Lomheim Haeli J, Reyes Rodas Lizet, Price Devon, Sarbu Serban M, Băncilă Raluca I, Carroll Cody, Freeborn Layla, Sanders Sheri, Protas Meredith E
Department of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Dominican University of California, San Rafael, California, USA.
Department of Biology, Georgetown University, Washington DC, Washington DC, USA.
Evol Dev. 2025 Sep;27(3):e70014. doi: 10.1111/ede.70014.
Sulfidic caves are harsh and extreme environments characterized by limited oxygen, low pH, and the presence of hydrogen sulfide. Amazingly, animals can live in sulfidic caves, one such animal being Asellus infernus, a representative of the Asellus aquaticus species complex, originating from Movile Cave and from old wells that represent windows of access to a sulfidic groundwater ecosystem located in southeast Romania. Little previous work has been done on lab-reared populations of A. infernus as they have been historically difficult to raise in the lab. Here, we develop resources for A. infernus, examining questions of timing of morphological differences in cave versus surface individuals, whether the environment (lab-bred vs. wild-caught) influenced size characteristics, and the genes and pathways showing differential expression between cave and surface samples. We found that A. infernus did not develop pigmentation embryonically, and juveniles had increased body length and longer antenna II as compared to surface individuals. Furthermore, we found that some of these measures differed between wild-caught and lab-reared juveniles for a given population, indicating that environmental differences can also influence these size characteristics. In addition, differential expression between cave and surface samples and allele-specific expression studies within F1 hybrids identified multiple genes, including those involved in sulfide metabolism and phototransduction. Strikingly, molecular convergence of genes involved in sulfide detoxification was observed between A. infernus and previous work on a fish that lives in both cave and sulfidic environments, Poecilia mexicana. In sum, we were able to develop embryonic and genomic tools for A. infernus, a model for understanding cave adaptation and adaptation to sulfidic environments.
硫化洞穴是恶劣的极端环境,其特点是氧气有限、pH值低且存在硫化氢。令人惊讶的是,动物能够生活在硫化洞穴中,其中一种动物是地下阿氏摇蚊,它是阿氏摇蚊物种复合体的代表,起源于莫维勒洞穴和一些旧井,这些旧井是通往罗马尼亚东南部一个硫化地下水生态系统的通道窗口。此前对实验室饲养的地下阿氏摇蚊种群研究甚少,因为它们历来很难在实验室中饲养。在这里,我们为地下阿氏摇蚊开发了相关资源,研究洞穴个体与地表个体形态差异的时间问题、环境(实验室培育与野外捕获)是否影响体型特征,以及洞穴样本和地表样本之间表现出差异表达的基因和通路。我们发现地下阿氏摇蚊胚胎期不会形成色素沉着,与地表个体相比,其幼虫体长增加且触角II更长。此外,我们发现对于给定种群,野生捕获的幼虫和实验室饲养的幼虫在某些测量指标上存在差异,这表明环境差异也会影响这些体型特征。此外,洞穴样本和地表样本之间的差异表达以及F1杂交种内的等位基因特异性表达研究确定了多个基因,包括参与硫化物代谢和光转导的基因。引人注目的是,在地下阿氏摇蚊与之前对一种同时生活在洞穴和硫化环境中的鱼类——墨西哥食蚊鱼的研究中,观察到了参与硫化物解毒的基因的分子趋同现象。总之,我们能够为地下阿氏摇蚊开发胚胎学和基因组学工具,它是理解洞穴适应和硫化环境适应的一个模型。