poster
Trehalose transporter gene diversity in the anhydrobiotic brine shrimp Artemia franciscana
The branchiopod crustacean Artemia franciscana can produce diapause embryos (cysts) with a high trehalose and glycerol content capable of surviving complete dehydration (anhydrobiosis) and freezing. To investigate the molecular regulation of trehalose metabolism during diapause in A. franciscana we identified the genomic repertoire of trehalose metabolic enzymes and transporters in this species. Phylogenomic analyses of the transcripts and deduced proteins in relation to the sugar transporters of humans, Drosophila and other crustaceans revealed 20-28 potential trehalose transporters (Trets) in Artemia genomes, which could be phylogenetically subclassified into two clades (Tret1 and Tret2). These analyses revealed a major expansion of Tret2-type transporters in the Banchiopoda. We further identified two trehalose-6-phospate synthase (Tps1 and -2) and one trehalase (Treh) enzymes. However, normalization of the abundance of the Tret transcripts in the transcriptomes of adults, nauplii and cysts indicated that only Tret1B and -1A, as well as Tret2B3a and -2B3b, were accumulated >2-fold in desiccated cysts. Ectopic expression of different Trets (Tret1B, -1A, -2B3b, -2C2a and -2C2b) in Xenopus laevis oocytes showed that the identified channels can facilitate trehalose transport. Gene expression analysis by qRT-PCR confirmed the transcriptome data, but showed that the mRNAs encoding Tret1A, -1B and -2B3b, as well as Tps2 and Treh, were accumulated in hydrated and desiccated cysts following the same pattern than that of trehalose. These data uncover an unexpectedly high diversity of trehalose transporters in Branchiopoda and suggest that different Tret paralogs might play redundant roles for the accumulation of trehalose in Artemia diapause cysts.