Transcriptionally mediated phenotypic plasticity as a mechanism of modifying traits in response to an environmental challenge remains an important area of study. We compared the transcriptional responses to low oxygen (hypoxia) of the hypoxia-tolerant intertidal fish, the tidepool sculpin (Oligocottus maculosus) with the closely related hypoxia-intolerant subtidal fish, the silverspotted sculpin (Blepsias cirrhosus) to determine whether these species use different mechanisms to cope with hypoxia. Individuals from each species were exposed to environmental O(2) tensions chosen to yield a similar level of tissue hypoxia, and gene transcription was assessed in the liver over time. There was an effect of time in hypoxia, where the greatest transcriptional change in the silverspotted sculpin occurred between 3 and 24 h in contrast to the tidepool sculpin where the largest transcriptional change occurred between 24 and 72 h of hypoxia. A number of genes showed similar hypoxia-induced transcription patterns in both species (e.g. genes associated with glycolysis and apoptosis) suggesting they are involved in a conserved hypoxia response. A large set of genes showed divergent transcriptional patterns in the two species, including fatty acid oxidation and oxidative phosphorylation, suggesting that these biological processes may contribute to explaining variation in hypoxia tolerance in these species. When both species were exposed to a single environmental O(2) tension, large transcriptional responses were seen in the hypoxia-intolerant silverspotted sculpin while almost no response was observed in the hypoxia-tolerant tidepool sculpin. Overall, divergent transcription patterns in response to both magnitude and duration of hypoxia provide insights into the processes that may determine an animal's capacity to tolerate frequent bouts of hypoxia in the wild.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.12991 | DOI Listing |
Fish Physiol Biochem
October 2023
Department of Zoology, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada.
In nature, mosshead sculpins (Clinocottus globiceps) are challenged by fluctuations in temperature and oxygen levels in their environment. However, it is unclear how mosshead sculpins modulate the permeability of their branchial epithelia to water and O in response to temperature or hypoxia stress. Acute decrease in temperature from 13 to 6 C reduced diffusive water flux rate by 22% and ṀO by 51%, whereas acute increase in temperature from 13 to 25 C increased diffusive water flux rate by 217% and ṀO by 140%, yielding overall Q values of 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Comp Physiol B
August 2023
Department of Zoology, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada.
The gill oxygen limitation hypothesis (GOLH) suggests that hypometric scaling of metabolic rate in fishes is a consequence of oxygen supply constraints imposed by the mismatched growth rates of gill surface area (a two-dimensional surface) and body mass (a three-dimensional volume). GOLH may, therefore, explain the size-dependent spatial distribution of fish in temperature- and oxygen-variable environments through size-dependent respiratory capacity, but this question is unstudied. We tested GOLH in the tidepool sculpin, Oligocottus maculosus, a species in which body mass decreases with increasing temperature- and oxygen-variability in the intertidal, a pattern consistent with GOLH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Lett
December 2022
Department of Zoology, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4.
Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
December 2020
Department of Zoology, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
Zoology (Jena)
December 2018
Friday Harbor Laboratories, University of Washington, 620 University Road, Friday Harbor, WA 98250, USA; Department of Biology, Howard University, 415 College Street NW, Washington, DC 20059 USA. Electronic address:
Tidepool sculpins (Oligocottus maculosus) have been observed moving overland in the rocky intertidal, and we documented the terrestrial walking behavior that they use to accomplish this. We quantified the terrestrial movements of O. maculosus and compared them to (1) their aquatic locomotion, (2) terrestrial locomotion of closely-related subtidal species (Leptocottus armatus and Icelinus borealis), and (3) terrestrial movements of walking catfishes (Clarias spp.
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