Abstract

Previous research on Antarctic notothenioids has demonstrated that cells of cold-adapted Antarctic notothenioids lack a common cellular defense mechanism called the heat shock response (HSR), the induction of a family of heat shock proteins (Hsps) in response to elevated temperatures. The goal of this study was to address how widespread the loss of the HSR is within the Notothenioidei suborder and, specifically, to ask whether cold temperate non-Antarctic notothenioids possess the HSR. In general, Antarctic fish have provided an important opportunity for physiologists to examine responses to selection in the environment and to ask whether traits of the notothenioids represent cold adaptation, or whether the traits are related to history and are characteristics of the notothenioid lineage. Using in vivo metabolic labeling, results indicate that one of the two New Zealand notothenioids possess an HSR. The thornfish, Bovichtus variegatus Richardson, 1846, expressed heat shock proteins (Hsp) in response to heat stress, whereas the black cod, Notothenia angustata Hutton, 1875, did not display robust stress-inducible Hsp synthesis at the protein-level. However, further analysis using Northern blotting clearly demonstrated that mRNA for a common Hsp gene, hsp70, was present in cells of both New Zealand species following exposure to elevated temperatures. Overall, combined evidence on the HSR in notothenioid fishes from temperate New Zealand waters indicate that the loss of the HSR in Antarctic notothenioid fishes occurred after the separation of Bovichtidae from the other Antarctic notothenioid families, and that the HSR was most likely lost during evolution at cold and constant environmental temperatures.

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