Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
J Comp Physiol B. 2023 Mar;193(2):155-169. doi: 10.1007/s00360-022-01473-2. Epub 2023 Jan 2.
The bay mussel, Mytilus trossulus, is an animal that can survive extracellular ice formation. Depending on air and ocean temperatures, freeze tolerant intertidal organisms, like M. trossulus, may freeze and thaw many times during the winter. Freezing can cause protein denaturation, leading to an induction of the heat shock response with expression of chaperone proteins like the 70 kDa heat shock protein (HSP70), and an increase in ubiquitin-conjugated proteins. There has been little work on the mechanisms of freeze tolerance in intertidal species, limiting our understanding of this survival strategy. Additionally, this limited research has focused solely on the effects of single freezing events, but the act of repeatedly crossing the freezing threshold may present novel physiological or biochemical stressors that have yet to be discovered. Mytilus are important ecosystem engineers and provide habitat for other intertidal species, thus understanding their physiology under thermal extremes is important for preserving shoreline health. We predicted that repeated freeze exposures would increase mortality, upregulate HSP70 expression, and increase ubiquitin conjugates in mussels, relative to single, prolonged freeze exposures. Mytilus trossulus from Vancouver, Canada were repeatedly frozen for a combination of 1 × 8 h, 2 × 4 h, or 4 × 2 h. We then compared mortality, HSP70 expression, and the quantity of ubiquitin-conjugated proteins across experimental groups. We found a single 8-h freeze caused significantly more mortality than repeated freeze-thaw cycles. We also found that HSP70 and ubiquitinated protein was upregulated exclusively after freeze-thaw cycles, suggesting that freeze-thaw cycles offer a period of damage repair between freezes. This indicates that freeze-thaw cycles, which happen naturally in the intertidal, are crucial for M. trossulus survival in sub-zero temperatures.
贻贝是一种能够在细胞外形成冰的动物。根据空气和海洋温度的不同,像贻贝这样的耐冻潮间带生物在冬季可能会经历多次冻结和解冻。冻结会导致蛋白质变性,从而诱导热休克反应,表达伴侣蛋白,如 70 kDa 热休克蛋白(HSP70),并增加泛素化蛋白。关于潮间带物种的耐冻机制的研究很少,这限制了我们对这种生存策略的理解。此外,这项有限的研究仅关注单次冻结事件的影响,但反复跨越冻结阈值的行为可能会带来新的生理或生化应激因素,这些因素尚未被发现。贻贝是重要的生态系统工程师,为其他潮间带物种提供栖息地,因此了解它们在极端温度下的生理学对保护海岸线健康非常重要。我们预测,与单次长时间冻结相比,重复冻结会增加死亡率,上调 HSP70 的表达,并增加贻贝中的泛素缀合物。我们从加拿大温哥华采集贻贝,将它们进行 1×8 h、2×4 h 或 4×2 h 的组合式重复冻结。然后,我们比较了死亡率、HSP70 的表达和泛素缀合蛋白在实验组之间的差异。我们发现单次 8 小时的冻结会导致比重复冻结-解冻循环更高的死亡率。我们还发现 HSP70 和泛素化蛋白仅在冻结-解冻循环后上调,这表明冻结-解冻循环在冻结之间提供了一个修复损伤的时期。这表明,在潮间带自然发生的冻结-解冻循环对贻贝在亚零温度下的生存至关重要。