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Transcriptome Analysis Revealed the Early Heat Stress Response in the Brain of Chinese Tongue Sole (Cynoglossus semilaevis)

Animals 2023 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yue Wang, Qian Liu, Yue Wang, Chengcheng Su, Chengcheng Su, Yue Wang, Yanjing Yang, Yanjing Yang, Qian Liu, Yanjing Yang, Yanjing Yang, Xiancai Hao, Qian Wang Yanjing Yang, Yanjing Yang, Yanjing Yang, Shenglei Han, Shenglei Han, Lucas B. Doretto, Ivana F. Rosa, Yanjing Yang, Yanjing Yang, Changwei Shao, Qian Wang

Summary

Researchers used transcriptome analysis to study how the brains of Chinese tongue sole fish respond to short-term heat stress. They identified distinct gene expression patterns in male and female fish, with key pathways related to cortisol production, immune signaling, and stress-response genes like heat shock proteins. The study provides new insights into the sex-specific brain mechanisms fish use to cope with temperature changes.

As a common influencing factor in the environment, temperature greatly influences the fish that live in the water all their life. The essential economic fish Chinese tongue sole (<i>Cynoglossus semilaevis</i>), a benthic fish, will experience both physiological and behavioral changes due to increases in temperature. The brain, as the central hub of fish and a crucial regulatory organ, is particularly sensitive to temperature changes and will be affected. However, previous research has mainly concentrated on the impact of temperature on the gonads of <i>C. semilaevis</i>. Instead, our study examines the brain using transcriptomics to investigate specific genes and pathways that can quickly respond to temperature changes. The fish were subjected to various periods of heat stress (1 h, 2 h, 3 h, and 5 h) before extracting the brain for transcriptome analysis. After conducting transcriptomic analyses, we identified distinct genes and pathways in males and females. The pathways were mainly related to cortisol synthesis and secretion, neuroactive ligand-receptor interactions, TGF beta signaling pathway, and JAK/STAT signaling pathway, while the genes included the HSP family, <i>tshr</i>, <i>c-fos</i>, <i>c-jun</i>, <i>cxcr4</i>, <i>camk2b</i>, and <i>igf2</i>. Our study offers valuable insights into the regulation mechanisms of the brain's response to temperature stress.

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