Tissue-specific response of transposable elements to temperature stress in the Antarctic fish Trematomus bernacchii
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2024-06Abstract
Genome architecture is deeply influenced by Transposable elements (TEs) activity.
Through their ability to migrate from one location to another, TEs are one of the main
drivers of genomic plasticity. This distinctive feature contributes to biological evolution
and adaptation to environmental changes. Climate changes affect the whole world, as in
Antarctica, where the suborder Notothenioidei dominate the fish fauna in terms of number
of species and biomass. Trematomus, due to its peculiar characteristics, is one of the most
studied genera belonging to Notothenioidei, and it is a good model to investigate the
effects that the increase in temperature can cause in transposable elements. We analyzed
the available RNA-Seq data obtained from specimens of Trematomus bernacchii exposed
at two different temperatures, -0.9 °C and 0.6 °C for three different periods of exposition
(six hours, seven days, and twenty days). The aim was to investigate the transcriptional
activity of TEs and that of genes encoding for proteins involved in their silencing
mechanisms in two different tissues (gill and brain). Our findings highlighted a variation
in TE transcriptional activity in the two analysed tissues as a consequence of the
temperature stress. A remarkable upregulation of TEs in the six hours and seven days
periods was observed. On the contrary, a stabilization of the TE transcriptional values
was observed for the twenty days of exposition. Moreover, the transcriptional analysis of
genes encoding proteins involved in TE silencing such as those responsible for
heterochromatin formation, of the NuRD complex, and the argonaute family highlighted
their activity in both tissues with a prompter response in the brain than in the gill. Overall,
our findings suggested that T. bernacchii can adapt to temperature changes in less than
twenty days corroborating the idea that TEs might represent a promising molecular tool
for species adaptation.
Document Type
Project / Final year job or degree
Language
English
Keywords
Peixos antàrtics
Pages
42 p.
Note
Curs 2023-2024
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Grau en Biologia [65]
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