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Projects / Programmes source: ARIS

Biomarkers of subcellular stress in the Northern Adriatic under global environmental change

Research activity

Code Science Field Subfield
1.03.03  Natural sciences and mathematics  Biology  Ecosystems 

Code Science Field
1.06  Natural Sciences  Biological sciences 
Keywords
Northern Adriatic, climate change, ocean acidification, warming, subcellular and physiological stress, biomarkers of stress
Evaluation (rules)
source: COBISS
Researchers (9)
no. Code Name and surname Research area Role Period No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  34210  PhD Nina Bednaršek  Control and care of the environment  Head  2020 - 2023  64 
2.  34499  PhD Katja Klun  Control and care of the environment  Researcher  2020 - 2023  114 
3.  18338  Tihomir Makovec    Technical associate  2020 - 2023  387 
4.  27504  PhD Borut Mavrič  Biology  Researcher  2020 - 2023  355 
5.  11360  PhD Patricija Mozetič  Biology  Researcher  2020 - 2023  420 
6.  54508  Živa Muhič    Technical associate  2021 - 2023 
7.  15367  PhD Andreja Ramšak  Biology  Researcher  2020 - 2023  326 
8.  38171  PhD Domen Trkov  Biology  Researcher  2023  94 
9.  56089  Paula Turković    Technical associate  2021 - 2023 
Organisations (1)
no. Code Research organisation City Registration number No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  0105  National Institute of Biology  Ljubljana  5055784  13,283 
Abstract
The Northern Adriatic Sea (NAS) is a shallow eutrophicated region of the northern Mediterranean Sea that is continuously interacting with strong anthropogenic inputs of nutrients and rapidly changing warming (W). Since it was considered that carbonate-rich riverine inputs offer surface protection against ocean acidification (OA), biological studies in the NAS have not include OA in its stressor portfolio so far. However, seasonal stratification and intense remineralization can potentially expose the benthic habitats in the NAS to intense OA exposure, representing an additional physiological stress for the economically and ecologically important benthic species under future climate change scenarios. This work thus proposes to study the impact of ocean acidification and warming (OAW) on various life stages on two species; the economically important Mediterranean mussel (Mytilus galloprovincialis) with increased sensitivity to OAW, and ecologically important Mediterranean shore crab (Carcinus aestuarii, Nardo, 1847) that exhibits high adaptability and resilience in the coastal lagoon system. Stressor response to environmental stress can induce the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and elucidate subcellular oxidative stress, with the changes evident in the mitochondrial integrity and cytoskeleton activity, both of which are the main determinant of organelle functionality and homeostasis. In the next stage, energy expenditure and compensatory energetic trade-offs can potentially cause fitness-related physiological impairments in vulnerable species. The goal of this work is to develop quantifiable relationships of OAW interactive stressors in crabs and bivalves that provide essential information about the organism capacity of sustaining vital biological processes against the OAW-related energetic constraints in the NAS. The proposed measurements in this proposal thus focus at the lowest (sub)-cellular level (mitochondrial integrity, cytoskeleton activity, oxidative stress reactions), designating these changes as the subcellular markers of stress. I built on the inference that the assessment of these subcellular parameters can reveal the functional outcomes derived from complex arrays of altered genes and proteins that set limits for physiological function. To establish the linkage between subcellular, physiological and organismal responses, this work aims at integrating various measurements across different stages of biological organization. Such coupling provides insights into early warning responses, while increasing the certainty of predictions under climate change scenarios in the NAS. Seasonal variability and potential for multiple stressor dynamics in the NAS offer a natural laboratory to understand in situ applicability of the subcellular biomarkers of stress. This will help understand and visualize the most sensitive OAW habitats and temporal windows of the greatest organismal sensitivity. As such, biomarkers of stress can offer an application for in situ stress responses and be used to inform conservation efforts and aquaculture management practices related to climate change. This project is multidisciplinary oriented, combining the expertise and state-of-the-art techniques in the subcellular biology, structural biology, marine ecophysiology, physical, chemical and biological oceanography, statistics. The collaboration with the experts in the specific area warranty high quality research, the design of different experiments and tasks and leveraging on the existing infrastructure and oceanographic surveys aim at providing multiple-layered results, while reducing the failure and uncertainty of the promised deliveries. The team is expecting to deliver several high impact factor peer-reviewed manuscripts and demonstrating the applicability of the developed biomarker methods for biological monitoring across habitats and spatial scales.
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