Project description:Color is an important trait in nature, playing a role in selection and speciation. The most important colorants in crustaceans are carotenoids, which in complexes with carotenoid-binding proteins provide an astonishing variety of colors from red to violet. Over 350 species and subspecies of amphipods (Crustacea: Amphipoda) endemic to Lake Baikal exhibit an impressive variability of colors and coloration patterns. However, the mechanisms forming this diversity are underexplored. In this work, we analyze the coloration of two species of endemic Lake Baikal amphipods, Eulimnogammarus cyaneus and E. vittatus. These species are brightly colored and, even more importantly, characterized by intraspecific color variability. We showed that the color of either species strongly correlated with the abundance of two putative carotenoid-binding proteins (the relative abundance of these proteins was higher in blue or teal-colored animals than in the orange- or yellow-colored ones.). With LC-MS/MS, we were able to identifiy these proteins, which turned out to be similar to the pheromone/odorant-binding protein family.
2020-06-04 | PXD018516 | Pride
Project description:Endemic lake Baikal amphipods Raw sequence reads
Project description:In this project we aimed to establish a proteome-based pipeline for a non-model Baikal endemic amphipod species Eulimnogammarus cyaneus (Dybowsky, 1874). We used next-generation transcriptome sequencing to create a database for protein identification and investigated the proteome of E. cyaneus with LC-MS with particular emphasis on sexual dimorphism and response to acute thermal stress. We were able to characterize ca. 1000 protein groups and found male- and female-specific proteins, as well as proteins specific for thermal stress conditions.
2020-11-19 | PXD013237 | Pride
Project description:Transcriptome sequencing of cryptic species of Lake Baikal endemic amphipods (Crustacea: Amphipoda) of the genus Eulimnogammarus
Project description:This project aims to find the molecular changes driving the cold stress response of freshwater amphipods with different overwintering strategies