Abstract

Background. Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) responsible for Diarrhetic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP) represent a major threat for human consumers of shellfish. The biotoxin Okadaic Acid (OA), a well-known phosphatase inhibitor and tumor promoter, is the primary cause of acute DSP intoxications. Although several studies have described the molecular effects of high OA concentrations on sentinel organisms (e.g., bivalve molluscs), the effect of prolonged exposures to low (sublethal) OA concentrations is still unknown. In order to fill this gap, this work combines Next-Generation sequencing and custom-made microarray technologies to develop an unbiased characterization of the transcriptomic response of mussels during early stages of a DSP bloom.Methods. Mussel specimens were exposed to a HAB episode simulating an early stage DSP bloom (200 cells/L of the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum lima for 24 h). The unbiased characterization of the transcriptomic responses triggered by OA was carried out using two complementary methods of cDNA library preparation: normalized and Suppression Subtractive Hybridization (SSH). Libraries were sequenced and read datasets were mapped to Gene Ontology and KEGG databases. A custom-made oligonucleotide microarray was developed based on these data, completing the expression analysis of digestive gland and gill tissues.Results. Our findings show that exposure to sublethal concentrations of OA is enough to induce gene expression modifications in the mussel Mytilus. Transcriptomic analyses revealed an increase in proteasomal activity, molecular transport, cell cycle regulation, energy production and immune activity in mussels. Oppositely, a number of transcripts hypothesized to be responsive to OA (notably the Serine/Threonine phosphatases PP1 and PP2A) failed to show substantial modifications. Both digestive gland and gill tissues responded similarly to OA, although expression modifications were more dramatic in the former, supporting the choice of this tissue for future biomonitoring studies.Discussion. Exposure to OA concentrations within legal limits for safe consumption of shellfish is enough to disrupt important cellular processes in mussels, eliciting sharp transcriptional changes as a result. By combining the study of cDNA libraries and a custom-made OA-specific microarray, our work provides a comprehensive characterization of the OA-specific transcriptome, improving the accuracy of the analysis of expresion profiles compared to single-replicated RNA-seq methods. The combination of our data with related studies helps understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying molecular responses to DSP episodes in marine organisms, providing useful information to develop a new generation of tools for the monitoring of OA pollution.

Highlights

  • Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) constitute an environmental phenomenon encompassing critical relevance due to their increasing frequency and impact in coastal areas (Anderson, 2009)

  • Characterization of Okadaic Acid (OA)-specific cDNA libraries in the mussel Mytilus The analysis of OA in pooled digestive gland tissue of exposed individuals revealed a concentration of 18.27 ng of OA per gram of fresh tissue in exposed individuals (OA content in controls individuals is below detection limit), an order of magnitude below the legal OA limit established for safe consumption of shellfish in the European Union (Reguera et al, 2014)

  • This result reinforces the focus of the present study on early stages of Diarrhetic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP) HAB episodes, at a moment when mussels start accumulating OA in their tissues but their commercialization is still allowed by law

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Summary

Introduction

Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) constitute an environmental phenomenon encompassing critical relevance due to their increasing frequency and impact in coastal areas (Anderson, 2009). Important efforts have been dedicated to develop rapid and sensible DSP biomonitoring methods, most notably using bivalve molluscs (e.g., mussels, oysters, clams, etc.) as sentinel organisms (Manfrin et al, 2010; Fernandez-Tajes et al, 2011; McNabb et al, 2012; Romero-Geraldo, Garcia-Lagunas & Hernandez-Saavedra, 2014; Huang et al, 2015) The choice of these organisms is supported by their wide distribution, sessile and filter-feeding lifestyles as well as their ability to accumulate high amounts of biotoxins, while displaying a strong resilience to their harmful effects (Svensson, Sarngren & Forlin, 2003; Prado-Alvarez et al, 2012; Prado-Alvarez et al, 2013). A number of transcripts hypothesized to be responsive to OA (notably the Serine/Threonine phosphatases PP1 and PP2A) failed to show substantial

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