poster
Metabolite profiling reveals energetic and osmoregulatory differences in populations from three zones of the Mytilus edulis species complex distribution area
Mussels from the Mytilus edulis species complex experience a salinity gradient from the North Sea into the Baltic Proper ranging from 32 to 5 practical salinity units. As osmoconformers, mussels adjust their internal osmolarity to match that of their surroundings. This adaptive strategy poses a significant challenge to the metabolic machinery of the mussels, including their mitochondria. Thus, populations from different sites have adapted to reach their highest mitochondrial function at a salinity close to their respective habitat salinity. We hypothesised that this adaptation is accompanied by a change in accumulated metabolites. To test this hypothesis, mussels from three populations along the salinity gradient were assessed: north Baltic Sea (M. trossulus zone), south Baltic Sea (transition zone) and North Sea (M. edulis zone). Metabolites from gill tissue were measured via liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and their abundances analysed using a principal component analysis (PCA) and pathway enrichment analysis (MetaboAnalyst 6.0). The measured metabolites separated the populations from one another either by osmoregulation or by energy metabolism. Additionally, the pathway enrichment analysis identified three pathways that differed between each population. γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) was one of the main drivers of the population specific differences, along with amino acids that are directly or indirectly connected to the citrate cycle. The citrate cycle in turn feeds the mitochondrial electron transport system (ETS). Overall, our findings suggest population specific differences in drivers of the citrate cycle as well as differences in the utilisation of sources for the mitochondrial respiration.