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The time course of molecular acclimation to seawater in a euryhaline fish
by
Berumen, Michael L.
, Lehmann, Robert
, Bonzi, Lucrezia C.
, Ravasi, Timothy
, Schunter, Celia
, Monroe, Alison A.
in
631/158
/ 631/158/2452
/ 631/1647/2017
/ 631/208/199
/ 631/208/514/1949
/ 631/208/514/2254
/ Acclimation
/ Acclimatization
/ Adaptation
/ Adaptation, Physiological
/ Animals
/ Apoptosis
/ Cellular stress response
/ Chemical analysis
/ Colonization
/ Computational Biology - methods
/ Deserts
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Flash floods
/ Fresh Water
/ Freshwater fish
/ Gene expression
/ Gene Expression Profiling
/ Gene Expression Regulation
/ Genomes
/ Geography
/ High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Immune system
/ Ion transport
/ Lagoons
/ Molecular Sequence Annotation
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural populations
/ Osmoregulation
/ Osmotic pressure
/ Ponds
/ Principal Component Analysis
/ Rainfall
/ Salinity
/ Salinity effects
/ Saudi Arabia
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seawater
/ Time Factors
/ Transcriptome
/ Transcriptomes
/ Water analysis
/ Water salinity
2021
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The time course of molecular acclimation to seawater in a euryhaline fish
by
Berumen, Michael L.
, Lehmann, Robert
, Bonzi, Lucrezia C.
, Ravasi, Timothy
, Schunter, Celia
, Monroe, Alison A.
in
631/158
/ 631/158/2452
/ 631/1647/2017
/ 631/208/199
/ 631/208/514/1949
/ 631/208/514/2254
/ Acclimation
/ Acclimatization
/ Adaptation
/ Adaptation, Physiological
/ Animals
/ Apoptosis
/ Cellular stress response
/ Chemical analysis
/ Colonization
/ Computational Biology - methods
/ Deserts
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Flash floods
/ Fresh Water
/ Freshwater fish
/ Gene expression
/ Gene Expression Profiling
/ Gene Expression Regulation
/ Genomes
/ Geography
/ High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Immune system
/ Ion transport
/ Lagoons
/ Molecular Sequence Annotation
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural populations
/ Osmoregulation
/ Osmotic pressure
/ Ponds
/ Principal Component Analysis
/ Rainfall
/ Salinity
/ Salinity effects
/ Saudi Arabia
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seawater
/ Time Factors
/ Transcriptome
/ Transcriptomes
/ Water analysis
/ Water salinity
2021
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
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The time course of molecular acclimation to seawater in a euryhaline fish
by
Berumen, Michael L.
, Lehmann, Robert
, Bonzi, Lucrezia C.
, Ravasi, Timothy
, Schunter, Celia
, Monroe, Alison A.
in
631/158
/ 631/158/2452
/ 631/1647/2017
/ 631/208/199
/ 631/208/514/1949
/ 631/208/514/2254
/ Acclimation
/ Acclimatization
/ Adaptation
/ Adaptation, Physiological
/ Animals
/ Apoptosis
/ Cellular stress response
/ Chemical analysis
/ Colonization
/ Computational Biology - methods
/ Deserts
/ Fishes - physiology
/ Flash floods
/ Fresh Water
/ Freshwater fish
/ Gene expression
/ Gene Expression Profiling
/ Gene Expression Regulation
/ Genomes
/ Geography
/ High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Immune system
/ Ion transport
/ Lagoons
/ Molecular Sequence Annotation
/ multidisciplinary
/ Natural populations
/ Osmoregulation
/ Osmotic pressure
/ Ponds
/ Principal Component Analysis
/ Rainfall
/ Salinity
/ Salinity effects
/ Saudi Arabia
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Seawater
/ Time Factors
/ Transcriptome
/ Transcriptomes
/ Water analysis
/ Water salinity
2021
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The time course of molecular acclimation to seawater in a euryhaline fish
Journal Article
The time course of molecular acclimation to seawater in a euryhaline fish
2021
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Overview
The Arabian pupfish,
Aphanius dispar
, is a euryhaline fish inhabiting both inland nearly-freshwater desert ponds and highly saline Red Sea coastal lagoons of the Arabian Peninsula. Desert ponds and coastal lagoons, located respectively upstream and at the mouths of dry riverbeds (“wadies”), have been found to potentially become connected during periods of intense rainfall, which could allow the fish to migrate between these different habitats. Flash floods would therefore flush Arabian pupfish out to sea, requiring a rapid acclimation to a greater than 40 ppt change in salinity. To investigate the molecular pathways of salinity acclimation during such events, a Red Sea coastal lagoon and a desert pond population were sampled, with the latter exposed to a rapid increase in water salinity. Changes in branchial gene expression were investigated via genome-wide transcriptome measurements over time from 6 h to 21 days. The two natural populations displayed basal differences in genes related to ion transport, osmoregulation and immune system functions. These mechanisms were also differentially regulated in seawater transferred fish, revealing their crucial role in long-term adaptation. Other processes were only transiently activated shortly after the salinity exposure, including cellular stress response mechanisms, such as molecular chaperone synthesis and apoptosis. Tissue remodelling processes were also identified as transient, but took place later in the timeline, suggesting their importance to long-term acclimation as they likely equip the fish with lasting adaptations to their new environment. The alterations in branchial functional pathways displayed by Arabian pupfish in response to salinity increases are diverse. These reveal a large toolkit of molecular processes important for adaptation to hyperosmolarity that allow for successful colonization to a wide variety of different habitats.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group,Nature Portfolio
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