian Tree Sparrows

Funds: 

the National Natural Science Foundation of China 31971413

NSFC 31770445

the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research Program 2019QZKK0501

the Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province C2020205038

the Foundation of Hebei Normal University L2019B26

the Post-doctoral Research Programm 

More Information
  • Background 

    Efficient and selective utilization of metabolic substrates is one of the key strategies in high-altitude animals to cope with hypoxia and hypothermia. Previous findings have shown that the energy substrate utilization of highland animals varies with evolutionary history and phylogeny. The heart is a proxy for the cardiopulmonary system, and the metabolic substrate utilization in the myocardium is also under the strong selective pressure of chronically hypoxic and hypothermic environments. However, little information is available on the physiological adjustments in relation to metabolic substrate utilization in the myocardium for coping with high-altitude environments.

    Methods 

    We compared the metabolic enzyme activities, including hexokinase (HK), phosphofructokinase (PFK), pyruvate kinase (PK), citrate synthase (CS), carnitine palmitoyl transferase 1 (CPT-1), lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), and creatine kinase (CK), and metabolic substrate contents including glucose (Glu), triglyceride (TG), and free fatty acid (FFA) in the myocardium of a typical human commensal species, Eurasian Tree Sparrows (Passer montanus) between the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (the QTP, 3230 m) and low altitude population (Shijiazhuang, 80 m), and between sexes.

    Results 

    Among the seven metabolic enzymes and three substrates investigated, we identified no significant differences in PK, CPT-1, HK, CS, LDH, and CK activities and TG content of the myocardium between high and low altitude populations. However, the QTP sparrows had significantly lower Glu content and PFK activities but higher FFA content relative to their lowland counterparts. In addition, male sparrows had higher myocardial HK and CS activities relative to females, independent of altitude.

    Conclusions 

    Our results showed that the QTP sparrows elevated fatty acid utilization rather than glucose preference in the myocardium relative to lowland counterpart, which contributes to uncovering both the physiological adjustments for adapting to the extreme conditions of the QTP, intraspecifically.

  • Ratites, a clade of birds lacking the ability to fly, most likely originated in Gondwana (Patnaik et al., 2009). Large ratite eggs are frequently found preserved and recorded in Tertiary and Quaternary sediments. Ratite skeletons, however, are rarely preserved, so that fossil eggshells constitute a richer and more widely used source of information on ratite evolution. The distribution of extant ratites is essentially restricted to the Southern Hemisphere (Cooper et al., 2009), but several fossils have been reported from the Northern Hemisphere (Mayr, 2009). Fossils have been found in Eurasia (Lowe, 1933; Burchak-Abramovich, 1962; Sauer and Rothe, 1972; Hou et al., 2005; Bibi et al., 2006; Wang, 2008; Patnaik et al., 2009), northern Africa (Sauer, 1972; Mikhailov, 1997) and even in North America (Houde and Olson, 1981). The biogeographic history of ratites through geological time remains an active and contentious area of research.

    The first description of a fossil ratite from Asia was based on some bones collected in the Siwaliks, India (Davies, 1880); this material was subsequently named Struthio asiaticus by Milne-Edwards (Burchak-Abramovich, 1962). In 1874, Brandt (1874) described a ratite eggshell fossil from the Ukraine; since then, a great many reports concerning Eurasian fossil ratites have been published (Burchak-Abramovich, 1962; Sauer, 1972; Mikhailov, 1988; Mikhailov and Kurochkin, 1988). In China, ratite research has a long history. Lowe reported Struthio anderssoni, S. mongolicus and S. wimani from Plio-Pleistocene sediments in China (Lowe, 1931), Yang described some additional specimens from Shanxi and Hebei provinces and the Zhoukoudian locality near Beijing, and discussed their biostratigraphic significance (Yang, 1933, 1937, 1947, 1952; Yang and Sun, 1960). Zhao and his colleagues discussed the microstructure and amino acid composition of ratite eggshell fossils from the Zhoukoudian locality (Zhao et al., 1981). Hou reported two pelvic skeletons from the Miocene sediments of Hezheng (Hou et al., 2005) and more recently, fossil eggshells from the same site have been described by Wang(2007, 2008).

    During the past two decades, several ratite eggshell fossils have been collected and reported from other continents, particularly from Africa (Pickford and Dauphin, 1993; Pickford et al., 1995; Dauphin et al., 1996; Harrison and Msuya, 2005). They have been used to analyze ratite evolutionary relationships, discuss changes in their geographic distribution and establish biostratigraphic divisions. These recent studies indicate that the fossil eggshell record is potentially far more informative than previously suspected.

    Recently, a special field project carried out by the IVPP (Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chineae Academy of Sciences) in Inner Mongolia, China focused on the study of Miocene mammals. This expedition acquired a large collection of fossil micromammals in addition to some other specimens, including ratite eggshells. We briefly describe some new fossil eggshell material from the Gashunyinadege and Baogedawula localities in Inner Mongolia. These specimens provide important new data on the distribution of fossil ratites in China.

    Ten eggshell fragments were recovered from two localities, six from Gashunyinadege and four from Baogedawula (Fig. 1). Gashunyinadege is about 40 km south of Sonid Zuoqi (Sunitezuoqi), Inner Mongolia (43°33′39.2″N, 113°32′51.9″E) and has been studied in detail by various paleontologists after being initially reported by Meng and others (Meng et al., 1996; Qiu and Wang, 1999; Qiu et al., 2006; Wang et al., 2009). The Gashunyinadege fauna was initially assigned a Late Oligocene-Early Miocene age (Meng et al., 1996), but was later reassessed as an Early Miocene deposit (about 17.5 Ma) on the basis of micromammals (Qiu et al., 2006). Baogedawula, however, is some 3 km northeast of Baogeawula Sumu, Abaga Qi (44°08′33.8″N, 114°35′41.6″E), Inner Mongolia (Qiu et al., 2006; Wang et al., 2009). The deposits consist of grayish and yellow sandy mudstones and sandstones dating to 7.11 ± 0.48 Ma. For more information about these two localities, see Qiu et al. (2006).

    Figure  1.  Geographic locations of fossil localities in Inner Mongolia, China

    Ratite eggshells can be identified using both macroscopic and microscopic approaches (She, 1995). The macroscopic approach is to observe or measure characters including pore complex structure, pore density and shell thickness using a low power hand lens and a set of calipers (Pickford et al., 1995). The microscopic approach is to polish the eggshells and then section them for scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and optical microscopy in order to observe their internal layering, crystal arrangement and other detailed features. The present study utilizes both approaches to analyze the new Inner Mongolian eggshell fragments and try to arrive at a comprehensive description.

    The thickness of each eggshell fragment was measured using calipers; subsequently, we selected three well-preserved eggshell fragments from each fossil site and used them to prepare microscopic samples. SEM samples were used for observing the radial section of each selected fragment as well as its inner and outer surfaces. Each sample was first polished with sandpaper, then etched with 1% hydrochloric acid (5 s for the inner surface, 18 s for the outer surface and 45 s for the radial section), which was then washed off and coated with gold in a vacuum environment (Becking, 1975; Pooley, 1979; Mikhailov, 1987; She, 1995; Mikhailov, 1997). Finally, scanning electron microscopy (JSM model No. 6100) was used to examine each prepared sample and make measurements of pore diameters. We also made thin sections in order to observe each sample using optical microscopy.

    The eggshell samples collected from Gashunyinadege are smooth, with sting-point pores distributed on their outer surfaces, producing no depressions or pore complexes. The pores can be seen with the naked eye (Fig. 2, left). Through a low power hand lens, most pores can be seen to occur in pairs and to range in diameter from 0.1–0.2 mm; however, some of the pores are isolated. These features are consistent with the normal characteristics of sting pores (Sauer, 1972). As to the pore density, more than 70 pores per cm2 can be seen with the naked eye, compared to 130 pores per cm2 under SEM examination. Their entire thickness averages around 2.12 mm (from 1.7 to 2.2 mm; n = 6 measured in 36 places). SEM examination (Fig. 3) shows that most of the pores are elliptical or in sting shape (Fig. 3b, c). In a cross-sectional view (Fig. 3a), the surface crystal layer is very thin, the outer portion of the column layer is slightly thicker than in Orientornis linxiaensis (Fig. 3e) and the ratio of the thickness of the cone layer to that of the entire column layer is about 1:2.4. The cunei run from the cone layer to the inner column layer. The pore canals are non-branching and straight (Fig. 3e).

    Figure  2.  Eggshell fragments from Inner Mongolia, China; note the pore pattern and size of each fragment. Left, eggshell fossils from the Gashunyinadege locality; Right, eggshell fossils from the Baogedawula locality.
    Figure  3.  Micrographs of the eggshells from Gashunyinadege. (ad) Scanning electron micrographs. (a) Radial section of the eggshell; (b) Outer surface of the eggshell, note the pore shape under the SEM; (c) Pore pattern shown on (b) is magnified; (d) Inner surface of the eggshell; (e) Radial section of the eggshells under the optical microscopy, note the pore canal shape.

    Samples from Baogedawula are similar in their pore pattern to those from Gashunyinadege. It is clear that small pore openings are irregularly distributed on the smooth outer surface, producing no depressions or pore complexes (Fig. 2, right). They show a relatively low pore density, about 8–15 pores per cm2 can be seen with the naked eye, but under the SEM, more tiny pores appear in the field (Fig. 4a) and the density rises to about 50 pores per cm2. From the SEM results (Fig. 4), the pore diameter ranges from 0.05–0.2 mm and the pores are round or elliptical and uniformly distributed on the outer surface. The pore distribution seems to display some regularity, in that the elliptical pores are always in pairs and the round ones are single. Details of the inner surface, however, cannot be observed clearly because they are obscured by sediment (Fig. 4b). As the cross-sectional view shows, the samples range in thickness from 1.7 to 2.1 mm, with a mean of 2.02 mm (n = 4 measured in 23 places); the pore canals are single and straight (Fig. 4c), with rough inner surfaces (Fig. 4d); the columnar layer is compact (Fig. 4e); the ratio of the thickness of the cone layer to that of the columnar layer is about 1:1.4. The cone layer is thinner, representing about one third of the entire shell thickness, the cones are slender and compact (Fig. 4f).

    Figure  4.  Micrographs of the eggshells from Baogeawula. (ae) Scanning electron micrographs. (a) Outer surface of the eggshell; (b) Inner surface of the eggshell; (c) Radial section of the eggshell; (d) Radial section of the eggshell, note the characteristics of the pore canals; (e) Upper portion of the radial section, note the crystal arrangement; (f) Radial section of the eggshell under optical microscopy.

    Obviously, the eggshells from Gashunyinadege and Baogedawula share a smooth outer surface; although the Baogedawula samples show considerable wear (Fig. 4a) and are close in thickness to those from Gashunyinadege. However, there are also some significant differences between the eggshell fragments from Gashunyinadege and those from Baogedawula. Pore density in the Gashunyinadege samples is more than 70 per cm2, slightly higher than in the Baogedawula samples. In cross-sectional view, the cone density of the Gashunyinadege samples is somewhat higher than in the Baogedawula samples; furthermore, the column layer is much thicker in the former than in the latter and the Gashunyinadege samples also differ from the Baogedawula samples in having a relatively thicker outer column layer.

    According to this description, these new eggshell fragments differ from Aepyornis eggshells in having a generally lower thickness and lacking pore grooves (Bibi et al., 2006), differ from Diamantornis eggshells in having a lower thickness and in lacking pore complexes (Pickford and Dauphin, 1993). Compared with Struthio camelus, the pore density of these Inner Mongolian eggshell fossils is higher; they also differ from S. camelus in lacking pore complexes. Their thickness is slightly less than in Struthio chrosonensis, S. kakesiensis, S. karingarabensis (Harrison and Msuya, 2005) and even in Orientornis linxiaensis (Wang, 2007). Also, pores of Struthio daberasensis clump together and produce "a reticulation of minuscule flat islands" (Sauer, 1972) while the pores of the new specimens are paired or single. The new specimens also differ from S. anderssoni in lacking pore pits. Sauer (1972) generalized the characters of the struthionid pore pattern, emphasizing that most of the clustered pores and grooves are located in pits and that there is no pore alignment in parallel with the axes of the egg; besides, the pore canals seen in struthionid eggshell are divergent. However, the new Inner Mongolian specimens lack these critical characters, implying that they do not represent typical struthionid eggshell. Previously, almost all ostrich eggshell fossils in China were described as S. anderssoni (Lowe, 1931), but recent studies suggest that additional types of eggshell fossils exist in China. The new specimens represent one such type, but we consider the material too fragmentary to justify the formal erection of a new taxon.

    Both similarities and differences between these Inner Mongolian fossils and Orientornis linxiaensis are obvious. The eggshell fossils from these two independent localities share characters including a smooth outer surface and similar pore shape. The pores of the new specimens are larger and more densely distributed than in O. linxiaensis. Furthermore, the column layer is proportionally thinner in the new material than in O. linxiaensis.

    Ratite eggshells are generally classified as either struthionid-type or aepyornithid-type (Patnaik et al., 2009). Sauer (1972) first described ratite eggshells with smooth outer surfaces and a sting-point pore pattern. According to his description, the pore pattern is the key distinguishing character of this type of eggshell. Pores on these eggshells are always linearly aligned long, and form short grooves with a dagger point, tiny circular to ovoid needle point pore shapes. Because these characters are quite similar to those of Aepyornis maximus in Madagascar, many authors have designated smooth eggshells of this kind as aepyornithid-type eggshells (Sauer and Sauer, 1978; Bibi et al., 2006). In gross morphology, the new Inner Mongolian fossils are similar to aepyornithid-type eggshells: their sting-point pores occur in rows that are conspicuously oriented parallel to one another very close in thickness to aepyornithid-type eggshells from Lanzarote (Sauer and Rothe, 1972). The only difference is that the new specimens lack pore grooves. Hence we are inclined to believe that these Inner Mongolian fossil materials may belong to aepyornithid-type eggs. Unfortunately, however, most studies on aepyornithid-type eggshell have not presented cross-sectional features, so that the new specimens cannot be readily compared to previously described aepyornithid-type material with respect to cross-sectional morphology.

    Most previously collected aepyornithid-type eggshell material has come from the Miocene-Pliocene sediments of western Europe and Asia (Sauer, 1972; Sauer and Rothe, 1972; Sauer, 1976; Sauer and Sauer, 1978; Stern et al., 1994; Harris and Leakey, 2003); however, Sauer (1972) reported some aepyornithid-like eggshell fragments from the Eocene Irdin Manha Formation. At Camp Margetts, near Iren Dabasu, Inner Mongolia, China (Sauer, 1972), and Bibi et al. (2006) reported aepyornithid-type eggshells from the Oligocene sediments of Mongolia. If these occurrences can be confirmed, the stratigraphic range of aepyornithid-type eggshells in East Asia would extend down into the Eocene (Bibi et al., 2006). It appears to be true because the age of the Gashunyinadege eggshells were dated at about 17.5 Ma, close to the Oligocene-Miocene boundary. It is quite possible that even earlier eggshells, from the Oligocene or Eocene, do in fact exist.

    Patnaik et al. (2009) suggested that ratites dispersed into Eurasia from Africa via an India-Madagascar biogeographic link. The Indian subcontinent was connected with the African plate during the Cretaceous. Subsequently, the India subcontinent drifted northward, and collided with Asia in a process that started at about 65 Ma and was completed by the end of Eocene (Zhu et al., 2005; Mo et al., 2007). If this biogeographic hypothesis is true, early ratites would be expected to have spread into Eurasia not earlier than the Eocene. However, more fossil evidence from the Indian subcontinent is needed in order to confirm this view. Another important aspect of ratite paleobiogeography is that both struthionid-type and aepyornithid-type eggshells have been found in Lanzarote, Canary Islands (Sauer and Rothe, 1972), in Siwalik (Sauer, 1972; Stern et al., 1994; Patnaik et al., 2009) and in Inner Mongolia (Sauer, 1972). In other words, the two types occur together at sites located from western Europe to East Asia. However, the aepyornithid-type eggshells from these three localities seem much older than the associated struthionid-type eggshells (Sauer, 1972; Sauer and Rothe, 1972; Patnaik et al., 2009). From the perspective of biochronology, the eggshells collected from the Irdin Manha Formation (Sauer, 1972) and Gashunyinadege might be considered the earliest presently known aepyornithid-type eggshell fossils (respectively Eocene, dated to 17.5 Ma), whereas struthionid-type eggshells occur in the Pliocene of this area according to Sauer (1972). Stern et al. (1994) identified some aepyornithid-type eggshells from Siwalik (about 11 Ma, whereas struthionid-type eggshell fragments from the same area range in age from 2.2 to 0.5 Ma). Orientornis linxiaensis (9.6 Ma) eggshells have a smooth surface, but are characterized by pores that are different from those of the Gashunyinadege specimens (Wang, 2007). Finally, the Baogedawula (7.11 Ma) samples again display a smooth outer surface and aepyornithid-like pore shape. The record suggests that ratites that laid aepyornithid-type eggs were present in Eurasia well before those that produced struthionid-type eggs. We are not sure whether this phenomenon simply implies two independent dispersal events of ratites, an early dispersal involving aepyornithid-laying birds and a later one involving struthionid-laying birds, into Eurasia.

    Mikhailov and Kurochkin reviewed the morphology and distribution of ratite eggshell fossils from Eurasia based on a large amount of material (Mikhailov, 1988; Mikhailov and Kurochkin, 1988); they concluded that aepyornithid-type eggshells appeared and disappeared periodically during the Neogene, alternating with struthionid-type eggshells. They considered both types of eggshell to belong to the genus Struthio. The characteristics that define the two types, i.e., pore structure and shell thickness, varied in response to the alternation of humid and dry conditions, or cold and warm ones (Mikhailov, 1988; Mikhailov and Kurochkin, 1988). This conclusion is still controversial because their results were largely based on morphological characters and lack supporting geochemical data. Since geochemical data would better reflect changes in climate, Stern et al. (1994) examined stable carbon and oxygen isotopes in ratite eggshell fossils from the Siwaliks, focusing on determining the nature and timing of environmental change in the Himalayan foothills. Stern et al. (1994) claimed that no differences in mineral content exist among aepyornithid-type, struthionid-type and extant ostrich eggshells, whereas the isotope value of aepyornithid-type eggshells is quite similar to that of struthionid-type eggshells at the specific time point of 2.24 Ma. This suggests that both aepyornithid-type and struthionid-type eggshells occurred at the same time period, sharing a similar environment. In contrast, although the δ18O values of aepyornithid-type eggshells from 5.26 to 2.34 Ma are quite different and the δ13C values also indicate their dietary sources had not changed during these 3 Ma (Stern et al., 1994), it has been clearly shown that aepyornithid-type eggshell characteristics were stable during this time and that struthionid-type eggshells did not appear until 2.24 Ma. Therefore, Mikhailov's conclusions might, to some extent, be problematic.

    Gashunyinadege and Baogedawula are both important Miocene sites in China; they have been repeatedly mentioned in the literature (Meng et al., 1996; Qiu and Wang, 1999; Qiu et al., 2006; Wang et al., 2009). The Gashunyinadege fauna contains at least 40 taxa of mammals and the Baogedawula fauna 22. Most of the mammals, especially micromammals, are ones that dispersed wilely within Eurasia (Qiu et al., 2006). This suggests that the central Inner Mongolian localities had good possibilities for interchange with other faunas. The faunal compositions of these two localities reflect a gradual drying of the Mongolia plateau during Miocene (Dong et al., 2006; Qiu et al., 2006; Liu et al., 2009). The reduction of the number of pores from the Gashunyinadege sample to the Baogedawula sample, some 10 Ma later, may reflect a response to this drying process.

    We thank Dr. Zhuding Qiu, Dr. Qiang Li, Dr. Xijun Ni (IVPP) and Yuri Kimura (National Science Museum, Japan) for preparing specimens; Yannicke Dauphin (University of Paris XI-Orsay, Franch), Dr. E.N. Kurochkin (Paleontological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences), Dr. Yaroslav Kuzmin (Institute of Geology & Mineralogy, Russia) and Dr. Rejeev Patnaik (Panjab University, India) for providing important references; Wending Zhang and Shukang Zhang (IVPP) for technical expertise and photography and Corwin Sullivan and Rejeev Patnaik for reviewing the manuscript. This study was supported by the Knowledge Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (KZCX2-YW-120) and the Key Laboratory of Evolutionary Systematics of Vertebrates, Chinese Academy of Sciences (2010LESV007).

  • Azevedo JL Jr, Carey JO, Pories WJ, Morris PG, Dohm GL. Hypoxia stimulates glucose transport in insulin-resistant human skeletal muscle. Diabetes. 1995;44: 695–8.
    Bagger JP, Thomassen A, Nielsen TT. Cardiac energy metabolism in patients with chest pain and normal coronary angiograms. Am J Cardiol. 2000;85: 315–20.
    Belitz HD, Grosch W, Schieberle P. Food chemistry. 4th ed. Berlin: Springer; 2009.
    Blanchard DC, Spencer RL, Weiss SM, Blanchard RJ, McEwen B, Sakai RR. Visible burrow system as a model of chronic social stress: behavioral and neuroendocrine correlates. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 1995;20: 117–34.
    Brooks GA, Butterfield GE, Wolfe RR, Groves BM, Mazzeo RS, Sutton JR, et al. Increased dependence on blood glucose after acclimatization to 4, 300 m. J Appl Physiol. 1991;70: 919–27.
    Brooks GA, Wolfel EE, Groves BM, Bender PR, Butterfield GE, Cymerman A, et al. Muscle accounts for glucose disposal but not blood lactate appearance during exercise after acclimatization to 4, 300 m. J Appl Physiol. 1992;72: 2435–45.
    Burggren WW, Cameron JN. Anaerobic metabolism, gas exchange, and acid–base balance during hypoxic exposure in the channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus. J Exp Zool. 1980;213: 405–16.
    Burggren WW, Farrell AP, Lillywhite HB. Vertebrate cardiovascular systems. In: Terjung R, editor. Comprehensive physiology, Suppl. 30. Handbook of physiology, comparative physiology. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell; 2011.
    Calder WA. Respiratory and heart rates of birds at rest. Condor. 1968;70: 358–65.
    Camici PG, Marraccini P, Lorenzoni R, Buzzigoli G, Pecori N, Perissinotto A, et al. Coronary hemodynamics and myocardial metabolism in patients with syndrome X: response to pacing stress. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1991;17: 1461–70.
    Cartee GD, Douen AG, Ramlal T, Klip A, Holloszy JO. Stimulation of glucose transport in skeletal muscle by hypoxia. J Appl Physiol. 1991;70: 1593–600.
    Casiday R, Frey R. Blood, sweat, and buffers: pH regulation during exercise, acid–base equilibria experiment. St. Louis: Washington University; 2012.
    Cheviron ZA, Bachman GC, Connaty AD, McClelland GB, Storz JF. Regulatory changes contribute to the adaptive enhancement of thermogenic capacity in high-altitude deer mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2012;109: 8635–40.
    Cheviron ZA, Natarajan C, Projecto-Garcia J, Eddy DK, Jones J, Carling MD, et al. Integrating evolutionary and functional tests of adaptive hypotheses: a case study of altitudinal differentiation in hemoglobin function in an Andean sparrow, Zonotrichia capensis. Mol Biol Evol. 2014;31: 2948–62.
    Durmowicz AG, Hofmeister S, Kadyraliev TK, Aldashev AA, Stenmark KR. Functional and structural adaptation of the yak pulmonary circulation to residence at high altitude. J Appl Physiol. 1993;74: 2276–85.
    Faraci FM, Kilgore DL Jr, Fedde MR. Attenuated pulmonary pressor response to hypoxia in bar-headed geese. Am J Physiol. 1984;247: R402–3.
    Fuxe K, Cintra A, Andbjer B, Anggård E, Goldstein M, Agnati LF. Centrally administered endothelin-1 produces lesions in the brain of the male rat. Acta Physiol Scand. 1989;137: 155–6.
    Ge RL, Kubo K, Kobayashi T, Sekiguchi M, Honda T. Blunted hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstrictive response in the rodent Ochotona curzoniae (pika) at high altitude. Am J Physiol. 1998;274: H1792–9.
    Ge RL, Simonson TS, Cooksey RC, Tanna U, Qin G, Huff CD, et al. Metabolic insight into mechanisms of high-altitude adaptation in Tibetans. Mol Genet Metab. 2012;106: 244–7.
    Gertz EW, Wisneski JA, Stanley WC, Neese RA. Myocardial substrate utilization during exercise in humans. Dual carbon-labeled carbohydrate isotope experiments. J Clin Invest. 1988;82: 2017–25.
    Green HJ, Sutton JR, Cymerman A, Young PM, Houston CS. Operation Everest Ⅱ: adaptations in human skeletal muscle. J Appl Physiol. 1989;66: 2454–61.
    Groves BM, Droma T, Sutton JR, McCullough RG, McCullough RE, Zhuang J, et al. Minimal hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in normal Tibetans at 3, 658 m. J Appl Physiol. 1985;1993(74): 312–8.
    Grubb BR. Allometric relations of cardiovascular function in birds. Am J Physiol. 1983;245: H567–72.
    Hao Y, Xiong Y, Cheng Y, Song G, Jia C, Qu Y, et al. Comparative transcriptomics of 3 high-altitude passerine birds and their low-altitude relatives. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2019;116: 11851–6.
    Hayward CS, Webb CM, Collins P. Effect of sex hormones on cardiac mass. Lancet. 2001;357: 1354–6.
    Hebisz R, Hebisz P, Borkowski J, Zatoń M. Differences in physiological responses to interval training in cyclists with and without interval training experience. J Hum Kinet. 2016;50: 93–101.
    Hochachka PW, Somero GN. Biochemical adaptation. Mechanism and process in physiological evolution. New York: Oxford University Press; 2002.
    Holden JE, Stone CK, Clark CM, Brown WD, Nickles RJ, Stanley C, et al. Enhanced cardiac metabolism of plasma glucose in high-altitude natives: adaptation against chronic hypoxia. J Appl Physiol. 1995;79: 222–8.
    Horscroft JA, Kotwica AO, Laner V, West JA, Hennis PJ, Levett DZH, et al. Metabolic basis to Sherpa altitude adaptation. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2017;114: 6382–7.
    Ingwall JS, Kramer MF, Fifer MA, Lorell BH, Shemin R, Grossman W, et al. The creatine kinase system in normal and diseased human myocardium. N Engl J Med. 1985;313: 1050–4.
    Ivy CM, Scott GR. Control of breathing and the circulation in high-altitude mammals and birds. Comp Biochem Phys A. 2015;186: 66–74.
    Jing XP, Wang WJ, Degen AA, Guo YM, Kang JP, Liu PP, et al. Energy substrate metabolism in skeletal muscle and liver when consuming diets of different energy levels: comparison between Tibetan and Small-tailed Han sheep. Animal. 2021;15: 100162.
    Kaur H, Parikh V, Sharma A, Singh M. Effect of amiloride a Na+/H+ exchange inhibitor on cardioprotective effect of ischaemic preconditioning: possible involvement of resident cardiac mast cells. Pharmacol Res. 1997;36: 95–102.
    Kodde IF, van der Stok J, Smolenski RT, de Jong JW. Metabolic and genetic regulation of cardiac energy substrate preference. Comp Biochem Phys A. 2007;146: 26–39.
    Kolar F, Ostadal B. Sex differences in cardiovascular function. Acta Physiol. 2013;207: 584–7.
    Koolhaas JM, Meerlo P, de Boer SF, Strubbe JH, Bohus B. Social stress in rats: an animal model of depression? Acta Neuropsychiatr. 1995;7: 27–9.
    Lagranha CJ, Deschamps A, Aponte A, Steenbergen C, Murphy E. Sex differences in the phosphorylation of mitochondrial proteins result in reduced production of reactive oxygen species and cardioprotection in females. Circ Res. 2010;106: 1681–91.
    Li D, Wu J, Zhang X, Ma X, Wingfield JC, Lei F, et al. Comparison of adrenocortical responses to acute stress in lowland and highland Eurasian Tree Sparrows (Passer montanus): similar patterns during the breeding, but different during the prebasic molt. J Exp Zool A Ecol Genet Physiol. 2011;315: 512–9.
    Lopaschuk GD, Ussher JR, Folmes CDL, Jaswal JS, Stanley WC. Myocardial fatty acid metabolism in health and disease. Physiol Rev. 2010;90: 207–58.
    Martinez M, Calvo-Torrent A, Pico-Alfonso MA. Social defeat and subordination as models of social stress in laboratory rodents: a review. Aggressive Behav. 1998;24: 241–56.
    Milerová M, Drahota Z, Chytilová A, Tauchmannová K, Houštěk J, Ošťádal B. Sex difference in the sensitivity of cardiac mitochondrial permeability transition pore to calcium load. Mol Cell Biochem. 2016;412: 147–54.
    Mónus F, Szabó K, Lózsa A, Pénzes Z, Barta Z. Intersexual size and plumage differences in tree sparrows (Passer montanus)—a morphologicals study based on molecular sex determination. Acta Zool Acad Sci H. 2011;57: 269–77.
    Murphy E. Estrogen signaling and cardiovascular disease. Circ Res. 2011;109: 687–96.
    Neglia D, de Caterina A, Marraccini P, Natali A, Ciardetti M, Vecoli C, et al. Impaired myocardial metabolic reserve and substrate selection flexibility during stress in patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2007;293: H3270–8.
    Pilarski JQ, Solomon IC, Kilgore DL Jr, Hempleman SC. Effects of aerobic and anaerobic metabolic inhibitors on avian intrapulmonary chemoreceptors. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2009;296: R1576–84.
    Pulinilkunnil T, Rodrigues B. Cardiac lipoprotein lipase: metabolic basis for diabetic heart disease. Cardiovasc Res. 2006;69: 329–40.
    Qiu Q, Zhang G, Ma T, Qian W, Wang J, Ye Z, et al. The yak genome and adaptation to life at high altitude. Nat Genet. 2012;44: 946–9.
    Qu Y, Zhao H, Han N, Zhou G, Song G, Gao B, et al. Ground tit genome reveals avian adaptation to living at high altitudes in the Tibetan plateau. Nat Commun. 2013;4: 2071.
    Qu Y, Tian S, Han N, Zhao H, Gao B, Fu J, et al. Genetic responses to seasonal variation in altitudinal stress: whole-genome resequencing of great tit in eastern Himalayas. Sci Rep. 2015;5: 14256.
    Qu Y, Chen C, Xiong Y, She H, Zhang YE, Cheng Y, et al. Rapid phenotypic evolution with shallow genomic differentiation during early stages of high elevation adaptation in Eurasian Tree Sparrows. Natl Sci Rev. 2020;7: 113–27.
    Roberts AC, Butterfield GE, Cymerman A, Reeves JT, Wolfel EE, Brooks GA. Acclimatization to 4, 300-m altitude decreases reliance on fat as a substrate. J Appl Physiol. 1996a;81: 1762–71.
    Roberts AC, Reeves JT, Butterfield GE, Mazzeo RS, Sutton JR, Wolfel EE, et al. Altitude and beta-blockade augment glucose utilization during submaximal exercise. J Appl Physiol. 1996b;80: 605–15.
    Sakai A, Matsumoto T, Saitoh M, Matsuzaki T, Koizumi T, Ishizaki T, et al. Cardiopulmonary hemodynamics of blue-sheep, Pseudois nayaur, as high-altitude adapted mammals. Jpn J Physiol. 2003;53: 377–84.
    Samaja M, Mariani C, Prestini A, Cerretelli P. Acid–base balance and O2 transport at high altitude. Acta Physiol Scand. 1997;159: 249–56.
    Scott GR, Milsom WK. Control of breathing and adaptation to high altitude in the bar-headed goose. Am J Physiol-Reg. 2007;I(293): R379–91.
    Scott GR, Schulte PM, Egginton S, Scott AL, Richards JG, Milsom WK. Molecular evolution of cytochrome C oxidase underlies high-altitude adaptation in the bar-headed goose. Mol Biol Evol. 2011;28: 351–63.
    Sears MW, Hayes JP, O'Connor CS, Geluso K, Sedinger JS. Individual variation in thermogenic capacity affects above-ground activity of high-altitude Deer Mice. Funct Ecol. 2006;20: 97–104.
    Shao Y, Li JX, Ge RL, Zhong L, Irwin DM, Murphy RW, et al. Genetic adaptations of the plateau zokor in high-elevation burrows. Sci Rep. 2015;5: 17262.
    Storz JF, Moriyama H. Mechanisms of hemoglobin adaptation to high altitude hypoxia. High Alt Med Biol. 2008;9: 148–57.
    Storz JF, Scott GR, Cheviron ZA. Phenotypic plasticity and genetic adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia in vertebrates. J Exp Biol. 2010;213: 4125–36.
    Summers-Smith D. Eurasian tree sparrow (Passer montanus). In: del Hoyo J, Elliott A, Sargatal J, Christie DA, de Juana E, editors. Handbook of the birds of the world alive. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions; 2018. p. 217–44.
    Sun YF, Ren ZP, Wu YF, Lei FM, Dudley R, Li DM. Flying high: limits to flight performance by sparrows on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. J Exp Biol. 2016;219: 3642–8.
    Sun YF, Li M, Song G, Lei FM, Li DM, Wu YF. The role of climate factors in geographic variation in body mass and wing length in a passerine bird. Avian Res. 2017;8: 1.
    Sutton JR, Jones NL, Griffith L, Pugh CE. Exercise at altitude. Annu Rev Physiol. 1983;45: 427–37.
    Tate KB, Ivy CM, Velotta JP, Storz JF, McClelland GB, Cheviron ZA, et al. Circulatory mechanisms underlying adaptive increases in thermogenic capacity in high-altitude deer mice. J Exp Biol. 2017;220: 3616–20.
    Thompson LG, Yao T, Mosley-Thompson E, Davis ME, Henderson KA, Lin P-N. A high-resolution millennial record of the south Asian monsoon from Himalayan ice cores. Science. 2000;289: 1916–9.
    Vaillancourt E, Haman F, Weber JM. Fuel selection in Wistar rats exposed to cold: shivering thermogenesis diverts fatty acids from re-esterification to oxidation. J Physiol. 2009;587: 4349–59.
    van der Vusse GJ, Glatz JF, Stam HC, Reneman RS. Fatty acid homeostasis in the normoxic and ischemic heart. Physiol Rev. 1992;72: 881–940.
    Ventura-Clapier R, Garnier A, Veksler V. Energy metabolism in heart failure. J Physiol. 2004;555: 1–13.
    Vinet A, Mandigout S, Nottin S, Nguyen LD, Lecoq AM, Courteix D, et al. Influence of body composition, hemoglobin concentration, and cardiac size and function of gender differences in maximal oxygen uptake in prepubertal children. Chest. 2003;124: 1494–9.
    Wang X, Hole DG, da Costa TH, Evans RD. Alterations in myocardial lipid metabolism during lactation in the rat. Am J Physiol. 1998;275: E265–71.
    Weber JM. Metabolic fuels: regulating fluxes to select mix. J Exp Biol. 2011;214: 286–94.
    Young AJ, Evans WJ, Cymerman A, Pandolf KB, Knapik JJ, Maher JT. Sparing effect of chronic high-altitude exposure on muscle glycogen utilization. J Appl Physiol. 1982;52: 857–62.
    Zhu X, Guan Y, Signore AV, Natarajan C, DuBay SG, Cheng Y, et al. Divergent and parallel routes of biochemical adaptation in high-altitude passerine birds from the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2018;115: 1865–70.
    Zinker BA, Namdaran K, Wilson R, Lacy DB, Wasserman DH. Acute adaptation of carbohydrate metabolism to decreased arterial PO2. Am J Physiol. 1994;266: E921–9.
  • Related Articles

Catalog

    Figures(2)  /  Tables(1)

    Article Metrics

    Article views (375) PDF downloads (10) Cited by()

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return