seawater adaptation
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Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Valentina Valenzuela-Muñoz ◽  
Cristian Gallardo-Escárate ◽  
Bárbara P. Benavente ◽  
Diego Valenzuela-Miranda ◽  
Gustavo Núñez-Acuña ◽  
...  

The growing amount of genome information and transcriptomes data available allows for a better understanding of biological processes. However, analysis of complex transcriptomic experimental designs involving different conditions, tissues, or times is relevant. This study proposes a novel approach to analyze complex data sets combining transcriptomes and miRNAs at the chromosome-level genome. Atlantic salmon smolts were transferred to seawater under two strategies: (i) fish group exposed to gradual salinity changes (GSC) and (ii) fish group exposed to a salinity shock (SS). Gills, intestine, and head kidney samples were used for total RNA extraction, followed by mRNA and small RNA illumina sequencing. Different expression patterns among the tissues and treatments were observed through a whole-genome transcriptomic approach. Chromosome regions highly expressed between experimental conditions included a great abundance of transposable elements. In addition, differential expression analysis showed a greater number of transcripts modulated in response to SS in gills and head kidney. miRNA expression analysis suggested a small number of miRNAs involved in the smoltification process. However, target analysis of these miRNAs showed a regulatory role in growth, stress response, and immunity. This study is the first to evidence the interplaying among mRNAs and miRNAs and the structural relationship at the genome level during Atlantic salmon smoltification.


Crustaceana ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 94 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 1359-1376
Author(s):  
Khadijeh Khalifi ◽  
Negin Salamat ◽  
Abdolali Movahedinia

Abstract There are differences between various crab species in the function and structure of organs involved in ionic and osmotic regulation processes. The antennal glands together constitute one of the most important organs involved in the osmoregulation in crabs. The present investigation aimed to study the tissue structure of the antennal glands and their Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) pump activity in three true crab species from three different habitats, including the marine (Portunus pelagicus (Linnaeus, 1758)), the estuarine (Macrophthalmus dentipes Lucas in Guérin, 1836) and the freshwater habitat (Eriocheir hepuensis Dai, 1991). In this regard, the tissue structure of the antennal glands and the activity of the Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA) pump were assessed in these three selected species. The results showed that the antennal glands in all studied species consisted of two anterior parts and a posterior part. The anterior parts are composed of the proximal tubular region (PT) and the distal tubular region (DT). The PT and DT parts comprised the coelomosac and labyrinths in the anterior portion, and the bladder located in the posterior portion. However, despite the similarity in the general tissue structure of the antennal gland in marine, estuarine and freshwater crab species, some structural differences were observed between those species. Labyrinth cells, coelomosac podocytes, and bladder cells in the estuarine crab M. dentipes contained large vacuoles especially on the top (i.e., near the lumen) of the cells. The highest amount of NKA pump activity was measured in the antennal glands of M. dentipes (). The NKA pump plays a more important role in the estuary and seawater adaptation of crabs, but freshwater species are not highly dependent on the NKA enzyme for osmoregulation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
François Chauvigné ◽  
Ozlem Yilmaz ◽  
Alba Ferré ◽  
Per Gunnar Fjelldal ◽  
Roderick Nigel Finn ◽  
...  

AbstractWater channels (aquaporins) were originally discovered in mammals with fourteen subfamilies now identified (AQP0-13). Here we show that a functional Aqp14 subfamily phylogenetically related to AQP4-type channels exists in all vertebrate lineages except hagfishes and eutherian mammals. In contrast to the water-selective classical aquaporins, which have four aromatic-arginine constriction residues, Aqp14 proteins present five non-aromatic constriction residues and facilitate the permeation of water, urea, ammonia, H2O2 and glycerol. Immunocytochemical assays suggest that Aqp14 channels play important osmoregulatory roles in piscine seawater adaptation. Our data indicate that Aqp14 intracellular trafficking is tightly regulated by the vasotocinergic/isotocinergic neuropeptide and receptor systems, whereby protein kinase C and A transduction pathways phosphorylate highly conserved C-terminal residues to control channel plasma membrane insertion. The neuropeptide regulation of Aqp14 channels thus predates the vasotocin/vasopressin regulation of AQP2-5-6 orthologs observed in tetrapods. These findings demonstrate that vertebrate Aqp14 channels represent an ancient subfamily of neuropeptide-regulated polytransporters.


2014 ◽  
Vol 307 (9) ◽  
pp. R1167-R1179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilan M. Ruhr ◽  
Charlotte Bodinier ◽  
Edward M. Mager ◽  
Andrew J. Esbaugh ◽  
Cameron Williams ◽  
...  

The physiological effects of guanylin (GN) and uroguanylin (UGN) on fluid and electrolyte transport in the teleost fish intestine have yet to be thoroughly investigated. In the present study, the effects of GN, UGN, and renoguanylin (RGN; a GN and UGN homolog) on short-circuit current ( Isc) and the transport of Cl−, Na+, bicarbonate (HCO3−), and fluid in the Gulf toadfish ( Opsanus beta) intestine were determined using Ussing chambers, pH-stat titration, and intestinal sac experiments. GN, UGN, and RGN reversed the Isc of the posterior intestine (absorptive-to-secretory), but not of the anterior intestine. RGN decreased baseline HCO3− secretion, but increased Cl− and fluid secretion in the posterior intestine. The secretory response of the posterior intestine coincides with the presence of basolateral NKCC1 and apical cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), the latter of which is lacking in the anterior intestine and is not permeable to HCO3− in the posterior intestine. However, the response to RGN by the posterior intestine is counterintuitive given the known role of the marine teleost intestine as a salt- and water-absorbing organ. These data demonstrate that marine teleosts possess a tissue-specific secretory response, apparently associated with seawater adaptation, the exact role of which remains to be determined.


Aquaculture ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 392-395 ◽  
pp. 77-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paloma Morán ◽  
Francisco Marco-Rius ◽  
Manuel Megías ◽  
Lara Covelo-Soto ◽  
Andrés Pérez-Figueroa

2013 ◽  
Vol 304 (6) ◽  
pp. R423-R434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Miyanishi ◽  
Kataaki Okubo ◽  
Toyoji Kaneko ◽  
Yoshio Takei

Cardiac natriuretic peptides (atrial natriuretic peptide, ANP; b-type natriuretic peptide, BNP; ventricular natriuretic peptide, VNP) and their direct ancestor C-type natriuretic peptide 3 (CNP3) exert potent osmoregulatory actions in fish. However, very little is known about their roles in embryonic osmoregulation. In this study, we performed loss-of-function analysis using euryhaline medaka ( Oryzias latipes), which has lost ANP and VNP during evolution and thus possesses only BNP and CNP3. We found that the maintenance of whole-body osmolality in seawater embryos was impaired by the knockdown of BNP+OLGC7 (BNP receptor) or CNP3 alone from 1 day postfertilization, and the CNP3 knockdown was accompanied by greater water loss. The impaired osmoregulation in the knockdown embryos was not due to the suppressed expression of major transporters for NaCl excretion via ionocytes or of key enzyme genes for metabolic water production, but to the impaired blood circulation to the yolk-sac membrane caused by abnormal heart development. We detected a strong positive correlation between impaired blood circulation and increased body fluid osmolality and pharmacological blockade of blood flow increased body fluid osmolality in seawater embryos. We also found that the exaggerated water loss in CNP3 knockdown embryos is related to the failure to suppress aquaporin (AQP3, AQP4, and AQP9) gene expression. These results show that CNP3 decrease water permeability of body surfaces and that both BNP and CNP3 ensure sufficient blood flow to the yolk-sac membrane for efficient salt excretion by ionocytes and sufficient water production by yolk metabolism to promote seawater adaptation during early development in medaka.


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