Fiche publication


Date publication

mai 2013

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr POCH Olivier


Tous les auteurs :
Bruneaux M, Mary J, Verheye M, Lecompte O, Poch O, Jollivet D, Tanguy A

Résumé

Alvinella pompejana (Polychaeta, Alvinellidae) is one of the most thermotolerant marine eukaryotes known to date. It inhabits chimney walls of deep-sea hydrothermal vents along the East Pacific Rise (EPR) and is exposed to various challenging conditions (e.g. high temperature, hypoxia and the presence of sulphides, heavy metals and radiations), which increase the production of dangerous reactive oxygen species (ROS). Two different allelic forms of a manganese-superoxide dismutase involved in ROS detoxification, ApMnSOD1 and ApMnSOD2, and differing only by two substitutions (M110L and A138G) were identified in an A. pompejana cDNA library. RFLP screening of 60 individuals from different localities along the EPR showed that ApMnSOD2 was rare (2 %) and only found in the heterozygous state. Dynamic light scattering measurements and residual enzymatic activity experiments showed that the most frequent form (ApMnSOD1) was the most resistant to temperature. Their half-lives were similarly long at 65 degrees C (>110 min) but exhibited a twofold difference at 80 degrees C (20.8 vs 9.8 min). Those properties are likely to be explained by the occurrence of an additional sulphur-containing hydrogen bond involving the M110 residue and the effect of the A138 residue on the backbone entropy. Our results confirm the thermophily of A. pompejana and suggest that this locus is a good model to study how the extreme thermal heterogeneity of the vent conditions may help to maintain old rare variants in those populations.

Référence

J Mol Evol. 2013 May;76(5):295-310