Δευτέρα 7 Ιανουαρίου 2019

Fasting enhances cold resistance in fish through stimulating lipid catabolism and autophagy

Key points

In cold environment, mammals increase their feed intake while fish decrease or stop feeding. However, the physiological value of fasting during cold resistance in fish is currently unknown. Fasting for more than 48 h enhanced acute cold resistance in zebrafish, which correlated with lipid catabolism and cell damage attenuation. Lipid catabolism and autophagy were necessary for cold resistance in fish and the inhibition of mitochondrial fatty acid β‐oxidation or autophagy weakened the fasting‐induced cold resistance. Repression of mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling pathway by rapamycin largely mimicked the beneficial effects of fasting in promoting cold resistance, suggesting mTOR signaling may be involved in the fasting‐induced cold resistance in fish. Our study demonstrates that fasting may be a protective strategy for fish to survive under cold stress.

Abstract

In cold environments, most homeothermic animals increase their food intake to supply more energy to maintain body temperature, whereas most poikilothermic animals such as fishes decrease or even stop feeding under cold stress. However, the physiological value of fasting during cold resistance in poikilotherms has not been explained. Here, we show that moderate fasting largely enhanced cold resistance in fish. By using pharmacological (fenofibrate, mildronate, chloroquine and rapamycin), and nutritional approaches (fatty and acids amino diets) in wild or specific gene‐knock out zebrafish models (carnitine palmitoyltransferase‐1b deficient strain, CPT1b−/− or autophagy‐related protein 12 deficient strain, ATG12−/−), we verified that fasting‐stimulated lipid catabolism and autophagy played essential roles in the improved cold resistance. Moreover, suppression of the mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway by using rapamycin mostly mimicked the beneficial effects of fasting in promoting cold resistance, from either physiological phenotype or transcriptomic pattern. However, these beneficial effects were largely reduced when mTOR pathway was activated through high dietary leucine supplementation. We conclude that fasting helps fish to resist cold stress by modulating lipid catabolism and autophagy, which correlates with the mTOR signaling pathway. Therefore, fasting can act as a protective strategy of fish in resisting coldness.

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