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Sacoglossa sea slugs have garnered attention due to their ability to retain intracellular functional chloroplasts from algae, while degrading other algal cell components. While protective mechanisms that limit oxidative damage under excessive light are well documented in plants and algae, the photoprotective strategies employed by these photosynthetic sea slugs remain unresolved. Species within the genus Elysia are known to retain chloroplasts from various algal sources, but the extent to which the metabolic processes from the donor algae can be sustained by the sea slugs is unclear. By comparing responses to high-light conditions through kinetic analyses, molecular techniques, and biochemical assays, this study shows significant differences between two photosynthetic Elysia species with chloroplasts derived from the green alga Acetabularia acetabulum. Notably, Elysia timida displayed remarkable tolerance to high-light stress and sophisticated photoprotective mechanisms such as an active xanthophyll cycle, efficient D1 protein recycling, accumulation of heat-shock proteins and α-tocopherol. In contrast, Elysia crispata exhibited absence or limitations in these photoprotective strategies. Our findings emphasize the intricate relationship between the host animal and the stolen chloroplasts, highlighting different capacities to protect the photosynthetic organelle from oxidative damage.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.14273 | DOI Listing |
Zoolog Sci
August 2025
Meguro Parasitological Museum, Meguro, Tokyo 153-0064, Japan.
Snails of the family Eulimidae are parasites of echinoderms in all five extant classes. Despite long years of taxonomic research on Eulimidae in Japan, their local species richness remains to be investigated, and few studies have focused on a eulimid fauna of a certain echinoderm taxon, even if it is a common species. Here, we conducted a comprehensive sampling of species parasitizing the black sea cucumber in Shirahama, Wakayama, central Japan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Helminthol
September 2025
Zoological Institute, https://ror.org/05snbjh64Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya Emb., 1, 199034St. Petersburg, Russian Federation.
The mother sporocyst is the least understood digenean life cycle stage. This study provides the first detailed description of the neuromusculature and reproductive apparatus of mother sporocysts in the hemiuroid digenean , a monoxenous parasite of White Sea mud snails, using transmission electron microscopy and fluorescent staining for muscles, FMRFamide-related peptides (FaRP), and serotonin (5HT). These parthenitae lack a germinal mass and have only a few germinal elements, which explains their limited reproductive potential.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
August 2025
Biogeochemistry Research Center, Research Institute for Marine Resources Utilization (MRU), Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Yokosuka, Kanagawa 237-0061, Japan.
Animals produce diverse hard structures for critical functions such as protection, feeding and detoxification. Most animals use the polysaccharide chitin as a framework for this, while vertebrates have switched to using fibrous proteins like collagen and keratin. Vertebrates make structures like skin and horns through a cellular differentiation process called keratinization where cells accumulating keratin die and compact into hard layers-drastically different from chitinous structures, which are secreted directly by living cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZool Stud
December 2024
Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, Ensenada, Baja California, México. E-mail: (Campos).
The symbiotic pinnotherid crab was rediscovered in Acapulco Guerrero, Mexico, and was found infesting the spindle sea snail (Fasciolaridae), a new host record for this crab. A total of 432 snails were collected in 2020, with a prevalence of 77%, well explained by the host width frequency. Monthly prevalence varied from 54% to 90%, and the mean intensity was 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Chem
August 2025
Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States.
A reliable and effective analytical method for discovering and characterizing isomerized residues in physiologically active peptides is essential for their comprehensive characterization. Complete structural detail facilitates the determination of a peptide's biological roles and meets the increasingly stringent demands for peptide-based therapeutics. Here, a comprehensive untargeted analytical workflow predicts possible peptide isomers from peptidomics data and then localizes the isomerized residues by using collision-induced dissociation-trapped ion mobility spectrometry (CID-TIMS) and protein isoaspartyl methyltransferase (PIMT) activity.
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