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1.
Limnol Oceanogr ; 63(4): 1579-1592, 2018 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30333668

RESUMO

Zooplankton from clear alpine lakes is exposed to stressful levels of solar UV radiation (UVR). As these pelagic organisms experience high UVR and large changes in solar radiation conditions between ice-free and ice-cover periods, they have evolved various strategies to minimize UVR exposure and damage. Here, we studied the relation between photoprotection levels (mycosporine-like amino acids, carotenoids), antioxidant capacities, and gene expression of heat shock proteins (hsps) as indicator of stress in the copepod Cyclops abyssorum tatricus during the course of a year. Expression of hsp60, hsp70, and hsp90 was measured in the field (baseline expression [BE]) and after UVR exposure in the laboratory. The BE differed among genes and seasons (hsp60: high during summer, hsp70 and hsp90: high during the ice-cover period). The gene expression of hsp70 was upregulated after exposure to UVR (up to 5.2-fold change), while hsp60 and hsp90 were only constitutively expressed. A strong seasonal pattern was found in the photoprotective compounds and antioxidant capacities, with highest levels during the ice-free period. The extent of upregulation of hsp70 gene expression increased with decreasing photoprotection levels and peaked 24 h post UVR exposure (9.6-fold change) at the time of lowest photoprotection (February). Our data suggest that hsp70 gene expression is modulated by seasonal plasticity in photoprotection. This ability of adequate stress response is essential for survival in highly variable ecosystems such as alpine lakes.

2.
J Evol Biol ; 29(7): 1328-37, 2016 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27018861

RESUMO

Natural populations can cope with rapid changes in stressors by relying on sets of physiological defence mechanisms. Little is known onto what extent these physiological responses reflect plasticity and/or genetic adaptation, evolve in the same direction and result in an increased defence ability. Using resurrection ecology, we studied how a natural Daphnia magna population adjusted its antioxidant defence to ultraviolet radiation (UVR) during a period with increasing incident UVR reaching the water surface. We demonstrate a rapid evolution of the induction patterns of key antioxidant enzymes under UVR exposure in the laboratory. Notably, evolutionary changes strongly differed among enzymes and mainly involved the evolution of UV-induced plasticity. Whereas D. magna evolved a strong plastic up-regulation of glutathione peroxidase under UVR, it evolved a lower plastic up-regulation of glutathione S-transferase and superoxide dismutase and a plastic down-regulation of catalase. The differentially evolved antioxidant strategies were collectively equally effective in dealing with oxidative stress because they resulted in the same high levels of oxidative damage (to lipids, proteins and DNA) and lowered fitness (intrinsic growth rate) under UVR exposure. The lack of better protection against UVR may suggest that the UVR exposure did not increase between both periods. Predator-induced evolution to migrate to lower depths that occurred during the same period may have contributed to the evolved defence strategy. Our results highlight the need for a multiple trait approach when focusing on the evolution of defence mechanisms.


Assuntos
Antioxidantes , Evolução Biológica , Daphnia/enzimologia , Raios Ultravioleta , Animais , Catalase/metabolismo , Glutationa Transferase/metabolismo , Estresse Oxidativo , Superóxido Dismutase/metabolismo
3.
Sci Total Environ ; 624: 1429-1442, 2018 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29929254

RESUMO

Mountain ecosystems are sensitive and reliable indicators of climate change. Long-term studies may be extremely useful in assessing the responses of high-elevation ecosystems to climate change and other anthropogenic drivers from a broad ecological perspective. Mountain research sites within the LTER (Long-Term Ecological Research) network are representative of various types of ecosystems and span a wide bioclimatic and elevational range. Here, we present a synthesis and a review of the main results from ecological studies in mountain ecosystems at 20 LTER sites in Italy, Switzerland and Austria covering in most cases more than two decades of observations. We analyzed a set of key climate parameters, such as temperature and snow cover duration, in relation to vascular plant species composition, plant traits, abundance patterns, pedoclimate, nutrient dynamics in soils and water, phenology and composition of freshwater biota. The overall results highlight the rapid response of mountain ecosystems to climate change, with site-specific characteristics and rates. As temperatures increased, vegetation cover in alpine and subalpine summits increased as well. Years with limited snow cover duration caused an increase in soil temperature and microbial biomass during the growing season. Effects on freshwater ecosystems were also observed, in terms of increases in solutes, decreases in nitrates and changes in plankton phenology and benthos communities. This work highlights the importance of comparing and integrating long-term ecological data collected in different ecosystems for a more comprehensive overview of the ecological effects of climate change. Nevertheless, there is a need for (i) adopting co-located monitoring site networks to improve our ability to obtain sound results from cross-site analysis, (ii) carrying out further studies, in particular short-term analyses with fine spatial and temporal resolutions to improve our understanding of responses to extreme events, and (iii) increasing comparability and standardizing protocols across networks to distinguish local patterns from global patterns.

4.
J Photochem Photobiol B ; 62(1-2): 35-42, 2001 Sep 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11693365

RESUMO

Solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR, 290-400 nm) is a crucial environmental factor in alpine lakes because of the natural increase of the UVR flux with elevation and the high water transparency of these ecosystems. The ecological importance of UVR, however, has only recently been recognized. This review, examines the general features of alpine lakes regarding UVR, summarizes what is known about the role of solar UVR in the ecology of alpine lakes, and identifies future research directions. Unlike the pattern observed in most lowland lakes, variability of UV attenuation in alpine lakes is poorly explained by differences in dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations, and depends mainly on optical characteristics (absorption) of the chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM). Within the water column of lakes with low DOC concentrations (0.2-0.4 mg l(-1)), UV attenuation is influenced by phytoplankton whose development at depth (i.e. the deep chlorophyll maximum) causes important changes in UV attenuation. Alpine aquatic organisms have developed a number of strategies to minimize UV damage. The widespread synthesis or bioaccumulation of different compounds that directly or indirectly absorb UV energy is one such strategy. Although most benthic and planktonic primary producers and crustacean zooplankton are well adapted to high intensities of solar radiation, heterotrophic protists, bacteria, and viruses seem to be particularly sensitive to UVR. Understanding the overall impact of UVR on alpine lakes would need to consider synergistic and antagonistic processes resulting from the pronounced climatic warming, which have the potential to modify the UV underwater climate and consequently the stress on aquatic organisms.


Assuntos
Altitude , Ecossistema , Luz Solar , Raios Ultravioleta , Áustria , Água Doce
5.
Chir Ital ; 34(3): 492-507, 1982 Jun.
Artigo em Italiano | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6765344

RESUMO

The authors develop an interesting subject: "Uremic osteodystrophy" in patients who have undergone a kidney transplantation. The analysis of results of bone scan in these patients bears an important contribution to a physiopathology problem that will become more and more important with the progress of transplantation technics.


Assuntos
Osso e Ossos/diagnóstico por imagem , Distúrbio Mineral e Ósseo na Doença Renal Crônica/diagnóstico por imagem , Transplante de Rim , Adolescente , Adulto , Distúrbio Mineral e Ósseo na Doença Renal Crônica/etiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Falência Renal Crônica/cirurgia , Masculino , Cintilografia
6.
Nat Commun ; 2: 405, 2011 Jul 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21792184

RESUMO

Remote lakes are usually unaffected by direct human influence, yet they receive inputs of atmospheric pollutants, dust, and other aerosols, both inorganic and organic. In remote, alpine lakes, these atmospheric inputs may influence the pool of dissolved organic matter, a critical constituent for the biogeochemical functioning of aquatic ecosystems. Here, to assess this influence, we evaluate factors related to aerosol deposition, climate, catchment properties, and microbial constituents in a global dataset of 86 alpine and polar lakes. We show significant latitudinal trends in dissolved organic matter quantity and quality, and uncover new evidence that this geographic pattern is influenced by dust deposition, flux of incident ultraviolet radiation, and bacterial processing. Our results suggest that changes in land use and climate that result in increasing dust flux, ultraviolet radiation, and air temperature may act to shift the optical quality of dissolved organic matter in clear, alpine lakes.


Assuntos
Ar/análise , Bactérias/isolamento & purificação , Poeira/análise , Ecossistema , Água Doce/química , Compostos Orgânicos/química , Microbiologia do Ar , Solubilidade , Temperatura , Raios Ultravioleta
8.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 61(9): 3457-9, 1995 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16535131

RESUMO

The size structure of planktonic bacteria from a hypertrophic lake was investigated at 5- to 15-day intervals by means of a semiautomatic image analysis system during 1 year. Characteristic of this bacterial assemblage was the permanent presence of large filamentous bacteria and small cocci with cell sizes of <0.01 (mu)m(sup3). These filamentous bacteria, sometimes longer than 200 (mu)m and with cell volumes of up to 276 (mu)m(sup3), are larger than nanoflagellates (<20 (mu)m) and, even, metazoans living in the lake. Although they account for only 4 to 16% of bacterial abundance, their contribution to total bacterial biovolume was between 45 and 86%. An analysis of the food web structure indicates that this particular bacterial size structure may be the consequence of a strong bacterivory pressure by nanoflagellates and the absence of other larger bacterivores. The persistence of bacterial forms resistant to grazing has important consequences for the carbon flow within the microbial food web.

9.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 63(2): 816, 1997 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16535532

RESUMO

Volume 62, no. 12, p. 4397: Figure 3 should appear as follows. FIG. 3 [This corrects the article on p. 4395 in vol. 62.].

10.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 62(12): 4395-400, 1996 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16535460

RESUMO

The effects of UV-B radiation on the heterotrophic nanoflagellate Bodo saltans (Kinetoplastida) were examined under controlled conditions with artificial UV sources and also under natural solar radiation in an oligotrophic lake. In both types of experiments, the characteristic elongated cell morphology of this flagellate changed into a spherical one. This effect was due to UV-B but also to UV-A radiation, and after 4 h of exposure at 0.5 m of depth, 99% (UV-B plus UV-A plus photosynthetically active radiation) and 69% of the cells (UV-A plus photosynthetically active radiation) were spherical. At 6 m of depth where only 10% of the UV-B (305 nm) at the surface was measured, no significant effect was observed. The spherical cells were nonmotile, but before the morphological change took place, the swimming speed was ca. 3.5 times lower in the plus-UV-B treatment. The negative relation between the abundance of spherical cells and the average ingestion of fluorescently labeled bacteria per cell indicates that these cells are not able to feed upon bacteria. In bacterivory experiments lasting for 6 h, the total number of grazed bacteria was up to 70% lower in the plus-UV-B treatment than in the control without UV-B. This resulted in a positive feedback between UV-B and bacterial growth. The high sensitivity of B. saltans to solar UV-B and UV-A radiation strongly reduces its ability to live near the surface at times of high UV radiation.

11.
J Eukaryot Microbiol ; 47(5): 450-5, 2000.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11001142

RESUMO

The sensitivity to ultraviolet radiation (UVR, 280-400 nm) of ten species of freshwater and marine phagotrophic protists was assessed in short-term (4 h) laboratory experiments. Changes in the motility and morphology of the cells, as well as direct quantification of DNA damage, were evaluated. The net amount of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers formed after exposure of the organisms to a weighted dose (Setlow DNA normalized at 300 nm) of 1.7 kJ m(-2) was quantified by an immunoassay using a monoclonal specific antibody directed against thymine dimers (T<>Ts). This is the first application of this method to aquatic protists. The results indicated that marine and freshwater heterotrophic nanoflagellates, representatives from the order Kinetoplastida (Bodo caudatus and Bodo saltans, respectively) accumulate significantly higher DNA damage than protists representatives of the orders Chrysomonadida, Cryptomonadida or Scuticociliatida. The high proportion of A:T bases in the unique kinetoplast DNA, may explain the higher accumulation of T<>Ts found in bodonids. Experiments made with B. saltans to study the dynamics of DNA damage accumulation in the presence of UVR and photorepairing light, indicated that the mechanisms of DNA repair in this species are very inefficient. Furthermore, the dramatic changes observed in the cell morphology of B. saltans probably compromise its recovery. Our results show that sensitivity to UVR among aquatic phagotrophic protists is species-specific and that different cell targets are affected differently among species. While DNA damage in B. saltans was accompanied by motility reduction, altered morphology, and finally mortality, this was not observed in other bodonids as well as in the other species tested.


Assuntos
Dano ao DNA , DNA de Protozoário/efeitos da radiação , Eucariotos/efeitos da radiação , Raios Ultravioleta , Água/parasitologia , Animais , Fagocitose , Dímeros de Pirimidina/análise
12.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 63(11): 4178-84, 1997 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16535724

RESUMO

We studied the effect of solar radiation on the incorporation of [(sup3)H]thymidine ([(sup3)H]TdR) and [(sup14)C]leucine ([(sup14)C]Leu) by bacterioplankton in a high mountain lake and the northern Adriatic Sea. After short-term exposure (3 to 4 h) of natural bacterial assemblages to sunlight just beneath the surface, the rates of incorporation of [(sup3)H]TdR and [(sup14)C]Leu were reduced at both sites by up to (symbl)70% compared to those for the dark control. Within the solar UV radiation (290 to 400 nm), the inhibition was caused exclusively by UV-A radiation (320 to 400 nm). However, photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) (400 to 700 nm) contributed almost equally to this effect. Experiments with samples from the high mountain lake showed that at a depth of 2.5 m, the inhibition was caused almost exclusively by UV-A radiation. At a depth of 8.5 m, where chlorophyll a concentrations were higher than those in the upper water column, the rates of incorporation of [(sup3)H]TdR were higher in those samples exposed to full sunlight or to UV-A plus PAR than in the dark control. In laboratory experiments with artificial UV light, the incorporation of [(sup3)H]TdR and [(sup14)C]Leu by mixed bacterial lake cultures was also inhibited mainly by UV-A. In contrast, in the presence of the green alga Chlamydomonas geitleri at a chlorophyll a concentration of 2.5 (mu)g liter(sup-1), inhibition by UV radiation was significantly reduced. These results suggest that there may be complex interactions among UV radiation, heterotrophic bacteria, and phytoplankton and their release of extracellular organic carbon. Our findings indicate that the wavelengths which caused the strongest inhibition of TdR and Leu incorporation by bacterioplankton in the water column were in the UV-A range. However, it may be premature to extrapolate this effect to estimates of bacterial production before more precise information on how solar radiation affects the transport of TdR and Leu into the cell is obtained.

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