AI Article Synopsis

  • Some microinvertebrates, like tardigrades, can survive extreme dehydration through a process called anhydrobiosis, but there is limited knowledge about how this ability varies across different species and environments.
  • A new metric, the anhydrobiotic recovery index (ARI), was developed to assess the anhydrobiotic performance of tardigrade populations, considering factors like habitat humidity and evolutionary history.
  • The study found that while ARI is influenced by moisture conditions, it is mainly determined by phylogenetic niche conservatism, highlighting significant variability in anhydrobiotic performance among closely related species.

Article Abstract

Desiccation stress is lethal to most animals. However, some microinvertebrate groups have evolved coping strategies, such as the ability to undergo anhydrobiosis (i.e. survival despite the loss of almost all body water). Tardigrades are one such group, where the molecular mechanisms of anhydrobiosis have been more thoroughly studied. Despite the ecological, evolutionary and biotechnological importance of anhydrobiosis, little is known about its inter- and intra-specific variability nor its relationship with natural habitat conditions or phylogenetic history. We developed a new index-anhydrobiotic recovery index (ARI)-to evaluate the anhydrobiotic performance of tardigrade populations from the family Macrobiotidae. Moreover, we compared the explanatory role of habitat humidity and phylogenetic history on this trait using a variance partitioning approach. We found that ARI is correlated with both microhabitat humidity and yearly rainfall, but it is mostly driven by phylogenetic niche conservatism (i.e. a high portion of ARI variation is explained by phylogeny alone). Finally, we showed that anhydrobiotic performance is highly variable, even between closely related species, and that their response to local ecological conditions is tightly linked to their phylogenetic history. This study not only presents key insights into an emerging model system, but also provides a new methodological approach for wider scale studies of the ecological and evolutionary implications of anhydrobiosis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.14031DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Some microinvertebrates, like tardigrades, can survive extreme dehydration through a process called anhydrobiosis, but there is limited knowledge about how this ability varies across different species and environments.
  • A new metric, the anhydrobiotic recovery index (ARI), was developed to assess the anhydrobiotic performance of tardigrade populations, considering factors like habitat humidity and evolutionary history.
  • The study found that while ARI is influenced by moisture conditions, it is mainly determined by phylogenetic niche conservatism, highlighting significant variability in anhydrobiotic performance among closely related species.
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Genomic safe harbors (GSHs) provide ideal integration sites for generating transgenic organisms and cells and can be of great benefit in advancing the basic and applied biology of a particular species. Here we report the identification of GSHs in a dry-preservable insect cell line, Pv11, which derives from the sleeping chironomid, , and similar to the larvae of its progenitor species exhibits extreme desiccation tolerance. To identify GSHs, we carried out genome analysis of transgenic cell lines established by random integration of exogenous genes and found four candidate loci.

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Anhydrobiosis, one of the most extensively studied forms of cryptobiosis, is induced in certain organisms as a response to desiccation. Anhydrobiotic species has been hypothesized to produce substances that can protect their biological components and/or cell membranes without water. In extremotolerant tardigrades, highly hydrophilic and heat-soluble protein families, cytosolic abundant heat-soluble (CAHS) proteins, have been identified, which are postulated to be integral parts of the tardigrades' response to desiccation.

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