Seasonal Proteome Variations in Reveal Molecular Thermal Stress Adaptations.

Proteomes

Biomedical Proteomics Facility, Microbiology and Immunology Department, Universidad Central del Caribe, Bayamón, PR 00960, USA.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Tropical coral reefs typically experience slight temperature changes, but even a 1 °C increase can destabilize coral health, leading to worldwide losses.
  • The Caribbean offers a unique environment to study coral responses to seasonal temperature variations, with cooler conditions in January-February and warmer conditions in September-October.
  • Research identified significant protein changes in corals during these seasonal shifts, revealing that a 3.1 °C temperature increase affects proteins linked to stress responses and metabolism, enhancing our understanding of coral resilience to climate change.

Article Abstract

Although seasonal water temperatures typically fluctuate by less than 4 °C across most tropical reefs, sustained heat stress with an increase of even 1 °C can alter and destabilize metabolic and physiological coral functions, leading to losses of coral reefs worldwide. The Caribbean region provides a natural experimental design to study how corals respond physiologically throughout the year. While characterized by warm temperatures and precipitation, there is a significant seasonal component with relative cooler and drier conditions during the months of January to February and warmer and wetter conditions during September and October. We conducted a comparative abundance of differentially expressed proteins with two contrasting temperatures during the cold and warm seasons of 2014 and 2015 in , one of the most important and affected reef-building corals of the Caribbean. All presented proteoforms (42) were found to be significant in our proteomics differential expression analysis and classified based on their gene ontology. The results were accomplished by a combination of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE) to separate and visualize proteins and mass spectrometry (MS) for protein identification. To validate the differentially expressed proteins of at the transcription level, qRT-PCR was performed. Our data indicated that a 3.1 °C increase in temperature in between the cold and warm seasons in San Cristobal and Enrique reefs of southwestern Puerto Rico was enough to affect the expression of a significant number of proteins associated with oxidative and heat stress responses, metabolism, immunity, and apoptosis. This research extends our knowledge into the mechanistic response of to mitigate thermal seasonal temperature variations in coral reefs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11270422PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/proteomes12030020DOI Listing

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