Journal of Applied Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 85: 1871-1876, 1998;
8750-7587/98 $5.00
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Vol. 85, Issue 5, 1871-1876, November 1998

Increased capillarity in leg muscle of finches living at altitude

Russell T. Hepple1, Peter J. Agey1, Larnelle Hazelwood1, Joseph M. Szewczak2, Richard E. MacMillen2, and Odile Mathieu-Costello1

1 Department of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0623; and 2 University of California White Mountain Research Station, Bishop, California 93514

An increased ratio of muscle capillary to fiber number (capillary/fiber number) at altitude has been found in only a few investigations. The highly aerobic pectoralis muscle of finches living at 4,000-m altitude (Leucosticte arctoa; A) was recently shown to have a larger capillary/fiber number and greater contribution of tortuosity and branching to total capillary length than sea-level finches (Carpodacus mexicanus; SL) of the same subfamily (O. Mathieu-Costello, P. J. Agey, L. Wu, J. M. Szewczak, and R. E. MacMillen. Respir. Physiol. 111: 189-199, 1998). To evaluate the role of muscle aerobic capacity on this trait, we examined the less-aerobic leg muscle (deep portion of anterior thigh) in the same birds. We found that, similar to pectoralis, the leg muscle in A finches had a greater capillary/fiber number (1.42 ± 0.06) than that in SL finches (0.77 ± 0.05; P < 0.01), but capillary tortuosity and branching were not different. As also found in pectoralis, the resulting larger capillary/fiber surface in A finches was proportional to a greater mitochondrial volume per micrometer of fiber length compared with that in SL finches. These observations, in conjunction with a trend to a greater (rather than smaller) fiber cross-sectional area in A than in SL finches (A: 484 ± 42, SL: 390 ± 26 µm2, both values at 2.5-µm sarcomere length; P = 0.093), support the notion that chronic hypoxia is also a condition in which capillary-to-fiber structure is organized to match the size of the muscle capillary-to-fiber interface to fiber mitochondrial volume rather than to minimize intercapillary O2 diffusion distances.

capillary anisotropy; mitochondria; hypoxia; capillarization; bird


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