Evolutionary Adaptation of Protein Turnover in White Muscle of Stenothermal Antarctic Fish: Elevated Cold Compensation at Reduced Thermal Responsiveness

Protein turnover is highly energy consuming and overall relates to an organism's growth performance varying largely between species, e.g., due to pre-adaptation to environmental characteristics such as temperature. Here, we determined protein synthesis rates and capacity of protein degradation in white muscle of the cold stenothermal Antarctic eelpout (Pachycara brachycephalum) and its closely related temperate counterpart, the eurythermal common eelpout (Zoarces viviparus). Both species were exposed to acute warming (P. brachycephalum, 0 °C + 2 °C/day; Z. viviparus, 4 °C + 3 °C/day). The in vivo protein synthesis rate (Ks) was monitored after injection of 13C-phenylalanine, and protein degradation capacity was quantified by measuring the activity of cathepsin D in vitro. Untargeted metabolic profiling by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was used to identify the metabolic processes involved. Independent of temperature, the protein synthesis rate was higher in P. brachycephalum (Ks = 0.38–0.614 %/day) than in Z. viviparus (Ks= 0.148-0.379%/day). Whereas protein synthesis remained unaffected by temperature in the Antarctic species, protein synthesis in Z. viviparus increased to near the thermal optimum (16 °C) and tended to fall at higher temperatures. Most strikingly, capacities for protein degradation were about ten times higher in the Antarctic compared to the temperate species. These differences are mirrored in the metabolic profiles, with significantly higher levels of complex and essential amino acids in the free cytosolic pool of the Antarctic congener. Together, the results clearly indicate a highly cold-compensated protein turnover in the Antarctic eelpout compared to its temperate confamilial. Constant versus variable environments are mirrored in rigid versus plastic functional responses of the protein synthesis machinery.

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Krebs, Nina, Bock, Christian, Tebben, Jan, Mark, Felix Christopher, Lucassen, Magnus, Lannig, Gisela, Pörtner, Hans-Otto (2023). Dataset: Evolutionary Adaptation of Protein Turnover in White Muscle of Stenothermal Antarctic Fish: Elevated Cold Compensation at Reduced Thermal Responsiveness. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.963276

DOI retrieved: 2023

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Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-4.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.963276
Author Krebs, Nina
Given Name Nina
Family Name Krebs
More Authors
Bock, Christian
Tebben, Jan
Mark, Felix Christopher
Lucassen, Magnus
Lannig, Gisela
Pörtner, Hans-Otto
Source Creation 2023
Publication Year 2023
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Krebs-etal_2023
Subject Areas
Name: BiologicalClassification

Name: Chemistry

Related Identifiers
Title: Evolutionary Adaptation of Protein Turnover in White Muscle of Stenothermal Antarctic Fish: Elevated Cold Compensation at Reduced Thermal Responsiveness
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13101507
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2023
Source: Biomolecules
Authors: Krebs Nina , Bock Christian , Tebben Jan , Mark Felix Christopher , Lucassen Magnus , Lannig Gisela , Pörtner Hans-Otto .