Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.

Painted turtles are the most anoxia-tolerant tetrapods known, capable of surviving without oxygen for more than four months at 3°C and 30 hours at 20°C. To investigate the transcriptomic basis of this ability, we used RNA-seq to quantify mRNA expression in the painted turtle ventricle and telencepha...

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Main Authors: Sarah W Keenan, Craig A Hill, Cyriac Kandoth, Leslie T Buck, Daniel E Warren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4493013?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e09cee32c7804f859f726e29b8d6b0322020-11-25T01:45:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013166910.1371/journal.pone.0131669Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.Sarah W KeenanCraig A HillCyriac KandothLeslie T BuckDaniel E WarrenPainted turtles are the most anoxia-tolerant tetrapods known, capable of surviving without oxygen for more than four months at 3°C and 30 hours at 20°C. To investigate the transcriptomic basis of this ability, we used RNA-seq to quantify mRNA expression in the painted turtle ventricle and telencephalon after 24 hours of anoxia at 19°C. Reads were obtained from 22,174 different genes, 13,236 of which were compared statistically between treatments for each tissue. Total tissue RNA contents decreased by 16% in telencephalon and 53% in ventricle. The telencephalon and ventricle showed ≥ 2x expression (increased expression) in 19 and 23 genes, respectively, while only four genes in ventricle showed ≤ 0.5x changes (decreased expression). When treatment effects were compared between anoxic and normoxic conditions in the two tissue types, 31 genes were increased (≥ 2x change) and 2 were decreased (≤ 0.5x change). Most of the effected genes were immediate early genes and transcription factors that regulate cellular growth and development; changes that would seem to promote transcriptional, translational, and metabolic arrest. No genes related to ion channels, synaptic transmission, cardiac contractility or excitation-contraction coupling changed. The generalized expression pattern in telencephalon and across tissues, but not in ventricle, correlated with the predicted metabolic cost of transcription, with the shortest genes and those with the fewest exons showing the largest increases in expression.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4493013?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah W Keenan
Craig A Hill
Cyriac Kandoth
Leslie T Buck
Daniel E Warren
spellingShingle Sarah W Keenan
Craig A Hill
Cyriac Kandoth
Leslie T Buck
Daniel E Warren
Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sarah W Keenan
Craig A Hill
Cyriac Kandoth
Leslie T Buck
Daniel E Warren
author_sort Sarah W Keenan
title Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.
title_short Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.
title_full Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.
title_fullStr Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptomic Responses of the Heart and Brain to Anoxia in the Western Painted Turtle.
title_sort transcriptomic responses of the heart and brain to anoxia in the western painted turtle.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Painted turtles are the most anoxia-tolerant tetrapods known, capable of surviving without oxygen for more than four months at 3°C and 30 hours at 20°C. To investigate the transcriptomic basis of this ability, we used RNA-seq to quantify mRNA expression in the painted turtle ventricle and telencephalon after 24 hours of anoxia at 19°C. Reads were obtained from 22,174 different genes, 13,236 of which were compared statistically between treatments for each tissue. Total tissue RNA contents decreased by 16% in telencephalon and 53% in ventricle. The telencephalon and ventricle showed ≥ 2x expression (increased expression) in 19 and 23 genes, respectively, while only four genes in ventricle showed ≤ 0.5x changes (decreased expression). When treatment effects were compared between anoxic and normoxic conditions in the two tissue types, 31 genes were increased (≥ 2x change) and 2 were decreased (≤ 0.5x change). Most of the effected genes were immediate early genes and transcription factors that regulate cellular growth and development; changes that would seem to promote transcriptional, translational, and metabolic arrest. No genes related to ion channels, synaptic transmission, cardiac contractility or excitation-contraction coupling changed. The generalized expression pattern in telencephalon and across tissues, but not in ventricle, correlated with the predicted metabolic cost of transcription, with the shortest genes and those with the fewest exons showing the largest increases in expression.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4493013?pdf=render
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