Growing cold 
By Peter Rejcek US Source: Antarctic Sun 7/5/2013
Peter Rejcek
The aquarium tanks in McMurdo Station’s research laboratory, the Albert P. Crary Science and Engineering Center , contained a species of Antarctic fish during the 2012-13 austral summer that has been a rare sight in recent years — Dissostichus mawsoni.

The Antarctic toothfish, one of the largest of the 120-plus species that make up the group of fish known collectively as notothenioids , has been a favored specimen for study for nearly a half-century. Like many of the notothenioids that inhabit the Southern Ocean around Antarctica, mawsoni have special adaptations that allow them to survive in the frigid waters.
 

Perhaps the most well-known and intensely studied trait is the ability of these fish to produce a sort of antifreeze protein that binds to ice crystals in the body to prevent them from growing. Otherwise, the fish would quickly freeze and die in seawater as cold as minus 1.8 degrees Celsius.
The sheer size of Antarctic toothfish, which can tip the scale at nearly 150 kilograms, makes it an ideal candidate for researchers who need tissue and blood samples for various analyses, some studies delving deep into the organism’s cell biology, as they attempt to learn more about how mawsoni and its cousins function in the world's coldest waters.

 
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