Differential expression of olfactory genes in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) during the parr-smolt transformation
The anadromous salmon life-cycle includes two migratory events, downstream smolt migration and adult homing migration, during which they must navigate with high precision. During homing migration, olfactory cues are used for navigation in coastal and freshwater areas, and studies have suggested that...
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Zusammenfassung: | The anadromous salmon life-cycle includes two migratory events, downstream
smolt migration and adult homing migration, during which they must
navigate with high precision. During homing migration, olfactory cues are
used for navigation in coastal and freshwater areas, and studies have
suggested that the parr-smolt transformation has a sensitive period for
imprinting. Accordingly, we hypothesized that there would be significant
changes in gene expression in the olfactory epithelium specifically
related to smoltification and sampled olfactory rosettes from
hatchery-reared upper growth modal juvenile Atlantic salmon at three-week
intervals from January to June, using lower growth modal non-smolting
siblings as controls. A suite of olfactory receptors and receptor-specific
proteins involved in functional aspects of olfaction and peripheral odor
memorization was analyzed by qPCR. Gene expression in juveniles was
compared with mature adult salmon of the same genetic strain caught in the
river Gudenaa. All mRNAs displayed significant variation over time in both
modal groups. Furthermore, 5 receptor genes (olfc13.1, olfc15.1, sorb,
ora2, asor1) and four olfactory-specific genes (soig, ependymin, gst,
omp2) were differentially regulated between modal groups, suggesting
altered olfactory function during smoltification. Several genes were
differentially regulated in mature salmon compared to juveniles,
suggesting that homing and odor recollection involves a different set of
genes than during imprinting. Thyroid hormone receptors thrα and thrβ
mRNAs were elevated during smolting suggesting increased sensitivity to
thyroid hormones. Treatment of pre-smolts with triiodothyronine in vivo
and ex vivo had, however, only subtle effects on the investigated
olfactory targets, questioning the hypothesis that thyroid hormones
directly regulate gene expression in the olfactory epithelium. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.r7sqv9s7j |