4.1 Article

Regulation of globin expression in Antarctic fish under thermal and hypoxic stress

期刊

MARINE GENOMICS
卷 57, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.margen.2020.100831

关键词

Hypoxia; Heat treatment; Myoglobin; Neuroglobin; Cytoglobin; Globin-X

资金

  1. Italian National Programme for Antarctic Research (PNRA) of Ministry of University and Research (MUR) [PNRA2013/AZ1.10, PNRA2013/AZ1.20, PNRA16_000226]

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Antarctic fish species, particularly the icefish, have unique adaptations to cope with cold environments but the regulatory mechanisms for temperature and oxygen-induced gene expression changes are still largely unknown. Proteins such as globins play crucial roles in mediating Antarctic fish adaptations to environmental changes.
In the freezing waters of the Southern Ocean, Antarctic teleost fish, the Notothenioidei, have developed unique adaptations to cope with cold, including, at the extreme, the loss of hemoglobin in icefish. As a consequence, icefish are thought to be the most vulnerable of the Antarctic fish species to ongoing ocean warming. Some icefish also fail to express myoglobin but all appear to retain neuroglobin, cytoglobin-1, cytoglobin-2, and globinX. Despite the lack of the inducible heat shock response, Antarctic notothenioid fish are endowed with physiological plasticity to partially compensate for environmental changes, as shown by numerous physiological and genomic/transcriptomic studies over the last decade. However, the regulatory mechanisms that determine temperature/oxygen-induced changes in gene expression remain largely unexplored in these species. Proteins such as globins are susceptible to environmental changes in oxygen levels and temperature, thus playing important roles in mediating Antarctic fish adaptations. In this study, we sequenced the full-length transcripts of myoglobin, neuroglobin, cytoglobin-1, cytoglobin-2, and globin-X from the Antarctic red-blooded notothenioid Trematomus bernacchii and the white-blooded icefish Chionodraco hamatus and evaluated transcripts levels after exposure to high temperature and low oxygen levels. Basal levels of globins are similar in the two species and both stressors affect the expression of Antarctic fish globins in brain, retina and gills. Temperature up-regulates globin expression more effectively in white-blooded than in red-blooded fish while hypoxia strongly up-regulates globins in red-blooded fish, particularly in the gills. These results suggest globins function as regulators of temperature and hypoxia tolerance. This study provides the first insights into globin transcriptional changes in Antarctic fish.

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