Abstract
The acute stress response is well-characterized, with rainbow trout as a teleost model for physiological and molecular responses. Air exposure, which stimulates an acute stress response, modulates liver microRNAs in rainbow trout; however, these highly conserved non-coding RNAs that bind to mRNA and repress translation, have never been measured in brook trout and it is unknown how miRNA expression responds following air exposure in this less studied salmonid. Our objective was to characterize the effects of air exposure on rainbow and brook trout liver miRNA expression, as well as the mRNA expression and enzyme activity that the miRNAs are predicted to target. Brook and rainbow trout were sampled pre- and 1-, 3-, and 24-h post- a three-minute air exposure. Plasma cortisol, glucose, and lactate were measured. Relative expression of miR-21a-5p, miR-143-3p, let-7a-5p and relative expression and enzyme activities of five predicted targets (pyruvate kinase, glucokinase, citrate synthase, cytochrome c oxidase, and catalase) were measured in liver. Rainbow and brook trout both had increases in plasma cortisol and lactate, while only rainbow trout had significant post-stress increases in plasma glucose. Furthermore, both trout species had increased miR-143-3p and miR-21a-5p relative expression 24-h post-stress. Four of the five enzymes measured had altered activity following stress. Brook trout miRNAs had inverse relative expression with relative catalase mRNA expression and cytochrome c oxidase enzyme activity, but no relationship was found in rainbow trout. Therefore, we have further characterized the transcriptional and enzymatic response to air exposure in two salmonids.
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More From: Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part B, Biochemistry & molecular biology
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