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Integr Comp Biol. 2021 Nov 17;61(5):1715-1729. doi: 10.1093/icb/icab176.

Physiological Variation in Response to Vibrio and Hypoxia by Aquacultured Eastern Oysters in the Southeastern United States.

Integrative and comparative biology

Denise Furr, Remi N Ketchum, Britney L Phippen, Adam M Reitzel, Anna V Ivanina

Affiliations

  1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Blvd. Charlotte, North Carolina 28223, Charlotte, NC, USA.
  2. Levine Cancer Institute, Atrium Health, 1021 Morehead Medical Drive Charlotte, North Carolina 28204, Charlotte, NC, USA.

PMID: 34351419 DOI: 10.1093/icb/icab176

Abstract

Eastern oysters (Crassostrea virginica) have long been recognized as model organisms of extreme environmental tolerance, showing resilience to variation in temperature, salinity, hypoxia, and microbial pathogens. These phenotypic responses, however, show variability between geographic locations or habitats (e.g., tidal). Physiological, morphological, and genetic differences occur in populations throughout a species' geographical range, which may have been shaped by regional abiotic and biotic variations. Few studies of C. virginica have explored the combined factors of physiological mechanisms of divergent phenotypes between locations and the genetic relationships of individuals between these locations. To characterize genetic relationships of four locations with aquacultured oysters along the North Carolina and Virginia coast, we sequenced a portion of cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) that revealed significant variation in haplotype distribution between locations. We then measured mitochondrial physiology and expression of the innate immunity response of hemocytes to lab acclimation and combined stress conditions to compare basal expression and stress response in oysters between these locations. For stress sensing genes, toll-like receptors had the strongest location-specific response to hypoxia and Vibrio, whereas mannose receptor and a stress-receptor were specific to hypoxia and bacteria, respectively. The expression of stress response genes also showed location-specific and stressor-specific changes in expression, particularly for big defensin and the complement gene Cq3. Our results further suggested that genetic similarity of oysters from different locations was not clearly related to physiological and molecular responses. These results are informative for understanding the range of physiological plasticity for stress responses in this commercially important oyster species. They also have implications in the oyster farming industry as well as conservation efforts to restore endangered native oyster beds.

© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.

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