Marine Heat Waves (MHWs) occurrence has been increasing in the Mediterranean Sea. The effects of field simulated MHWs of different intensity (medium and high temperature) on the transcriptome expression of the endemic seagrass Posidonia oceanica were evaluated considering different origins of the plant. The aim of the study was reached through a common garden transplant experiment in the North-west of Sardinia (Italy), where two P. oceanica meadows characterized by different thermal regimes (cold and warm) were chosen. MHWs were simulated in front of a power plant, that creates a natural laboratory by releasing warm water in the sea. Differential gene expression and GO enrichment analyses highlighted differences in the transcriptomic profiles of plants from cold and warm environments suggesting that the MHWs induced different levels of stress due to different tolerance to the heat event. Plants from both origins activated processes to achieve protein homeostasis, but only cold plants activated an antioxidant defense and altered sugar metabolism, both indicators of heat stress. Within plants of the same origin, a different response to MHW intensity was also detected: while warm plants showed the most complex response at high temperature rather than at medium temperature, cold plants seemed to better cope with the medium temperature intensity rather than with high temperature.
The intensity of a field simulated marine heat wave differentially modulates the transcriptome expression of Posidonia oceanica from warm and cold environments / Stipcich, Patrizia; Ceccherelli, Giulia; Marín-Guirao, Lázaro; Pazzaglia, Jessica; Santillán-Sarmiento, Alex; Procaccini, Gabriele. - In: MARINE BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0025-3162. - 171:10(2024). [10.1007/s00227-024-04501-7]
The intensity of a field simulated marine heat wave differentially modulates the transcriptome expression of Posidonia oceanica from warm and cold environments
Stipcich, Patrizia
;Ceccherelli, Giulia;
2024-01-01
Abstract
Marine Heat Waves (MHWs) occurrence has been increasing in the Mediterranean Sea. The effects of field simulated MHWs of different intensity (medium and high temperature) on the transcriptome expression of the endemic seagrass Posidonia oceanica were evaluated considering different origins of the plant. The aim of the study was reached through a common garden transplant experiment in the North-west of Sardinia (Italy), where two P. oceanica meadows characterized by different thermal regimes (cold and warm) were chosen. MHWs were simulated in front of a power plant, that creates a natural laboratory by releasing warm water in the sea. Differential gene expression and GO enrichment analyses highlighted differences in the transcriptomic profiles of plants from cold and warm environments suggesting that the MHWs induced different levels of stress due to different tolerance to the heat event. Plants from both origins activated processes to achieve protein homeostasis, but only cold plants activated an antioxidant defense and altered sugar metabolism, both indicators of heat stress. Within plants of the same origin, a different response to MHW intensity was also detected: while warm plants showed the most complex response at high temperature rather than at medium temperature, cold plants seemed to better cope with the medium temperature intensity rather than with high temperature.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.