INVESTIGADORES
BALSEIRO Esteban Gabriel
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Living in transparent lakes: Low food P:C ratio decreases antioxidant response to ultraviolet radiation in Daphnia.
Autor/es:
BALSEIRO, E.G; SOUZA, M.S.; MODENUTTI, B.E.; REISSIG, M.
Lugar:
University of New England, Maine, USA
Reunión:
Congreso; Gordon Research Conference - Metabolic Basis of Ecology; 2008
Institución organizadora:
Gordon Research Conference
Resumen:
We experimentally tested the effect of food quality (in terms of P:C ratio) on the response of antioxidant enzymes to ultraviolet radiation (UVR) in Daphnia commutata fed with Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Algal cultures were grown at different concentrations of phosphorus and light intensities, resulting in significant differences in the P:C ratios (µg atomic P•[mg atomic C]-1) (6.05, 1.70 and 0.83). After 12 days of D. commutata growth under these three food quality treatments, we observed significant differences in Daphnia individual biomass and protein content. Subsequently, we carried out an ultraviolet exposure experiment to determine if stoichiometric constraints imposed would limit enzymatic defenses against UVR oxidative stress. The UVR exposure experiment consisted of a factorial design with with three levels of food P:C (low, medium and high) and two levels of UVR (exposed and protected). The activities of Glutathione S-Transferases (GST) and Catalase (CAT), enzymes involved in protection and repair of damage caused by UVR, and were determined. Enzyme activities in the animals exposed to or protected from UVR showed a direct relationship with food P:C ratio that fit exponential models. Although GST and CAT differed slightly in their response to UVR, both enzymes were significantly affected by food quality: there was a lower response to UVR under lower food P:C for both enzymes.  These results imply that a low food quality (less P for biosynthesis) may also impose a weaker antioxidant response of the organisms, a response of considerable ecological relevance in transparent Andean lakes which combine high UVR intensities with low seston P:C ratios.