Publications by authors named "Vittoria Todisco"

Article Synopsis
  • The study focused on thiamin (vitamin B1), a crucial micronutrient produced by bacteria and phytoplankton, highlighting its importance for higher trophic level consumers like fish and zooplankton.* -
  • Using a mesocosm system, researchers observed that while phytoplankton absorbed thiamin quickly, varying levels did not significantly impact their community structure or abundance, although nitrogen addition did.* -
  • The research found that thiamin concentrations decreased along the food chain, with only about six percent of thiamin present in producers reaching top consumers like fish, demonstrating the concept of trophic dilution for micronutrients.*
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Thiamine deficiency is an ongoing issue across the Northern Hemisphere, causing reproductive failure in multiple salmonid populations. In the Baltic Sea, a large brackish water system in northern Europe, previous research has suggested that this deficiency is associated with lipid-rich diets with a high proportion of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n-3). The mechanism proposed is that a diet abundant in highly unsaturated fatty acids, such as DHA, depletes thiamine as an antioxidant defense in adult salmonids, rather than allocating thiamine to the offspring.

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Thiamin is an essential water-soluble B vitamin known for its wide range of metabolic functions and antioxidant properties. Over the past decades, reproductive failures induced by thiamin deficiency have been observed in several salmonid species worldwide, but it is unclear why this micronutrient deficiency arises. Few studies have compared thiamin concentrations in systems of salmonid populations with or without documented thiamin deficiency.

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Circadian rhythm is well known to play a pivotal role in reproduction but the presence of a gonadal circadian rhythm is opening a lot of questions about a local regulation of reproduction. In the present study, we first set to identify the key genes driving circadian rhythmicity from the gonadal transcriptome of the swordfish, a commercially relevant species undergoing overfishing, and we then investigated whether their transcriptional activity was influenced by the maturation stage. Finally, we explored whether seasonality had the ability to modulate the expression of these genes.

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