Temperature adaptations of the thermophilic snail Echinolittorina malaccana: insights from metabolomic analysis.
Ya-Qi ChenJie WangMing-Ling LiaoXiao-Xu LiYun-Wei DongPublished in: The Journal of experimental biology (2021)
The periwinkle snail Echinolittorina malaccana, for which the upper lethal temperature is near 55°C, is one of the most heat-tolerant eukaryotes known. We conducted a multi-level investigation - including cardiac physiology, enzyme activity, and targeted and untargeted metabolomic analyses - that elucidated a spectrum of adaptations to extreme heat in this organism. All systems examined showed heat intensity-dependent responses. Under moderate heat stress (37-45°C), the snail depressed cardiac activity and entered a state of metabolic depression. The global metabolomic and enzymatic analyses revealed production of metabolites characteristic of oxygen-independent pathways of ATP generation (lactate and succinate) in the depressed metabolic state, which suggests that anaerobic metabolism was the main energy supply pathway under heat stress (37-52°C). The metabolomic analyses also revealed alterations in glycerophospholipid metabolism under extreme heat stress (52°C), which likely reflected adaptive changes to maintain membrane structure. Small-molecular-mass organic osmolytes (glycine betaine, choline and carnitine) showed complex changes in concentration that were consistent with a role of these protein-stabilizing solutes in protection of the proteome under heat stress. This thermophilic species can thus deploy a wide array of adaptive strategies to acclimatize to extremely high temperatures.
Keyphrases
- heat stress
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- high intensity
- heat shock
- left ventricular
- climate change
- single cell
- microbial community
- mass spectrometry
- ms ms
- wastewater treatment
- cancer therapy
- heart failure
- high throughput
- signaling pathway
- sleep quality
- physical activity
- drug delivery
- small molecule
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- heavy metals