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
4826Highly contaminated fish in Porcupine Lake, test revealsCBC News2020-10-28CA
4827Ban on fish farms in the Discovery Islands called ‘historic’cheknews2020-12-19CA
4828See the fish that will repopulate Michigan waters with native Arctic graylingmlive2020-12-21US
4829For first time in years, chinook salmon spawn in upper Columbia River system The Associated Press2020-12-18CA
4830Atlantic Salmon Caught Near Ketchikansitnews2004-07-24US
4831Cell swap could help conservationbbc news2004-08-05JP
4832On bass lakes, turning a rite of spring into race for a recordcsmonitor2004-04-20CA
4833Escaped farmed salmon find home in Alaskasitnews2004-08-26US
4834Minnesota Couple Wins New Bass Cat In B.A.S.S. Sweepstakesfishingworld2020-12-08US
4835Finding Nemo …How do fish find and recognise ’friends’?innovations-report2004-01-12UK
4836Fisherman lands £8,000 catchbbc news2004-06-02UK
4837Rivers protected to save salmonbbc news2004-06-02UK
4838Sturgeon heads for new homebbc news2004-06-08UK
4839Wild salmon still 'in jeopardy'bbc news2004-07-03UK
4840Israeli company develops environmentally friendly fish cage systemglobes2004-06-01IL
48413 fishermen survive 5 days lost at sea on raw fish, rainwaternewsday2020-12-15TT
4842Ontario Fishing Regulation Changes for 2021Fish'n Canada2020-12-17CA
4843Fish farms on key B.C. salmon migration route to be phased out by 2022The Canadian Press 2020-12-18CA
4844Saguenay Fjord winter recreational groundfish fisherycanada.ca2020-12-22CA
4845Scientists support endangered sturgeonusatoday302004-12-18CA
4846Aquatic scientists divided on role of sea lice from salmon farms in decline of native salmon in B.C.EUREKA2004-03-03CA
4847Scare over farmed salmon safetybbc news2004-01-08US
4848Tracking fish by sonar to prevent over-fishingEUREKA2003-10-14CA
4849Antarctic fish study may aid cardiac researcheurekalert2004-03-30CA
4850Farmed sturgeon 'only hope for caviar'bbc news2002-12-02KZ

215 216 217 193 of [218 - pages.]