Cloning and expression profile of the alanine aminotransferase gene from kuruma shrimp Penaeus japonicus exposed to different salinities

Author:

Koyama Hiroki1ORCID,Yamashita Kyoko2,Narita Hinano1,Hiraoka Haruki1,Sasaki Yuka2,Kamiya Kanna2,Yamakawa Rin2,Kuniyoshi Hisato23,Piyapattanakorn Sanit4,Watabe Shugo5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Food Science and Technology Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology Tokyo Japan

2. Program of Food and AgriLife Science, Graduate School of Integrated Sciences for Life Hiroshima University Hiroshima Japan

3. Seto Inland Sea Carbon‐neutral Research Center Hiroshima University Hiroshima Japan

4. Department of Marine Science, Center of Excellence for Marine Biotechnology Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand

5. Department of Marine Biochemistry, School of Marine Biosciences Kitasato University Kanagawa Japan

Abstract

AbstractSeveral crustaceans including shrimps change the amount of specific free amino acids to regulate the osmotic pressure in their bodies. Kuruma shrimp Penaeus japonicus also increases the concentration of alanine (Ala) in the abdominal muscle following the increase of environmental salinity. In the present study, to elucidate the mechanisms of changes in Ala accumulation of kuruma shrimp depending on salinity, we cloned the gene encoding alanine aminotransferase (ALT), an enzyme involved in Ala biosynthesis, and examined its expression profile. It was found that the full‐length kuruma shrimp ALT1 cDNA consisted of 3,301 bp, encoding 514 amino acids, and that all amino acid residues important for ALT activity were conserved. Phylogenetic analysis also indicated that the ALT gene cloned in this study was classified as ALT1. Moreover, we examined the expression levels of the ALT1 gene in the abdominal muscle and the hepatopancreas of kuruma shrimp acclimated at 17‰, 34‰, and 40‰ salinities, resulting that the mRNA levels of the ALT1 genes in both tissues of the shrimp acclimated at 40‰ were significantly higher than those at 17‰ for 12 h (p < 0.05). The mRNA levels of the ALT1 gene in the abdominal muscle of the shrimp acclimated for more than 24 h tended to increase following the increase of environmental salinity. These results indicate that ALT1 is responsible for the increase of free Ala concentration in the abdominal muscle of kuruma shrimp to regulate osmotic pressure at high salinity.

Publisher

Wiley

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