2021
DOI: 10.32604/biocell.2021.016121
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RNA-sequencing indicates high hemocyanin expression as a key strategy for cold adaptation in the Antarctic amphipod Eusirus cf. giganteus clade g3

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…For example, such adaptations in notothenioids include the expression of antifreeze glycoproteins, encoded by an expanded family of trypsinogen-derived genes, which prevent ice-crystal formation in body fluids [66,67], or the loss of an inducible heat shock response, which facilitates protein folding at sub-zero temperatures [68]. Nonetheless, these scientific developments have not progressed at a similar pace in invertebrates, even though molecular approaches have already shown great potential in uncovering novel cold adaptation strategies, as in the case of Antarctic amphipods [69]. Although A. colbecki is the most abundant bivalve species in Antarctic coastal waters and a key component of the Southern Ocean food web, our current knowledge of the mechanisms that enable this species to survive and thrive at sub-zero temperatures is limited to a handful of studies, none of which has exploited large-scale -omic approaches to date.…”
Section: Multiple a Colbecki Tissues Display A Shared Transcriptomic ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, such adaptations in notothenioids include the expression of antifreeze glycoproteins, encoded by an expanded family of trypsinogen-derived genes, which prevent ice-crystal formation in body fluids [66,67], or the loss of an inducible heat shock response, which facilitates protein folding at sub-zero temperatures [68]. Nonetheless, these scientific developments have not progressed at a similar pace in invertebrates, even though molecular approaches have already shown great potential in uncovering novel cold adaptation strategies, as in the case of Antarctic amphipods [69]. Although A. colbecki is the most abundant bivalve species in Antarctic coastal waters and a key component of the Southern Ocean food web, our current knowledge of the mechanisms that enable this species to survive and thrive at sub-zero temperatures is limited to a handful of studies, none of which has exploited large-scale -omic approaches to date.…”
Section: Multiple a Colbecki Tissues Display A Shared Transcriptomic ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To reduce redundancy, only the longest isoform assembled for each gene model was considered for subsequent analyses. Spurious transcripts resulting from exogenous contaminant RNAs (expected to be present due to the filter-feeding habits of C. kusceri) and those derived from poorly expressed and likely fragmented endogenous transcripts unlikely to carry out a biologically relevant role were detected as follows: Salmon v.1.2.1 [23] was used to calculate the coverage of all contigs (based on the combined mapping of all libraries), and all the contigs that did not reach the arbitrary threshold of five transcripts per million (TPM) [24] were removed, following the same protocol used in previous studies carried out by our team on aquatic invertebrates [25,26]. This process allowed discarding contigs that may have derived from exogenous contamination (e.g., due to the presence of food particles associated with gills and digestive glands, microbial cells associated with pathogens and/or symbionts, debris mixed with bivalve tissues as a result of filter-feeding, etc.…”
Section: De Novo Assembly Quality Assessment and Annotation Of The Tr...mentioning
confidence: 99%