Project description:We performed a laboratory experiment with vegetative gametophytes of the kelp Saccharina latissima and exposed the gametophytes to three temperatures (4°C, 12°C and 20°C) by sex (female, male) for 14 days.
Project description:The data is a result of a large laboratory experiment targeting interactive effects of salinity and temperature on the transcriptomic level in algae from two populations of an ecologically relevant kelp species (Laminariales), Saccharina latissima. Research interest in S. latissima has recently been increasing given its importance as ecosystem engineer along temperate rocky shores in the Atlantic Ocean, and its growing potential in industrial applications such as aquaculture, pharmaceutics, food and feed. Young sporophytes of S. latissima were raised from stock cultures of clonal male and female gametophytes at the Alfred-Wegener-Institute Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research. Cultures originated from sporophyte collected at Kongsfjorden (79°N, 11°E; Spitsbergen, Norway) and at Roscoff (48° 43′ 39″ N, 3° 59′ 13.2″ W; Brittany, France). Sporophytes of both populations were grown aerated in glass beakers at 8°C and under a photon fluence rate of 20 µmol photons m–2 s–1 of photosynthetically active radiation with a 18 h light: 6 h dark photoperiod and were cultivated in sterile seawater enriched with Provasoli (Starr & Zeikus 1993) with an absolute salinity (SA) of ~30 during three months. At the start of the experiment, sporophytes were either kept at 8°C (or transferred to 0°C and 15°C) in temperature controlled rooms. After one week, per each temperature, sporophytes were divided into a low salinity treatment of SA 20 or kept at the control salinity (SA 30).
Project description:Effect of PAR and temperature stress on the gene expression Saccharina latissima. Total RNA of stress treatments (low PAR 2° and 17°C, high PAR 2° and 17°C) was hybridized against the control treatment (low PAR 12°C); hybridizations were carried out in 4 replicates.
Project description:To explore possible interactive effects of UV-radiation, temperature and growth conditions, cultivated and field sporophytes of Saccharina latissima were exposed for 24h to UV-radiation at three different temperatures (2,7 & 12°C). Gene expression profiles under UV-radiation at different temperatures were assessed through microarray hybridizations, afterwards comparisons of gene expression profiles in field and culture sporophytes were carried out.
Project description:Kelp are the largest photosynthetic organisms in the ocean with tissue differentiation and complex life cycles. Other multicellular organisms with similar complexity such as plants and animals are well known to posses epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation to control development and morphogenesis. Despite plant-like body plans and the presence of different life-cycle stages, the kelp species Saccharina japonica has only a very low level of DNA methylation, yet we have found strong evidence for differential methylation of regulatory elements and protein-coding genes which seem to contribute to the formation of life-cycle stages, tissue differentiation, growth and halogen metabolism. Thus, DNA methylation seems to play an important role in kelp, which has not been reported before.