Abstract

Dive capacities of air-breathing vertebrates are dictated by onboard O2 stores, suggesting that physiologic specialization of diving birds such as penguins may have involved adaptive changes in convective O2 transport. It has been hypothesized that increased hemoglobin (Hb)-O2 affinity improves pulmonary O2 extraction and enhances the capacity for breath-hold diving. To investigate evolved changes in Hb function associated with the aquatic specialization of penguins, we integrated comparative measurements of whole-blood and purified native Hb with protein engineering experiments based on site-directed mutagenesis. We reconstructed and resurrected ancestral Hb representing the common ancestor of penguins and the more ancient ancestor shared by penguins and their closest nondiving relatives (order Procellariiformes, which includes albatrosses, shearwaters, petrels, and storm petrels). These two ancestors bracket the phylogenetic interval in which penguin-specific changes in Hb function would have evolved. The experiments revealed that penguins evolved a derived increase in Hb-O2 affinity and a greatly augmented Bohr effect (i.e., reduced Hb-O2 affinity at low pH). Although an increased Hb-O2 affinity reduces the gradient for O2 diffusion from systemic capillaries to metabolizing cells, this can be compensated by a concomitant enhancement of the Bohr effect, thereby promoting O2 unloading in acidified tissues. We suggest that the evolved increase in Hb-O2 affinity in combination with the augmented Bohr effect maximizes both O2 extraction from the lungs and O2 unloading from the blood, allowing penguins to fully utilize their onboard O2 stores and maximize underwater foraging time.

Highlights

  • In air-breathing vertebrates, diving capacities are dictated by onboard O2 stores and the efficiency of O2 use in metabolizing tissues [1]

  • Blood-O2 affinity is a highly plastic trait that is influenced by changes in red cell metabolism and acid-base balance, so measurements on purified Hb under standard assay conditions are needed to assess whether observed species differences in blood-O2 affinity stem from genetically based changes in the oxygenation properties of Hb

  • We demonstrate that penguins evolved an increased Hb-O2 affinity in conjunction with a greatly augmented Bohr effect that should maximize pulmonary O2 extraction without compromising O2 delivery at systemic capillaries

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Summary

Introduction

In air-breathing vertebrates, diving capacities are dictated by onboard O2 stores and the efficiency of O2 use in metabolizing tissues [1]. To investigate evolved changes in Hb function associated with the aquatic specialization of penguins, we integrated experimental measurements of whole-blood and purified native Hb with Measured O2 affinities for purified Hb exhibited very little variation among species in both the presence and absence of allosteric cofactors (Fig. 2 and SI Appendix, Table S1).

Results
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