School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine, 5751 Murray Hall, Orono, ME 04469, USA; Aquaculture Research Institute, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469, USA.
Department of Animal Sciences and Aquaculture, Faculty of Agriculture, Dalhousie University, 58 Sipu Awti, Bible Hill, NS B2N 5E3, Canada.
Comp Biochem Physiol Part D Genomics Proteomics. 2020 Dec;36:100716. doi: 10.1016/j.cbd.2020.100716. Epub 2020 Aug 5.
The American lobster (Homarus americanus) is one of the most iconic and economically valuable fishery species in the Northwestern Atlantic. Surface ocean temperatures are rapidly increasing across much of the species' range, raising concern about resiliency in the face of environmental change. Warmer temperatures accelerate rates of larval development and enhance survival to the postlarval stage, but the potential costs at the molecular level have rarely been addressed. We explored how exposure to current summer temperatures (16 °C) or temperature regimes mimicking projected moderate or extreme warming scenarios (18 °C and 22 °C, respectively) for the Gulf of Maine during development influences the postlarval lobster transcriptome. After de novo assembling the transcriptome, we identified 2542 differentially expressed (DE; adjusted p < 0.05) transcripts in postlarvae exposed to 16 °C vs. 22 °C, and 422 DE transcripts in postlarvae reared at 16 °C vs. 18 °C. Lobsters reared at 16 °C significantly over-expressed transcripts related to cuticle formation and the immune response up to 14.4- and 8.5-fold respectively, relative to those reared at both 18 °C and 22 °C. In contrast, the expression of transcripts affiliated with metabolism increased up to 7.1-fold as treatment temperature increased. These results suggest that lobsters exposed to projected warming scenarios during development experience a shift in the transcriptome that reflects a potential trade-off between maintaining immune defenses and sustaining increased physiological rates under a warming environment. This could have major implications for post-settlement survival through increased risk of mortality due to disease and/or starvation if energetic demands cannot be met.
美洲龙虾(Homarus americanus)是西北大西洋最具标志性和经济价值的渔业物种之一。该物种分布范围内的大部分地区表面海水温度正在迅速升高,这引发了人们对其在环境变化面前的恢复力的担忧。较高的温度会加速幼虫的发育速度,并提高幼体到后期的存活率,但在分子水平上的潜在代价却很少被关注。我们研究了在缅因湾夏季(16°C)或模拟的温和或极端变暖情景下(分别为 18°C 和 22°C)的温度条件下暴露对幼体龙虾转录组的影响。在从头组装转录组后,我们发现暴露于 16°C 与 22°C 条件下的幼体中存在 2542 个差异表达(DE;调整后的 p 值<0.05)转录本,而在 16°C 与 18°C 条件下的幼体中存在 422 个 DE 转录本。在 16°C 条件下培育的龙虾,与在 18°C 和 22°C 条件下培育的龙虾相比,与甲壳质形成和免疫反应相关的转录本的表达水平分别显著上调了 14.4 倍和 8.5 倍。相比之下,随着处理温度的升高,与代谢相关的转录本的表达水平上调了 7.1 倍。这些结果表明,在发育过程中暴露于预测变暖情景下的龙虾,其转录组发生了变化,反映了在变暖环境下维持免疫防御和维持生理速率增加之间的潜在权衡。如果不能满足能量需求,这可能会对定居后的生存产生重大影响,导致死亡率增加,原因是疾病和/或饥饿。