When Nemo finds home, he goes through major genetic changes

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Photo by Sebastian Pena Lambarri on Unsplash
Photo by Sebastian Pena Lambarri on Unsplash

Young clownfish like Nemo live an early life that's very different to their adult life on the reef and they undergo major genetic changes to adapt, according to Australian research. Watching cinnamon clownfish larvae in the lab and sequencing their mRNA at different ages, the researchers say they saw major genetic changes associated with major physiological changes. They say this is because clownfish eggs are washed out into the ocean and larvae must swim long distances against strong currents to find a reef to settle on. This means they need to swim fast and take in large amounts of oxygen when they're young, but then survive low oxygen environments on the reef at night.

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From: PLOS

Peer-reviewed                     Observational study                      Animals

Gene switches help juvenile “Nemo” fish adapt their physiology to a new life on the coral reef

Rapid gene activity changes underpin transition from open ocean swimming to settling on reef floor

Coral reef fish larvae undergo major physiological changes during their short development as they transition from long-distance dispersal in the open ocean to settling on a reef, according to a study by Adam Downie at James Cook University in Australia and colleagues, publishing May 11th in the open access journal PLOS Biology.

Coral reef fish tend to stay in the reef as adults, but when they spawn their eggs are washed into the open ocean. After hatching, the larvae swim against strong currents to settle on a reef, an energetically demanding task. Once settled on the reef floor, they must survive low-oxygen (hypoxic) environments at night. To understand how fish larvae cope with these two opposing challenges, the researchers collected daily measurements of swimming speed, oxygen uptake, and hypoxia tolerance in cinnamon anemonefish (Amphiprion melanopus) larvae in the laboratory from hatching until day nine, when they usually settle.

They found swimming speed increased from three body-lengths per second at hatching to ten body-lengths per second by day nine. Oxygen uptake rates decreased, and hypoxia tolerance increased around day five. The team sequenced mRNA from larvae of different ages to investigate changes in gene activity changes during development. Physiological changes were correlated with the production of different hemoglobin subunits. Activity of 2,470 genes changed during development, with the biggest shift between four and nine after hatching. This included increased expression of the oxygen-carrying molecules myoglobin, cytoglobin, and neuroglobin.

Relative to their body size, cinnamon anemonefish larvae have the highest oxygen uptake rate of any bony fish measured to date, which underpins their exceptional swimming performance. The authors suggest that changes in gene activity allow the larvae to switch from hemoglobin subunits that deliver large amounts of oxygen to tissues for swimming, to different subunits that help them cope with hypoxic conditions on the reef floor.

Downie adds, “Anemonefishes are miniature athletes as larvae so they are able to swim against ocean currents and find a home coral reef to settle on. When they are close to finding a reef, they lower their oxygen uptake rates and their haemoglobin changes to be able to tolerate the low oxygen levels that characterise their new coral reef homes at night.”

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conference:
PLOS Biology
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: James Cook University, The University of Queensland, University of Waikato
Funder: Funding support for this research was provided by a Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (PDE150101266) and L’Oreal UNESCO Women in Science Foundation to JLR, infrastructure and research allocation from the ARC Center of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies to JLR and ATD, International Research Training Program Stipend from James Cook University to ATD, the German Research Foundation (IL 220/2-1 and IL 220/3-1) to BI, and the University of Oslo for SL and GN. The bioinformatics were performed on resources provided by Sigma2 - the National Infrastructure for High Performance Computing and Data Storage in Norway (projects NN8014K, and NS8014K). Funders had no role in study design, data collection or analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.
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