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Differential tissue development compromising the growth rate and physiological performances of mussel

Authors :
Genética, antropología física y fisiología animal
Zoología y biología celular animal
Genetika,antropologia fisikoa eta animalien fisiologia
Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia
Pérez Cebrecos, Maitane
Prieto Pérez, Daniel
Blanco Rayón, Esther
Izaguirre Aramayona, Urtzi
Ibarrola Bellido, Irrintzi
Genética, antropología física y fisiología animal
Zoología y biología celular animal
Genetika,antropologia fisikoa eta animalien fisiologia
Zoologia eta animalia zelulen biologia
Pérez Cebrecos, Maitane
Prieto Pérez, Daniel
Blanco Rayón, Esther
Izaguirre Aramayona, Urtzi
Ibarrola Bellido, Irrintzi
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Differences in the food acquisition rates and in the energetic costs of metabolism seem to affect the growth rate variability of mussels. The aim of this study was to analyze if the physiological performances responsible for such growth rate variability are accompanied by structural differences at tissue or cellular level in the main organs involved in energy acquisition (gill) and processing (digestive gland). Fast growers had higher cilia density and metabolic efficiency in their gill, and well-developed digestive tissue with barely no connective tissue or atrophy. Slow-growing mussels displayed stress signs that impede the proper acquisition, digestion and absorption of food: low cilia density, low mitochondrial capacity and high antioxidant activity levels in the gills, and high atrophy of the digestive gland. The data herein explains the growth rate variability of mussels, demonstrating that morphological and functional differences exist between fast and slow growers.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
This work was supported by the Basque Government through Consolidated Research Groups fellowship (CBET group, IT810-B) and through the predoctoral fellowship of Maitane Perez-Cebrecos., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1364682076
Document Type :
Electronic Resource