Abstract

In this experiment, the effects of a sudden drop of salinity on the immune response mechanisms of the ark shell Anadara kagoshimensis were examined by simulating the sudden drop of salinity that occurs in seawater after a rainstorm. Additionally, the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified using transcriptome sequencing. When the salinity dropped from 30‰ (S30) to 14‰ (S14), the phagocytic activity of blood lymphocytes, the O2− levels produced from respiratory burst, the content of reactive oxygen species, and the activities of lysozymes and acid phosphatases increased significantly, whereas the total count of blood lymphocytes did not increase. Total count of blood lymphocytes in 22‰ salinity (S22) was significantly higher than that in any other group. The raw data obtained from sequencing were processed with Trimmomatic (Version 0.36). The expression levels of unigenes were calculated using transcripts per million (TPM) based on the effects of sequencing depth, gene length, and sample on reads. Differential expression analysis was performed using DESeq (Version 1.12.4). Transcriptome sequencing revealed 269 (101 up-regulated, 168 down-regulated), 326 (246 up-regulated, 80 down-regulated), and 185 (132 up-regulated, 53 down-regulated) significant DEGs from comparison of the S14 vs. S22, S22 vs. S30, and S14 vs. S30 groups, respectively. Gene Ontology enrichment analysis of the DEGs in these salinity comparison groups revealed that the cellular amino acid metabolic process, the regulation of protein processing, the regulation of response to stress, and other terms were significantly enriched. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes enrichment analysis showed that nucleotide-binding, oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptor signaling pathway (ko04621), apoptosis-multiple species (ko04215), Toll and Imd signaling pathway (ko04624), NF-κB signaling pathway (ko04064), apoptosis (ko04210), and focal adhesion (ko04510) were significantly enriched in all salinity comparison groups. qRT-PCR verification of 12 DEGs in the above six pathways was conducted, and the results were consistent with the transcriptome sequencing results in terms of up-regulation and down-regulation, which illustrates that the transcriptome sequencing data are credible. These results were used to preliminarily explore the effects of a sudden drop of salinity on blood physiological and biochemical indexes and immunoregulatory mechanisms of A. kagoshimensis. They also provide a theoretical basis for the selection of bottom areas optimal for release and proliferation of A. kagoshimensis required to restore the declining populations of this species.

Highlights

  • The marine environment is being subjected to drastic changes due to global warming

  • When the salinity decreased from 30% to 22%, total count of blood lymphocytes in A. kagoshimensis increased significantly (p < 0.05, Table 1)

  • When the salinity decreased from 30% to 22% in our study, total count of lymphocytes in A. kagoshimensis significantly increased

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Summary

Introduction

The marine environment is being subjected to drastic changes due to global warming. Over the past 10–15 years, glaciers and ice sheets have disappeared at a fast rate accompanied by heavy rainfall [1]. The salinity of surface seawater and nearshore water is prone to a substantial decrease during the rainy season, resulting in massive mortality and changes in the distribution area of marine organisms [2]. Due to the effects of tide, evaporation, and seasonal rainfall, the salinity of seawater normally exhibits cyclic changes, and marine organisms have to adapt their own physiological activities to such changes of salinity [5,6,7]. Osmotic regulation by marine invertebrates is similar to that of vertebrates, and it includes perception, signal transduction, and physiological response. The physiological response of marine invertebrates is quite different from that of homoiosmotic animals [8]

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