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Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish

Some species of butterflyfish have had preyed upon corals for millions of years, yet the mechanism of butterflyfish specialized coral feeding strategy remains poorly understood. Certain butterflyfish have the ability to feed on allelochemically rich soft corals, e.g. Sinularia maxima. Cytochrome P45...

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Autores principales: Maldonado, Aileen, Lavado, Ramon, Knuston, Sean, Slattery, Marc, Ankisetty, Sridevi, Goldstone, Jared V., Watanabe, Kayo, Hoh, Eunha, Gadepalli, Rama S., Rimoldi, John M., Ostrander, Gary K., Schlenk, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4854401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27136924
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154208
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author Maldonado, Aileen
Lavado, Ramon
Knuston, Sean
Slattery, Marc
Ankisetty, Sridevi
Goldstone, Jared V.
Watanabe, Kayo
Hoh, Eunha
Gadepalli, Rama S.
Rimoldi, John M.
Ostrander, Gary K.
Schlenk, Daniel
author_facet Maldonado, Aileen
Lavado, Ramon
Knuston, Sean
Slattery, Marc
Ankisetty, Sridevi
Goldstone, Jared V.
Watanabe, Kayo
Hoh, Eunha
Gadepalli, Rama S.
Rimoldi, John M.
Ostrander, Gary K.
Schlenk, Daniel
author_sort Maldonado, Aileen
collection PubMed
description Some species of butterflyfish have had preyed upon corals for millions of years, yet the mechanism of butterflyfish specialized coral feeding strategy remains poorly understood. Certain butterflyfish have the ability to feed on allelochemically rich soft corals, e.g. Sinularia maxima. Cytochrome P450 (CYP) is the predominant enzyme system responsible for the detoxification of dietary allelochemicals. CYP2-like and CYP3A-like content have been associated with butterflyfish that preferentially consumes allelochemically rich soft corals. To investigate the role of butterflyfish CYP2 and CYP3A enzymes in dietary preference, we conducted oral feeding experiments using homogenates of S. maxima and a toxin isolated from the coral in four species of butterflyfish with different feeding strategies. After oral exposure to the S. maxima toxin 5-episinulaptolide (5ESL), which is not normally encountered in the Hawaiian butterflyfish diet, an endemic specialist, Chaetodon multicinctus experienced 100% mortality compared to a generalist, Chaetodon auriga, which had significantly more (3–6 fold higher) CYP3A-like basal content and catalytic activity. The specialist, Chaetodon unimaculatus, which preferentially feed on S. maxima in Guam, but not in Hawaii, had 100% survival, a significant induction of 8–12 fold CYP3A-like content, and an increased ability (2-fold) to metabolize 5ESL over other species. Computer modeling data of CYP3A4 with 5ESL were consistent with microsomal transformation of 5ESL to a C15-16 epoxide from livers of C. unimaculatus. Epoxide formation correlated with CYP3A-like content, catalytic activity, induction, and NADPH-dependent metabolism of 5ESL. These results suggest a potentially important role for the CYP3A family in butterflyfish-coral diet selection through allelochemical detoxification.
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spelling pubmed-48544012016-05-07 Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish Maldonado, Aileen Lavado, Ramon Knuston, Sean Slattery, Marc Ankisetty, Sridevi Goldstone, Jared V. Watanabe, Kayo Hoh, Eunha Gadepalli, Rama S. Rimoldi, John M. Ostrander, Gary K. Schlenk, Daniel PLoS One Research Article Some species of butterflyfish have had preyed upon corals for millions of years, yet the mechanism of butterflyfish specialized coral feeding strategy remains poorly understood. Certain butterflyfish have the ability to feed on allelochemically rich soft corals, e.g. Sinularia maxima. Cytochrome P450 (CYP) is the predominant enzyme system responsible for the detoxification of dietary allelochemicals. CYP2-like and CYP3A-like content have been associated with butterflyfish that preferentially consumes allelochemically rich soft corals. To investigate the role of butterflyfish CYP2 and CYP3A enzymes in dietary preference, we conducted oral feeding experiments using homogenates of S. maxima and a toxin isolated from the coral in four species of butterflyfish with different feeding strategies. After oral exposure to the S. maxima toxin 5-episinulaptolide (5ESL), which is not normally encountered in the Hawaiian butterflyfish diet, an endemic specialist, Chaetodon multicinctus experienced 100% mortality compared to a generalist, Chaetodon auriga, which had significantly more (3–6 fold higher) CYP3A-like basal content and catalytic activity. The specialist, Chaetodon unimaculatus, which preferentially feed on S. maxima in Guam, but not in Hawaii, had 100% survival, a significant induction of 8–12 fold CYP3A-like content, and an increased ability (2-fold) to metabolize 5ESL over other species. Computer modeling data of CYP3A4 with 5ESL were consistent with microsomal transformation of 5ESL to a C15-16 epoxide from livers of C. unimaculatus. Epoxide formation correlated with CYP3A-like content, catalytic activity, induction, and NADPH-dependent metabolism of 5ESL. These results suggest a potentially important role for the CYP3A family in butterflyfish-coral diet selection through allelochemical detoxification. Public Library of Science 2016-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4854401/ /pubmed/27136924 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154208 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Maldonado, Aileen
Lavado, Ramon
Knuston, Sean
Slattery, Marc
Ankisetty, Sridevi
Goldstone, Jared V.
Watanabe, Kayo
Hoh, Eunha
Gadepalli, Rama S.
Rimoldi, John M.
Ostrander, Gary K.
Schlenk, Daniel
Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish
title Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish
title_full Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish
title_fullStr Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish
title_full_unstemmed Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish
title_short Biochemical Mechanisms for Geographical Adaptations to Novel Toxin Exposures in Butterflyfish
title_sort biochemical mechanisms for geographical adaptations to novel toxin exposures in butterflyfish
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4854401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27136924
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0154208
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