AI Article Synopsis

  • Temperature significantly impacts embryonic development in marine organisms, particularly in cephalopods, where the effects of autophagy and apoptosis during temperature fluctuations are not well understood.
  • In an experiment with embryos at varying temperatures (18 °C, 23 °C, and 28 °C), results showed that higher temperatures increased mortality and malformation rates while reducing development time.
  • The study identified early developmental stages as particularly sensitive to temperature variations, revealing a connection between the expression of autophagy and apoptosis genes and the health of embryos under different temperature conditions.*

Article Abstract

Temperature is a crucial environmental factor that affects embryonic development, particularly for marine organisms with long embryonic development periods. However, the sensitive period of embryonic development and the role of autophagy/apoptosis in temperature regulation in cephalopods remain unclear. In this study, we cultured embryos of , a typical species in the local area of the East China Sea, at different incubation temperatures (18 °C, 23 °C, and 28 °C) to investigate various developmental aspects, including morphological and histological characteristics, mortality rates, the duration of embryonic development, and expression patterns of autophagy-related genes (, , ) and apoptosis marker genes (, ) at 25 developmental stages. Our findings indicate that embryos in the high-temperature (28 °C) group had significantly higher mortality and embryonic malformation rates than those in the low-temperature (18 °C) group. Furthermore, high temperature (28 °C) shortened the duration of embryonic development by 7 days compared to the optimal temperature (23 °C), while low temperature (18 °C) caused a delay of 9 days. Therefore, embryos of were more intolerant to high temperatures (28 °C), emphasizing the critical importance of maintaining an appropriate incubation temperature (approximately 23 °C). Additionally, our study observed, for the first time, that the Early blastula, Blastopore closure, and Optic vesicle to Caudal end stages were the most sensitive stages. During these periods, abnormalities in the expression of autophagy-related and apoptosis-related genes were associated with higher rates of mortality and malformations, highlighting the strong correlation and potential interaction between autophagy and apoptosis in embryonic development under varying temperature conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10607546PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015365DOI Listing

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