Literature DB >> 36003414

Elevated Salinity Rapidly Confers Cross-Tolerance to High Temperature in a Splash-Pool Copepod.

Mark W Denny1, W Wesley Dowd2.   

Abstract

Accurate forecasting of organismal responses to climate change requires a deep mechanistic understanding of how physiology responds to present-day variation in the physical environment. However, the road to physiological enlightenment is fraught with complications: predictable environmental fluctuations of any single factor are often accompanied by substantial stochastic variation and rare extreme events, and several factors may interact to affect physiology. Lacking sufficient knowledge of temporal patterns of co-variation in multiple environmental stressors, biologists struggle to design and implement realistic and relevant laboratory experiments. In this study, we directly address these issues, using measurements of the thermal tolerance of freshly collected animals and long-term field records of environmental conditions to explore how the splash-pool copepod Tigriopus californicus adjusts its physiology as its environment changes. Salinity and daily maximum temperature-two dominant environmental stressors experienced by T. californicus-are extraordinarily variable and unpredictable more than 2-3 days in advance. However, they substantially co-vary such that when temperature is high salinity is also likely to be high. Copepods appear to take advantage of this correlation: median lethal temperature of field-collected copepods increases by 7.5°C over a roughly 120 parts-per-thousand range of ambient salinity. Complementary laboratory experiments show that exposure to a single sublethal thermal event or to an abrupt shift in salinity also elicits rapid augmentation of heat tolerance via physiological plasticity, although the effect of salinity dwarfs that of temperature. These results suggest that T. californicus's physiology keeps pace with the rapid, unpredictable fluctuations of its hypervariable physical environment by responding to the cues provided by recent sublethal stress and, more importantly, by leveraging the mechanistic cross-talk between responses to salinity and heat stress.
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 36003414      PMCID: PMC9394168          DOI: 10.1093/iob/obac037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Integr Org Biol        ISSN: 2517-4843


  58 in total

Review 1.  Multiple Stressors in a Changing World: The Need for an Improved Perspective on Physiological Responses to the Dynamic Marine Environment.

Authors:  Alex R Gunderson; Eric J Armstrong; Jonathon H Stillman
Journal:  Ann Rev Mar Sci       Date:  2015-09-10

2.  Physiological responses to shifts in multiple environmental stressors: relevance in a changing world.

Authors:  Anne E Todgham; Jonathon H Stillman
Journal:  Integr Comp Biol       Date:  2013-07-26       Impact factor: 3.326

3.  Repeated stress exposure results in a survival-reproduction trade-off in Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  Katie E Marshall; Brent J Sinclair
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2009-11-25       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Multimodal in situ datalogging quantifies inter-individual variation in thermal experience and persistent origin effects on gaping behavior among intertidal mussels (Mytilus californianus).

Authors:  Luke P Miller; W Wesley Dowd
Journal:  J Exp Biol       Date:  2017-08-29       Impact factor: 3.312

5.  Consequences of HSF knockdown on gene expression during the heat shock response in Tigriopus californicus.

Authors:  Alice E Harada; Ronald S Burton
Journal:  J Exp Biol       Date:  2020-02-05       Impact factor: 3.312

6.  Phenotypic and transcriptomic responses to salinity stress across genetically and geographically divergent Tigriopus californicus populations.

Authors:  Melissa B DeBiasse; Yasmeen Kawji; Morgan W Kelly
Journal:  Mol Ecol       Date:  2018-04-14       Impact factor: 6.185

7.  Neural dysfunction correlates with heat coma and CTmax in Drosophila but does not set the boundaries for heat stress survival.

Authors:  Lisa B Jørgensen; R Meldrum Robertson; Johannes Overgaard
Journal:  J Exp Biol       Date:  2020-07-10       Impact factor: 3.312

8.  Chemical chaperones regulate molecular chaperones in vitro and in cells under combined salt and heat stresses.

Authors:  S Diamant; N Eliahu; D Rosenthal; P Goloubinoff
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2001-08-21       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  Physiological effects of an allozyme polymorphism: glutamate-pyruvate transaminase and response to hyperosmotic stress in the copepod Tigriopus californicus.

Authors:  R S Burton; M W Feldman
Journal:  Biochem Genet       Date:  1983-04       Impact factor: 1.890

10.  An Experimental Test of Adaptive Introgression in Locally Adapted Populations of Splash Pool Copepods.

Authors:  Joanna S Griffiths; Yasmeen Kawji; Morgan W Kelly
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2021-04-13       Impact factor: 16.240

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.