4.7 Article

The combined effects of temperature and salinity on the digestion and respiration metabolism of Pinctada fucata

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-26168-0

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The combined effects of temperature and salinity on the digestion and respiration metabolism of Pinctada fucata were evaluated in this study. The results showed that both temperature and salinity had significant effects on the enzymes involved in digestion and respiration. The study also found that temperature and salinity affected the activity of certain enzymes differently. These findings provide important theoretical references for shellfish culture and the establishment of related index models.
The combined effects of temperature and salinity on the digestion and respiration metabolism of Pinctada fucata were evaluated via response surface methodology and box-benhnken design under laboratory condition. Results indicated that the primary and secondary effects of salinity and temperature had significant effects on amylase (AMS) of P. fucata (P < 0.05)., The digestive enzyme reached the maximum activity when temperature was 26 degrees C. The AMS and trypsin (TRYP) increased at first, and then decreased with increasing temperature. The Lipase (LPS) was positively correlated with either salinity or temperature. Salinity had no significant effect on TRYP as a primary effect (P > 0.05), but had a significant effect on TRYP as a secondary effect (P < 0.01). These effects were completely opposite to the effect of temperature on pepsin (PEP) as primary and secondary effects. The combined effects of salinity and temperature on AMS, TRYP and PEP were significant (P < 0.01), but had no significant effect on LPS (P > 0.05). The primary, secondary and interaction effects of salinity had significant effects on NKA (Na+-K+-ATPase) of P. fucata (P < 0.05), and NKA presented a U-shaped distribution with increasing salinity. The quadratic and interactive effects of temperature had a significant effect on AKP (P < 0.05), and AKP showed a U-shaped distribution with increasing temperature. Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity decreased at first, and then increased when temperature and salinity changed from 20 to 30 degrees C and 23-33 parts per thousand, respectively. The expression of GPX gene affected by temperature in gills may be delayed compared with that in hepatopancreas, and its expression is tissue-specific. The appropriate digestion and respiratory metabolism index models were established under the combined temperature and salinity conditions. The optimization results showed that the optimal combination of temperature and salinity was 26.288 degrees C/28.272 parts per thousand. The desirability was 0.832. Results from the present study will provide a theoretical reference for shellfish culture affected by environmental interactions and the establishment of related index models.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available