Abstract
Organisms respond to severe environmental changes by entering into hypometabolic states, minimizing their metabolic rates, suspending development and reproduction, and surviving critical ecological changes. They come back to an active lifestyle once the environmental conditions are conducive. Marine invertebrates live in the aquatic environment and adapt to environmental changes in their whole life. Sea cucumbers and sponges are only two recently known types of marine organisms that aestivate in response to temperature change. Sea cucumber has become an excellent model organism for studies of environmentally-induced aestivation by marine invertebrates. DNA methylation, the most widely considered epigenetic marks, has been reported to contribute to phenotypic plasticity in response to environmental stress in aquatic organisms. Most of methylation-related enzymes, including DNA methyltransferases, Methyl-CpG binding domain proteins, and DNA demethylases, were up-regulated during aestivation. We conducted high-resolution whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of the intestine from sea cucumber at non-aestivation and deep-aestivation stages. Further DNA methylation profile analysis was also conducted across the distinct genomic features and entire transcriptional units. A different elevation in methylation level at internal exons was observed with clear demarcation of intron/exon boundaries during transcriptional unit scanning. The lowest methylation level occurs in the first exons, followed by the last exons and the internal exons. A significant increase in non-CpG methylation (CHG and CHH) was observed within the intron and mRNA regions in aestivation groups. A total of 1393 genes were annotated within hypermethylated DMRs (differentially methylated regions), and 749 genes were annotated within hypomethylated DMRs. Differentially methylated genes were enriched in the mRNA surveillance pathway, metabolic pathway, and RNA transport. Then, 24 hypermethylated genes and 15 hypomethylated genes were Retrovirus-related Pol polyprotein from transposon (RPPT) genes. This study provides further understanding of epigenetic control on environmental induced hypometabolism in aquatic organisms.
Highlights
Changing environmental conditions is a challenge for virtually all organisms
We reported a genome-wide examination of DNA methylation in the intestine of sea cucumber A. japonicus during thermal stress-induced hypometabolism
A total of 1393 genes were in hypermethylated Differentially methylated regions (DMRs), and 749 genes were in hypomethylated DMRs
Summary
Changing environmental conditions is a challenge for virtually all organisms. It may be caused by predictable rhythms (e.g., daily, tidal, seasonal) or episodically (e.g., a sudden environmental changeGenes 2020, 11, 1020; doi:10.3390/genes11091020 www.mdpi.com/journal/genesGenes 2020, 11, 1020 in temperature, water, oxygen, nutrients, etc.). Changing environmental conditions is a challenge for virtually all organisms. It may be caused by predictable rhythms (e.g., daily, tidal, seasonal) or episodically An organism can adapt to a unique environment and change its behavior, morphology, and physiology [1]. Many species enter into environmental induced hypometabolism (e.g., hibernation, aestivation, or diapause) in response to predictable environmental signals [2,3,4]. This environmental induced hypometabolism shows reversible phenotypic plasticity, which happens seasonally but reversibly [5,6,7].
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