4.4 Article

CO2 induced seawater acidification impacts sea urchin larval development II: Gene expression patterns in pluteus larvae

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2011.06.023

Keywords

Strongylocentrotus purpuratus; Echinoderm; Growth; RT-qPCR; Ocean acidification

Funding

  1. DFG
  2. German 'Biological impacts of ocean acidification (BIOACID)' project [3.1.4]
  3. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [FKZ 03F0608A]
  4. Linnaeus Centre for Marine Evolutionary Biology at the University of Gothenburg
  5. Swedish Research Councils VR
  6. Formas
  7. VR
  8. Knut and Alice Wallenberg's minnen
  9. Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences

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Extensive use of fossil fuels is leading to increasing CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere and causes changes in the carbonate chemistry of the oceans which represents a major sink for anthropogenic CO2. As a result, the oceans' surface pH is expected to decrease by ca. 0.4 units by the year 2100, a major change with potentially negative consequences for some marine species. Because of their carbonate skeleton, sea urchins and their larval stages are regarded as likely to be one of the more sensitive taxa. In order to investigate sensitivity of pre-feeding (2 days post-fertilization) and feeding (4 and 7 days post-fertilization) pluteus larvae, we raised Strongylocentrotus purpuratus embryos in control (pH 8.1 and pCO(2) 41 Pa e.g. 399 mu atm) and CO2 acidified seawater with pH of 7.7 (pCO(2) 134 Pa e.g. 1318 mu atm) and investigated growth, calcification and survival. At three time points (day 2, day 4 and day 7 post-fertilization), we measured the expression of 26 representative genes important for metabolism, calcification and ion regulation using RT-qPCR. After one week of development, we observed a significant difference in growth. Maximum differences in size were detected at day 4 (ca. 10% reduction in body length). A comparison of gene expression patterns using PCA and ANOSIM clearly distinguished between the different age groups (two-way ANOSIM: Global R=1) while acidification effects were less pronounced (Global R=0.518). Significant differences in gene expression patterns (ANOSIM R=0.938, SIMPER: 4.3% difference) were also detected at day 4 leading to the hypothesis that differences between CO2 treatments could reflect patterns of expression seen in control experiments of a younger larva and thus a developmental artifact rather than a direct CO2 effect. We found an up regulation of metabolic genes (between 10%and 20% in ATP-synthase, citrate synthase, pyruvate kinase and thiolase at day 4) and down regulation of calcification related genes (between 23% and 36% in msp130, SM30B, and SM50 at day 4). Ion regulation was mainly impacted by up regulation of Na+/K+-ATPase at day 4 (15%) and down regulation of NHE3 at day 4 (45%). We conclude that in studies in which a stressor induces an alteration in the speed of development, it is crucial to employ experimental designs with a high time resolution in order to correct for developmental artifacts. This helps prevent misinterpretation of stressor effects on organism physiology. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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