Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.

Although temperature is known to have an important effect on protein synthesis rates and growth in aquatic ectotherms held in the laboratory, little is known about the effects of thermal gradients on natural populations in the field. To address this issue we determined whole-animal fractional rates...

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Main Authors: Samuel P S Rastrick, Nia M Whiteley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3609777?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3842c5f216cd465bb8c123448fdb035e2020-11-25T02:24:31ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0183e6005010.1371/journal.pone.0060050Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.Samuel P S RastrickNia M WhiteleyAlthough temperature is known to have an important effect on protein synthesis rates and growth in aquatic ectotherms held in the laboratory, little is known about the effects of thermal gradients on natural populations in the field. To address this issue we determined whole-animal fractional rates of protein synthesis (ks ) in four dominant species of gammarid amphipods with different distributions along the coasts of Western Europe from arctic to temperate latitudes. Up to three populations of each species were collected in the summer and ks measured within 48 h. Summer ks values were relatively high in the temperate species, Gammarus locusta, from Portugal (48°N) and Wales (53°N) and were maintained across latitudes by the conservation of translational efficiency. In sharp contrast, summer ks remained remarkably low in the boreal/temperate species G. duebeni from Wales, Scotland (58°N) and Tromsø (70°N), probably as a temporary energy saving strategy to ensure survival in rapidly fluctuating environments of the high intertidal. Values for ks increased in acclimated G. duebeni from Scotland and Tromsø showing a lack of compensation with latitude. In the subarctic/boreal species, G. oceanicus, summer ks remained unchanged in Scotland and Tromsø but fell significantly in Svalbard (79°N) at 5°C, despite a slight increase in RNA content. At 79°N, mean ks was 4.5 times higher in the circumpolar species G. setosus than in G. oceanicus due to a doubling in RNA content. The relationship between whole-animal protein synthesis rates and natural thermal gradients is complex, varies between species and appears to be associated with local temperatures and their variability, as well as changes in other environmental factors.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3609777?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samuel P S Rastrick
Nia M Whiteley
spellingShingle Samuel P S Rastrick
Nia M Whiteley
Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Samuel P S Rastrick
Nia M Whiteley
author_sort Samuel P S Rastrick
title Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.
title_short Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.
title_full Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.
title_fullStr Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.
title_full_unstemmed Influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.
title_sort influence of natural thermal gradients on whole animal rates of protein synthesis in marine gammarid amphipods.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Although temperature is known to have an important effect on protein synthesis rates and growth in aquatic ectotherms held in the laboratory, little is known about the effects of thermal gradients on natural populations in the field. To address this issue we determined whole-animal fractional rates of protein synthesis (ks ) in four dominant species of gammarid amphipods with different distributions along the coasts of Western Europe from arctic to temperate latitudes. Up to three populations of each species were collected in the summer and ks measured within 48 h. Summer ks values were relatively high in the temperate species, Gammarus locusta, from Portugal (48°N) and Wales (53°N) and were maintained across latitudes by the conservation of translational efficiency. In sharp contrast, summer ks remained remarkably low in the boreal/temperate species G. duebeni from Wales, Scotland (58°N) and Tromsø (70°N), probably as a temporary energy saving strategy to ensure survival in rapidly fluctuating environments of the high intertidal. Values for ks increased in acclimated G. duebeni from Scotland and Tromsø showing a lack of compensation with latitude. In the subarctic/boreal species, G. oceanicus, summer ks remained unchanged in Scotland and Tromsø but fell significantly in Svalbard (79°N) at 5°C, despite a slight increase in RNA content. At 79°N, mean ks was 4.5 times higher in the circumpolar species G. setosus than in G. oceanicus due to a doubling in RNA content. The relationship between whole-animal protein synthesis rates and natural thermal gradients is complex, varies between species and appears to be associated with local temperatures and their variability, as well as changes in other environmental factors.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3609777?pdf=render
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