Department of Biological Sciences, California State University Long Beach, Long Beach, CA 90084, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, California State University Long Beach, Long Beach, CA 90084, USA
J Exp Biol. 2021 Feb 24;224(Pt 4):jeb230748. doi: 10.1242/jeb.230748.
Food-induced morphological plasticity, a type of developmental plasticity, is a well-documented phenomenon in larvae of the echinoid echinoderm, A recent study in our lab has shown that this morphological plasticity is associated with significant physiological plasticity for growth. The goal of the current study was to measure several aspects of protein metabolism in larvae growing at different rates to understand the mechanistic basis for this physiological growth plasticity. Larvae of were fed rations of 1000 algal cells ml (low-fed larvae) or 10,000 algal cells ml (high-fed larvae). Relative protein growth rate was 6.0 and 12.2% day for low- and high-fed larvae, respectively. The energetic cost of protein synthesis was similar for the two treatments at 4.91 J mg protein synthesized. Larvae in both treatments used about 50% of their metabolic energy production to fuel protein synthesis. Mass-specific rates of protein synthesis were also similar. Large differences in mass-specific rates of protein degradation were observed. Low-fed larvae had relatively low rates of degradation early in development that increased with larval age, surpassing those of high-fed larvae at 20 days post-fertilization. Changes in protein depositional efficiency during development were similar to those of larval growth efficiency, indicating that differences in protein metabolism are largely responsible for whole-organism growth plasticity. Low-fed larvae also had alanine transport rates that were 2 times higher than those of high-fed larvae. In total, these results provide an explanation for the differences in growth efficiency between low- and high-fed larvae and allow for a more integrated understanding of developmental plasticity in echinoid larvae.
摄食诱导的形态可塑性是一种发育可塑性,在海胆类棘皮动物的幼虫中已有充分的文献记载。我们实验室最近的一项研究表明,这种形态可塑性与生长的显著生理可塑性有关。本研究的目的是测量在不同生长速率下生长的幼虫的几个蛋白质代谢方面,以了解这种生理生长可塑性的机制基础。将 幼虫分别喂食 1000 个藻细胞/ml(低喂养幼虫)或 10000 个藻细胞/ml(高喂养幼虫)。低喂养和高喂养幼虫的相对蛋白质生长率分别为 6.0%和 12.2%/天。两种处理的蛋白质合成的能量成本相似,均为 4.91 J mg 合成蛋白质。两种处理的幼虫均将约 50%的代谢能用于蛋白质合成。蛋白质合成的比质量速率也相似。然而,蛋白质降解的比质量速率存在较大差异。低喂养幼虫在发育早期的降解率相对较低,随着幼虫年龄的增加而增加,在受精后 20 天超过了高喂养幼虫。发育过程中蛋白质沉积效率的变化与幼虫生长效率的变化相似,表明蛋白质代谢的差异在很大程度上是导致整个生物体生长可塑性的原因。低喂养幼虫的丙氨酸转运速率也比高喂养幼虫高 2 倍。总的来说,这些结果解释了低喂养和高喂养幼虫生长效率的差异,并允许对海胆类幼虫的发育可塑性有更综合的理解。