4.5 Article

Transcriptional response of key metabolic and stress response genes of a nuculanid bivalve, Lembulus bicuspidatus from an oxygen minimum zone exposed to hypoxia-reoxygenation

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpb.2021.110617

Keywords

Hypoxia; anoxia; OMZ margin; mRNA expression; bioenergetics; protein quality control; marine mollusks

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [03 V01279]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [415984732, GZ: SO 1333/5-1]
  3. Leibniz Association within the Leibniz ScienceCampus Phosphorus Research Rostock
  4. Kent State University Brain Health Institute Pilot Award
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIA) [R21AG064479-01]

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The study investigated the physiological adaptations of benthic animals at the edges of marine oxygen minimum zones to oxygen fluctuations, revealing that severe hypoxia stimulated anaerobic glycolysis, antioxidant protection, and quality control mechanisms in the gills. Unlike UCP2, mRNA levels of thiol-dependent mitochondrial antioxidants were not affected by hypoxia-reoxygenation stress, and marker genes for aerobic energy metabolism were not responsive to oxygen fluctuations in the bivalve species studied.
Benthic animals inhabiting the edges of marine oxygen minimum zones (OMZ) are exposed to unpredictable large fluctuations of oxygen levels. Sessile organisms including bivalves must depend on physiological adaptations to withstand these conditions. However, as habitats are rather inaccessible, physiological adaptations of the OMZ margin inhabitants to oxygen fluctuations are not well understood. We therefore investigated the transcriptional responses of selected key genes involved in energy metabolism and stress protection in a dominant benthic species of the northern edge of the Namibian OMZ, the nuculanid clam Lembulus bicuspidatus,. We exposed clams to normoxia (similar to 5.8 ml O-2 l(-1)), severe hypoxia (36 h at similar to 0.01 ml O-2 l(-1)) and post-hypoxic recovery (24 h of normoxia following 36 h of severe hypoxia). Using newly identified gene sequences, we determined the transcriptional responses to hypoxia and reoxygenation of the mitochondrial aerobic energy metabolism (pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 complex, cytochrome c oxidase, citrate synthase, and adenine nudeotide translocator), anaerobic glycolysis (hexokinase (HK), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK), phosphofructokinase, and aldolase), mitochondrial antioxidants (glutaredoxin, peroxiredoxin, and uncoupling protein UCP2) and stress protection mechanisms (a molecular chaperone HSP70 and a mitochondrial quality control protein MIEAP) in the gills and the labial palps of L. bicuspidatus. Exposure to severe hypoxia transcriptionally stimulated anaerobic glycolysis (including HK and PEPCK), antioxidant protection (UCP2), and quality control mechanisms (HSP70 and MIEAP) in the gills of L. bicuspidatus. Unlike UCP2, mRNA levels of the thiol-dependent mitochondrial antioxidants were not affected by hypoxia-reoxygenation stress. Transcript levels of marker genes for aerobic energy metabolism were not responsive to oxygen fluctuations in L. bicuspidatus. Our findings highlight the probable importance of anaerobic succinate production (via PEPCK) and mitochondrial and proteome quality control mechanisms in responses to oxygen fluctuations of the OMZ bivalve L. bicuspidatus. The reaction of L. bicuspidatus to oxygen fluctuations implies parallels to that of other hypoxia-tolerant bivalves, such as intertidal species.

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