Salinity-induced transcriptome profiles in marine and freshwater
threespine stickleback after an abrupt six hour exposure
Abstract
Saltwater- and freshwater environments have opposing physiological
challenges, yet, there are fish species that are able to enter both
habitats during short time-spans, and as individuals they must therefore
adjust quickly to osmoregulatory contrasts. In this study, we conducted
an experiment to test for plastic responses to abrupt sainity changes in
two poplulations of threespine stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus,
representing two ecotypes (freshwater and ancestral saltwater). We
exposed both ecotypes to abrupt native (control treatment) and
non-native salinities (0 and 30‰) and sampled gill-tissue for
transcriptomic analyses after six hours exposure. To investigate genomic
responses to salinity, we analysed four different comparisons; one for
each ecotype (in their control and exposure salinity; 1 and 2), one
between ecotypes in their control salinity (3), and the fourth
comparison included all transcripts identified in (3) that did not show
any expressional changes within ecotype in either the control or the
exposed salinity (4). Abrupt salinity transfer affected the expression
of 10 and 1530 transcripts for the saltwater and freshwater ecotype,
respectively, and 1314 were differentially expressed between the
controls, including 502 that were not affected by salinity within
ecotype (fixed expression). In total, these results indicate that
factors other than genomic expressional plasticity are important for
osmoregulation in stickleback, due to the need for opposite
physiological pathways to survive the abrupt change in salinity.