Genes Hold Secret Of A 'Whole Range Of Biological Functions' In Survival Of Antarctic 'antifreeze Fish' 
US Source: Underwatertimes 10/16/2008
Genes Hold Secret Of A 'Whole Range Of Biological Functions' In Survival Of Antarctic 'antifreeze Fish'
A genetic study of a fish that lives in the icy waters off Antarctica sheds light on the adaptations that enable it to survive in one of the harshest environments on the planet.

The study, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is the first to search the genome of an Antarctic notothenioid fish for clues to its astounding hardiness.

There are eight families of notothenioid fish, and five of them inhabit the Southern Ocean, the frigid sea that encircles the Antarctic continent. These fish can withstand temperatures that would turn most fish to ice. Their ability to live in the cold – and oxygen-rich – extremes is so extraordinary that they make up more than 90 percent of the fish biomass of the Southern Ocean.
 

The researchers reasoned that any proteins that gave the fish an advantage in a cold, oxygen-rich environment would be expressed at high levels in the Antarctic fish. But it could also be true that specific tissues simply expressed more of certain proteins.

To get a better idea of whether the genes that were "upregulated" in D. mawsoni enhanced its survival in the Antarctic, the researchers compared gene expression in D. mawsoni and in the same tissues of several unrelated, warm-water fish. They found that most of the genes that were highly expressed in the Antarctic fish were not elevated in the warm-water fish.

When they analyzed the upregulated genes, the researchers found that many of them coded for proteins that respond to environmental stress. There were many chaperone proteins, including "heat shock proteins," for example, which protect other proteins from being damaged by stresses such as extreme cold (or heat).

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4776State's freshwater fish tainted, study saysseattlepi2006-03-19US
4777Contaminants May Play Role in Apparent Decline of White Sturgeon in Columbia RiverUnderwatertimes2006-04-06US
4778Fish larvae don't swim well because they lack controlunderwatertimes2006-04-03UK
4779Male Bass Across Region Found to Be Bearing EggsWashington Post2006-09-06US
4780Carp Found to Hold Its Breath for MonthsUnderwatertimes.com2006-04-07NO
4781Scientists worry B.C. hatchery fish threatening endangered wild chinooknanaimobulletin2021-01-02CA
4782Puyallup tribe suing Electron Dam citing fish killswral2020-12-31US
4783Some southern Ontario waterways now as salty as the ocean: WWF Canadaiheartradio2019-06-21CA
4784Port Hope boat launch delayed until further noticeNorthumberland News2017-05-23CA
4785Рыбаки выловили морского «монстра» на побережье Австралииtvzvezda2021-01-09AU
4786Help local fish environments by donating your dead Christmas treeKentucky Department of Fish & Wildlife2020-12-30US
4787Idaho fisherman sets new record for mirror carp only months after previous recordFox News2020-12-20US
4788NEWS RELEASE: VALE STOCKS ONAPING RIVER WITH LOCAL GREENHOUSE-RAISED FISHrepublicofmining.com2012-04-19CA
4789Vale release 6,000 trout in Onaping Riversudbury.com2005-09-03CA
4790Threat of Estrogen Biomagnification in Food Chain Unfounded in Top Predator FishAllen Press Publishing2005-05-10CA
4791Mass fish escape raises concerns over fish farmingabc2005-05-19AU
4792New fish species found off Taitungtaipeitimes2005-05-28TW
4793In River of Many Aliens, Snakehead Looms as ThreatWashington Post 2005-05-28US
4794Foiling fugitive fishinnovations2005-02-21CA
4795Scientist finds little surprise lurking at bottom of the harboursmh2005-07-11CA
4796Sinking Fish May Fast-Track Mercury Pollution to the Deep Seaeos.org2020-12-22US
4797Mint pollution kills 6,000 fishbbc news2005-07-04UK
4798How fish hear and make sounds at same timeinnovations2005-04-07US
4799Fishy secret of why men attractbbc news2005-03-22UK
4800Researcher Focuses on Atka MackerelNOAA2005-03-18US

215 216 217 191 of [218 - pages.]