Morphometry of retinal vasculature in Antarctic fishes is dependent upon the level of hemoglobin in circulation

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Abstract

We quantitatively assessed ocular vascular patterns of six Antarctic notothenioid fishes that vary in their expression of the circulating oxygen-binding protein, hemoglobin (Hb). Digital image analyses revealed marked differences in vessel morphometries among notothenioid species. Hemoglobinless (-Hb) icefishes display mean vessel length densities that are greater (Chaenocephalus aceratus, 5.51±0.32 mm mm-2; Champsocephalus gunnari, 5.15±0.50 mm mm-2) than those observed in red-blooded (+Hb) species (Gymnodraco acuticeps, 5.20±0.46 mm mm-2; Parachaenichthyes charcoti, 4.40±0.30 mm mm-2; Trematomus hansoni, 3.94±0.08 mm mm-2; Notothenia coriiceps, 2.48±0.21 mm mm-2). -Hb fishes also have mean vessel diameters that are -1.5 times greater than vessel diameters of +Hb species (-Hb, 0.193±0.006 mm; +Hb, 0.125±0.005 mm). Vascular density index (VDI), a stereological index that is affected by both vessel number and length, is greatest in -Hb C. aceratus (3.51±0.20) and lowest in +Hb N. coriiceps (1.58±0.14). Among four +Hb species, there is a direct relationship between red blood cell content and retinal vasculature. Hematocrit (Hct) is inversely correlated to vascular density (r2=0.934) and positively correlated to intervessel distance (r2= 0.898) over a >2.3-fold range of Hct. These results indicate that anatomical capacity to supply blood to the retina increases to compensate for decreases in oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood.

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Wujcik, J. M., Wang, G., Eastman, J. T., & Sidell, B. D. (2007). Morphometry of retinal vasculature in Antarctic fishes is dependent upon the level of hemoglobin in circulation. Journal of Experimental Biology, 210(5), 815–824. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.001867

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