Abstract

BackgroundGlobal climate change is predicted to force the bathymetric migrations of shallow-water marine invertebrates. Hydrostatic pressure is proposed to be one of the major environmental factors limiting the vertical distribution of extant marine invertebrates. However, the high-pressure acclimation mechanisms are not yet fully understood.ResultsIn this study, the shallow-water sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus was incubated at 15 and 25 MPa at 15 °C for 24 h, and subjected to comparative transcriptome analysis. Nine samples were sequenced and assembled into 553,507 unigenes with a N50 length of 1204 bp. Three groups of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified according to their gene expression patterns, including 38 linearly related DEGs whose expression patterns were linearly correlated with hydrostatic pressure, 244 pressure-sensitive DEGs which were up-regulated at both 15 and 25 MPa, and 257 high-pressure-induced DEGs which were up-regulated at 25 MPa but not up-regulated at 15 MPa.ConclusionsOur results indicated that the genes and biological processes involving high-pressure acclimation are similar to those related to deep-sea adaptation. In addition to representative biological processes involving deep-sea adaptation (such as antioxidation, immune response, genetic information processing, and DNA repair), two biological processes, namely, ubiquitination and endocytosis, which can collaborate with each other and regulate the elimination of misfolded proteins, also responded to high-pressure exposure in our study. The up-regulation of these two processes suggested that high hydrostatic pressure would lead to the increase of misfolded protein synthesis, and this may result in the death of shallow-water sea cucumber under high-pressure exposure.

Highlights

  • Global climate change is predicted to force the bathymetric migrations of shallow-water marine invertebrates

  • A total of 9 individuals (3 individuals from each experimental group) were highpressure incubated for transcriptome analysis

  • The scientific question of this study is how shallow-water invertebrates acclimatize to high-pressure environment, and we suggested that the acclimation mechanisms identified in the species A. japonicus are similar to other sea cucumber species

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Global climate change is predicted to force the bathymetric migrations of shallow-water marine invertebrates. The bathymetric migrations of marine fauna are predicted to be constrained by the combined effects of temperature, Liang et al BMC Genomics (2020) 21:68 transcriptome analysis was seldom applied to relevant studies, and the molecular mechanisms of shallow-water invertebrates to acclimatize to high-pressure environment is not yet fully understood. This question is important in the present context of climate change and ocean warming. Many biological processes, including alanine biosynthesis [13], antioxidation [14, 15], energy metabolism [13, 16], immunity [16, 17], fatty acid metabolism [18], and genetic information processing [13], are related to deep-sea adaptation

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call