Changes in the number, shape, efficiency and interconnectedness of organelles in the cells of flight muscles provide extra energy for birds’ continent-spanning feats.
This is the fifth episode of The Quanta Podcast. In each episode, Quanta Magazine editor in chief Samir Patel speaks with the minds behind the award-winning publication to navigate through some of the most important and mind-expanding questions in science and math.
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/birds-migratory-mitochondria/id1021340531?i=1000713226354
Strange they do not point out that infrared light directly powers mitochondria - so that is why when the days are longer the birds have more energy to migrate long distance.
mitochondria
are far more than our cells’ captive energy generators. Indeed, studies
are revealing that, in some ways, they have retained their ancient
origins as free-living cells — and still behave that way.
Mitochondria
can divide through fission or merge through fusion. They not only
process food into energy, but also break down and synthesize many types
of molecules. They function as signaling hubs, sharing messages within
and between cells and tissues to set off stress, immune, metabolic and cell fate processes, including cell death. More recent studies show that mitochondria can even specialize for different functions, just like complex cells, and travel between cells through what’s known as mitochondrial transfer.
All
this work reveals that the “powerhouse” analogy has expired. And the
more scientists discover about these influential organelles, the more
central they appear to our physical and mental health.
What's New and Noteworthy
Mitochondria
can be targets of evolutionary processes, and research into birds shows
how changes in the number, shape and behavior of mitochondria can
support ecological traits — in this case, long-distance migration. Many
birds perform athletic and physiological feats when flying long
distances. For example, a one-ounce sparrow will fly hundreds of miles
every spring and fall, flapping nonstop for days without stopping for
food or water. Two labs independently pinned birds’ seasonal sprints
on differences in their mitochondria, which become “turbocharged” only
during migration season — and then revert to their normal state during
the rest of the year. It’s a subcellular discovery that explains
continent-spanning behavior, which I discussed with editor-in-chief
Samir Patel in a recent episode of The Quanta Podcast.
What
makes life tick? During the first stages of life, as an embryo divides
into two cells, then four, eight, and so on, it does so at a certain
pace. In addition to genetic differences, variation in developmental
tempo can explain variability among species: For example, mice and
humans use the same genes to create neurons or build a spine, but those
genes are activated and deactivated on different timelines. What is the
fundamental control center of an organism’s developmental tempo? A body
of work from different labs has pointed to mitochondria as the cellular metronome;
these studies suggest that the rate at which mitochondria process
molecules sets the rate of other cellular processes, such as gene
expression and protein synthesis. In lab experiments, speeding up and
slowing down the metabolic rates of mitochondria altered developmental
rates too.
Along with producing ATP, mitochondria synthesize many other molecules: amino acids, nucleotides, carbohydrates, lipids and more, together known as metabolites. For many years, researchers in epigenetics have investigated how certain metabolites interact with DNA to turn genes on and off, regulating patterns of gene expression that determine cell types, for example differentiating a heart cell from a liver cell. Now developmental biologists are finding that a cell’s metabolism and the products of its mitochondria help determine cell specialization during embryonic development, which shows how, at the molecular level, environment influences life in its earliest stages. “It really changes the way we think about developmental biology, the way we think about how our own life starts,” said Berna Sozen, a developmental biologist at Yale University.
No comments:
Post a Comment