Abstract

Osmoregulation is an important mechanism by which euryhaline crustaceans regulate osmotic and ionic concentrations. The Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir sinensis) is a strong osmoregulating animal model among crustacean species, as it can maintain its hemolymph composition and survives well in either seawater or freshwater. Osmoregulation by E. sinensis during physiological adaptation has been studied extensively. However, the genetic basis of osmoregulation in E. sinensis for acclimating to changing salinities remains unclear. The current study investigated five genes involved in E. sinensis osmoregulation and compared them with a representative marine crab Portunus trituberculatus to test whether adaptive evolution has occurred changing salinity conditions. The results showed that carbonic anhydrase (CA), cytochrome P450 4C (CYP4C), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), and the Na+/H+ exchanger (NHE) have undergone positive selection(i.e., directional selection) in E. sinensis. Thus, the positive selection in CA and NHE suggests that E. sinensis has enhanced capacity for maintaining systemic acid-base balance and ion regulation. GDH and CYP4C also demonstrated positive selection in E. sinensis, suggesting that E. sinensis might have acquired an enhanced capacity to metabolize glutamate and synthesize ecdysteroids in response to a change in osmotic concentration. The present study provides new insight into the molecular genetic basis of salinity adaption in E. sinensis.

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