Company, R.; Serafim, A.; Cosson, R.; Fiala-Medioni, A.; Dixon, D.; Bebianno, M.J.. 2007 Adaptation of antioxidant defence system in transplanted mussels from two mid-Atlantic Ridge hydrothermal vents. Marine Ecology, 28 (1). 93-99. 10.1111/j.1439-0485.2006.00125.x
Abstract
The vent mussel Bathymodiolus azoricus is the dominant member of the Northern
Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) hydrothermal megafauna, and lives in an
environment characterized by temporal and spatial variations in the levels of
heavy metals, methane and hydrogen sulphide, substances which are known to
increase reactive oxygen species levels in the tissues of exposed organisms.
To evaluate the effects of two contrasting hydrothermal environments on the
antioxidant defence system of this vent mussel species, a 2-week transplant
experiment was carried out involving mussels collected from the relatively deep
(2300 m), and chemical rich, Rainbow vent field. These were transplanted to
the shallower (1700 m), and relatively less toxic, Lucky Strike vent field.
To achieve this objective, levels of superoxide dismutase, catalase (CAT), total
glutathione peroxidase (GPx), selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase and
lipid peroxidation (LPO) were measured in the gills and mantle tissues of resident
and transplant mussels before and after the transplant experiment. With
the exception of CAT, the gills of the transplanted mussels had significantly
higher antioxidant enzyme activity compared with the basal levels in the donor
(Rainbow) and recipient (Lucky Strike) populations; whereas the antioxidant
enzyme levels in the mantle tissues of the transplants reflected the baseline levels
of activity in the native Lucky Strike mussels after 2 weeks. In contrast,
LPO levels were significantly higher in both tissue types in the transplants than
in either the source or the recipient populations, which suggested a response to
hydrostatic pressure change (note, the transplant animals were brought to the
surface for transportation between the two vent fields). The fact that the Rainbow
mussels survived the transplant experience indicates that B. azoricus has a
very robust constitution, which enables it to cope behaviourally, physiologically
and genetically with the extreme conditions found in its naturally contaminated
deep-sea environment.
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