Molecular ecophysiology of Antarctic notothenioid fishes

被引:109
|
作者
Cheng, C.-H. Christina
Detrich, H. William, III
机构
[1] Univ Illinois, Dept Anim Biol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[2] Northeastern Univ, Dept Biol, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
Antarctic water temperatures; stenothermal; teleost freeze avoidance paradigm shift; evolutionary genomics; haemoprotein loss; notothenioid fishes;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.2006.1946
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The notothenioid fishes of the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica are remarkable examples of organismal adaptation to extreme cold. Their evolution since the mid-Miocene in geographical isolation and a chronically cold marine environment has resulted in extreme stenothermality of the extant species. Given the unique thermal history of the notothenioids, one may ask what traits have been gained, and conversely, what characters have been lost through change in the information content of their genomes. Two dramatic changes that epitomize such evolutionary transformations are the gain of novel antifreeze proteins, which are obligatory for survival in icy seawater, by most notothenioids and the paradoxical loss of respiratory haemoproteins and red blood cells, normally deemed indispensable for vertebrate life, by the species of a highly derived notothenioid family, the icefishes. Here, we review recent advances in our understanding of these traits and their evolution and suggest future avenues of investigation. The formerly coherent paradigm of notothenioid freeze avoidance, developed from three decades of study of antifreeze glycoprotein (AFGP) based cold adaptation, now faces challenges stemming from the recent discovery of antifreeze-deficient, yet freeze-resistant, early notothenioid life stages and from definitive evidence that the liver is not the physiological source of AFGPs in notothenioid blood. The resolution of these intriguing observations is likely to reveal new physiological traits that are unique to the notothenioids. Similarly, the model of AFGP gene evolution from a notothenioid pancreatic trypsinogen-like gene precursor is being expanded and refined based on genome-level analyses of the linked AFGP loci and their ancestral precursors. Finally, the application of comparative genomics to study evolutionary change in the AFGP genotypes of cool-temperate notothenioids from sub-Antarctic habitats, where these genes are not necessary, will contribute to the mechanistic understanding of the dynamics of AFGP gene gain and loss. In humans and most vertebrates, mutations in the alpha- or beta-globin genes or defects in globin chain synthesis are causes of severe genetic disease. Thus, the 16 species of haemoglobinless, erythrocytenull icefishes are surprising anomalies-in fact, they could only have evolved and thrived due to relaxed selection pressure for oxygen-binding proteins in the cold, oxygen-rich waters of the Southern Ocean. Fifteen of the sixteen icefish species have lost most of the adult alpha beta-globin locus and retain only a small 3' fragment of the alpha-globin gene. The only exception to this pattern occurs in Neopagetopsis ionah, which possesses a disrupted alpha beta-globin gene complex that probably represents a non-functional intermediate on the evolutionary pathway to near total globin gene extinction. By contrast, six of the icefish species fail to express myoglobin. The absence of myoglobin expression has occurred by several independent mutations and distinct mechanisms. Haemoprotein loss is correlated with dramatic increases in cellular mitochondrial density, heart size, blood volume and capillary bed volume. Evolution of these compensatory traits was probably facilitated by the homeostatic activity of nitric oxide, a key modulator of angiogenesis and mitochondrial biogenesis. These natural knockouts of the red blood cell lineage are an excellent genomic resource for erythroid gene discovery by comparative genomics, as illustrated for the newly described gene, bloodthirsty.
引用
收藏
页码:2215 / 2232
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Molecular cloning of cDNA encoding red opsin gene in the retinas of five Antarctic notothenioid fishes
    Miyazaki, Taeko
    Iwami, Tetsuo
    POLAR BIOLOGY, 2012, 35 (05) : 775 - 783
  • [32] Molecular cloning of cDNA encoding red opsin gene in the retinas of five Antarctic notothenioid fishes
    Taeko Miyazaki
    Tetsuo Iwami
    Polar Biology, 2012, 35 : 775 - 783
  • [33] Accelerated evolution at chaperone promoters among Antarctic notothenioid fishes
    Bogan, Samuel N.
    Place, Sean P.
    BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2019, 19 (01)
  • [34] Geographic intraspecific variation in buoyancy within Antarctic notothenioid fishes
    Near, Thomas J.
    Jones, Christopher D.
    Eastman, Joseph T.
    ANTARCTIC SCIENCE, 2009, 21 (02) : 123 - 129
  • [35] Resilience of cardiac performance in Antarctic notothenioid fishes in a warming climate
    O'Brien, Kristin M.
    Joyce, William
    Crockett, Elizabeth L.
    Axelsson, Michael
    Egginton, Stuart
    Farrell, Anthony P.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2021, 224 (10):
  • [36] Divergence in Skeletal Mass and Bone Morphology in Antarctic Notothenioid Fishes
    Eastman, Joseph T.
    Witmer, Lawrence M.
    Ridgely, Ryan C.
    Kuhn, Kristen L.
    JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, 2014, 275 (08) : 841 - 861
  • [37] Molecular evolution of ATP Synthase in notothenioid fishes
    Nagata, Ken
    Ota, Tatsuya
    GENES & GENETIC SYSTEMS, 2013, 88 (06) : 381 - 381
  • [38] Spatial patterns and behaviour of notothenioid fishes off the northern Antarctic Peninsula
    La Mesa, Mario
    La Mesa, Gabriele
    Piepenburg, Dieter
    Gutt, Julian
    Eastman, Joseph T.
    POLAR BIOLOGY, 2022, 45 (06) : 971 - 985
  • [39] Evolution of chaperome gene expression and regulatory elements in the antarctic notothenioid fishes
    Bilyk, Kevin T.
    Zhuang, Xuan
    Vargas-Chacoff, Luis
    Cheng, C-H Christina
    HEREDITY, 2021, 126 (03) : 424 - 441
  • [40] Spatial patterns and behaviour of notothenioid fishes off the northern Antarctic Peninsula
    Mario La Mesa
    Gabriele La Mesa
    Dieter Piepenburg
    Julian Gutt
    Joseph T. Eastman
    Polar Biology, 2022, 45 : 971 - 985