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Lauritano, C., M. Borra, Y. Carotenuto, E. Biffali, A. Miralto, G. Procaccini & A. Ianora. (2011). First molecular evidence of diatom effects in the copepod Calanus helgolandicus. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 404(1-2):79-86.
153044
Lauritano, C., M. Borra, Y. Carotenuto, E. Biffali, A. Miralto, G. Procaccini & A. Ianora
2011
First molecular evidence of diatom effects in the copepod Calanus helgolandicus.
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
404(1-2):79-86.
Publication
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In this study we develop gene expression tools in Calanus helgolandicus to study the effects of toxic diatom diets on copepod fitness and survival. We demonstrate that when adult females are fed on the control dinoflagellate Prorocentrum minimum and the flagellate Rhodomonas baltica, which are not known to produce toxic oxylipins, there are no significant changes in alpha- and beta-tubulin (microtubule subunits) gene expression levels. By contrast, the oxylipin-producing diatom Skeletonema marinoi influences tubulin expression levels which were markedly down-regulated. We scored a panel of putative reference genes (ACT, EFA, GAPDH, 18S, S7, S20, ATPs, UBI and IST) and found that two (S20 and S7) were highly stable in the tested conditions and can be used for further experiments. To normalize reverse transcription-quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) data we also used the third best reference gene, GAPDH, considering the possibility that the two ribosomal proteins could be co-regulated. This pilot study will pave the way for further investigations on which genes are affected by diatom diets and clarify when and if a stress response or a detoxification mechanism becomes visible in C. helgolandicus. Moreover, the RT-qPCR analysis presented here may also be useful to study the effects of other diets and/or environmental factors such as salinity, temperature, pollution and other toxic compounds, on gene expression levels in this copepod species.
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