4.7 Article

Rapid acclimation of juvenile corals to CO2-mediated acidification by upregulation of heat shock protein and Bcl-2 genes

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 24, 期 2, 页码 438-452

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.13021

关键词

Acropora millepora; Bcl-2; caspases; climate change; corals; heat shock proteins

资金

  1. Australian Research Council [DP1095343]
  2. Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
  3. Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship [PIOF-GA-2008-235142]
  4. European Community [211384]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Corals play a key role in ocean ecosystems and carbonate balance, but their molecular response to ocean acidification remains unclear. The only previous whole-transcriptome study (Moya etal. Molecular Ecology, 2012; 21, 2440) documented extensive disruption of gene expression, particularly of genes encoding skeletal organic matrix proteins, in juvenile corals (Acropora millepora) after short-term (3d) exposure to elevated pCO(2). In this study, whole-transcriptome analysis was used to compare the effects of such acute' (3d) exposure to elevated pCO(2) with a longer (prolonged'; 9d) period of exposure beginning immediately post-fertilization. Far fewer genes were differentially expressed under the 9-d treatment, and although the transcriptome data implied wholesale disruption of metabolism and calcification genes in the acute treatment experiment, expression of most genes was at control levels after prolonged treatment. There was little overlap between the genes responding to the acute and prolonged treatments, but heat shock proteins (HSPs) and heat shock factors (HSFs) were over-represented amongst the genes responding to both treatments. Amongst these was an HSP70 gene previously shown to be involved in acclimation to thermal stress in a field population of another acroporid coral. The most obvious feature of the molecular response in the 9-d treatment experiment was the upregulation of five distinct Bcl-2 family members, the majority predicted to be anti-apoptotic. This suggests that an important component of the longer term response to elevated CO2 is suppression of apoptosis. It therefore appears that juvenile A.millepora have the capacity to rapidly acclimate to elevated pCO(2), a process mediated by upregulation of specific HSPs and a suite of Bcl-2 family members.

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