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Sea cucumber has modified genes to help it live on hydrothermal vents

A sea cucumber called Chiridota heheva lives on deep-sea vents and cold seeps where there is little oxygen, and has evolved to survive in these toxic environments
A sea cucumber, Chiridota heheva
A sea cucumber (Chiridota heheva)
PF-(usna1)/Alamy

A sea cucumber that lives in extreme deep-sea environments has had its genome sequenced. This revealed that many of its genes have been altered, potentially by the intense places it calls home.

Chiridota heheva is a sea cucumber, a worm-like animal in the echinoderm group that also includes starfish. First described in 2004, it is one of the only echinoderms that lives in three of the most extreme ocean locations: hydrothermal vents, cold seeps rich in carbon-based chemicals like methane, and “whale falls” – the sunken corpses of whales. These places have little dissolved oxygen and are toxic to many organisms.

To find out how C. heheva survives, researchers led by Muhua Wang at Sun Yat-sen University in China read its DNA from samples collected by team member Jian He in the South China Sea in 2019.

The team found that 27 genes had been strongly selected for, suggesting they evolved in response to environmental pressures. Four of them are known to be involved in surviving a lack of oxygen.

Some genes had also been duplicated. There were seven genes for aerolysin-like proteins that are usually part of the immune system. Most echinoderms have either just one or none of these.

These proteins create small holes in the outer membranes of bacteria, destroying them. However, Wang says cold seeps don’t normally have any infectious bacteria. “We don’t think it’s related to the immune system,” he says.

The sea cucumbers could instead use the proteins to help digest bacteria. This would make sense because, unlike most animals in these environments, C. heheva doesn’t have symbiotic bacteria that provide it with nutrients. However, Wang emphasises that this idea is only a hypothesis at present.

bioRxiv

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Topics: Genetics / marine biology / marine life