ABSTRACT
The periwinkle snail Echinolittorina malaccana, for which the upper lethal temperature is near 55°C, is one of the most heat-tolerant eukaryotes known. We conducted a multi-level investigation – including cardiac physiology, enzyme activity, and targeted and untargeted metabolomic analyses – that elucidated a spectrum of adaptations to extreme heat in this organism. All systems examined showed heat intensity-dependent responses. Under moderate heat stress (37–45°C), the snail depressed cardiac activity and entered a state of metabolic depression. The global metabolomic and enzymatic analyses revealed production of metabolites characteristic of oxygen-independent pathways of ATP generation (lactate and succinate) in the depressed metabolic state, which suggests that anaerobic metabolism was the main energy supply pathway under heat stress (37–52°C). The metabolomic analyses also revealed alterations in glycerophospholipid metabolism under extreme heat stress (52°C), which likely reflected adaptive changes to maintain membrane structure. Small-molecular-mass organic osmolytes (glycine betaine, choline and carnitine) showed complex changes in concentration that were consistent with a role of these protein-stabilizing solutes in protection of the proteome under heat stress. This thermophilic species can thus deploy a wide array of adaptive strategies to acclimatize to extremely high temperatures.
Footnotes
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing or financial interests.
Author contributions
Conceptualization: Y.-w.D.; Methodology: Y.-q.C.; Software: Y.-q.C., M.-l.L., X.-x.L.; Formal analysis: Y.-q.C., M.-l.L.; Investigation: Y.-q.C., J.W., X.-x.L.; Resources: J.W., M.-l.L., X.-x.L.; Data curation: Y.-q.C., J.W., M.-l.L.; Writing - original draft: Y.-q.C., J.W., M.-l.L., X.-x.L., Y.-w.D.; Writing - review & editing: Y.-q.C., Y.-w.D.; Supervision: Y.-w.D.; Project administration: Y.-w.D.; Funding acquisition: Y.-w.D.
Funding
The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41976142, 41776135, 42025604).
Data availability
Data associated with this paper have been deposited in the China National Microbiology Data Center (accession numbers NMDCX0000102, NMDCX0000105).
Supplementary information
Supplementary information available online at https://jeb.biologists.org/lookup/doi/10.1242/jeb.238659.supplemental
- Received October 1, 2020.
- Accepted January 27, 2021.
- © 2021. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd
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