Genome wide transcriptional changes underlie gradual and recurrent adaptation to protein malnutrition in zebrafish
Wang, S.; Childers, L.; Martinez, F.; Bagnat, M.; Park, J.
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Lysosome-rich enterocytes (LREs) are a specialized population of intestinal cells that mediate the uptake and absorption of dietary proteins in fish and neonatal mammals. Loss of LRE function causes inhibited growth and poor survival due to protein malnutrition. Previously, we reported that in zebrafish loss of Plasmolipin (pllp), an endosomal membrane protein highly expressed in LREs, impairs LRE differentiation and dietary protein absorption, resulting in marked reduction in survival rates. Raising pllp homozygous mutants surviving to adulthood and in-crossing them for multiple generations resulted in their adaptation to malnutrition, with adapted pllp mutants showing no survival deficits. To uncover mechanisms underlying this phenomenon, we compared the older adapted pllp allele with genetically related wild type (WT) fish and a newly generated pllp mutant allele. Using transcriptome profiling and quantitative protein absorption assays, we found that adapted pllp mutants exhibit upregulation of LRE endocytic components, resulting in a capacity for protein absorption that exceeds that of WT. This hyperactivation of LRE endocytic and absorptive activity is aided by a fine-tuned transcriptional regulation of immune genes that may contribute to the enhanced survival of pllp mutants in the face of increased exposure to environmental antigens. Genetic analyses indicate that these adaptations emerge gradually and are recurrent as shown experimentally by the adaptation of a mutant allele upon inbreeding and natural selection. Overall, our study illustrates that genome wide transcriptional changes underly adaptation mechanisms that enhance intestinal function and organismal survival in response to protein malnutrition. Author SummaryIn this study, we investigated how zebrafish adapt to protein malnutrition when the function of specialized intestinal protein-absorbing enterocytes, also found in newborn mammals, is impaired. We observed that fish carrying a mutation that severely disrupts intestinal protein absorption gradually recovered their ability to survive over multiple generations of inbreeding, even though the underlying mutation remained intact. By comparing gene activity in these adapted fish with that of newly generated mutants, we found that adaptation involves a coordinated rewiring of two systems: the enterocytes themselves became hyperactivated, absorbing more protein than even wildtype fish, while the immune system was simultaneously recalibrated to dampen inflammation. We further showed that this adaptive process is recurrent by using a second, independently generated mutant line that underwent a strikingly similar recovery trajectory over successive generations. Together, our findings reveal that animals can overcome a severe, heritable nutritional deficit through a gradual, genome-wide transcriptional response that fundamentally reshapes intestinal function across generations.
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