Cold-Driven Hemoglobin Evolution in Antarctic Notothenioid Fishes Prior to Hemoglobin Gene Loss in White-Blooded Icefishes

Author:

Desvignes Thomas1ORCID,Bista Iliana234ORCID,Herrera Karina1,Landes Audrey1,Postlethwait John H1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon , Eugene, OR 97403 , USA

2. Wellcome Sanger Institute , Tree of Life, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton CB10 1SA , United Kingdom

3. LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics , Frankfurt 60325 , Germany

4. Senckenberg Research Institute , Frankfurt 60325 , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Expression of multiple hemoglobin isoforms with differing physiochemical properties likely helps species adapt to different environmental and physiological conditions. Antarctic notothenioid fishes inhabit the icy Southern Ocean and display fewer hemoglobin isoforms, each with less affinity for oxygen than temperate relatives. Reduced hemoglobin multiplicity was proposed to result from relaxed selective pressure in the cold, thermally stable, and highly oxygenated Antarctic waters. These conditions also permitted the survival and diversification of white-blooded icefishes, the only vertebrates living without hemoglobin. To understand hemoglobin evolution during adaptation to freezing water, we analyzed hemoglobin genes from 36 notothenioid genome assemblies. Results showed that adaptation to frigid conditions shaped hemoglobin gene evolution by episodic diversifying selection concomitant with cold adaptation and by pervasive evolution in Antarctic notothenioids compared to temperate relatives, likely a continuing adaptation to Antarctic conditions. Analysis of hemoglobin gene expression in adult hematopoietic organs in various temperate and Antarctic species further revealed a switch in hemoglobin gene expression underlying hemoglobin multiplicity reduction in Antarctic fish, leading to a single hemoglobin isoform in adult plunderfishes and dragonfishes, the sister groups to icefishes. The predicted high hemoglobin multiplicity in Antarctic fish embryos based on transcriptomic data, however, raises questions about the molecular bases and physiological implications of diverse hemoglobin isoforms in embryos compared to adults. This analysis supports the hypothesis that the last common icefish ancestor was vulnerable to detrimental mutations affecting the single ancestral expressed alpha- and beta-globin gene pair, potentially predisposing their subsequent loss.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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