Digestive enzymes and gut morphometric parameters of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus): Influence of body size and temperature

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Abstract

Determining digestive enzyme activity is of potential interest to obtain and understand valuable information about fish digestive physiology, since digestion is an elementary process of fish metabolism. We described for the first time (i) three digestive enzymes: Amylase, trypsin and intestinal alkaline phosphatase (IAP), and (ii) three gut morphometric parameters: Relative gut length (RGL), relative gut mass (RGM) and Zihler's index (ZI) in threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus), and we studied the effect of temperature and body size on these parameters. When mimicking seasonal variation in temperature, body size had no effect on digestive enzyme activity. The highest levels of amylase and trypsin activity were observed at 18°C, while the highest IAP activity was recorded at 20°C. When sticklebacks were exposed to three constant temperatures (16, 18 and 21°C), a temporal effect correlated to fish growth was observed with inverse evolution patterns between amylase activity and the activities of trypsin and IAP. Temperature (in both experiments) had no effect on morphometric parameters. However, a temporal variation was recorded for both RGM (in the second experiment) and ZI (in both experiments), and the later was correlated to fish body mass.

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  • Table 1. Water parameters and photoperiod during the mimicked seasonal variation experiment. Only temperatures and the photoperiod were modulated. The pH, dissolved oxygen and conductivity changed with water temperature, but their effects were not studied.
  • Table 2. Water parameters recorded during the prolonged maintenance of sticklebacks at 16, 18 and 21˚C.
  • Table 3. Biometric and gut morphometric parameters measured in sticklebacks exposed to a temperature-photoperiod cycle after 0, 60, 120, 180 and 240 days.
  • Fig 1. Effect of time condition on the activities of three digestive enzymes in G. aculeatus. (A) Amylase, (B) Intestinal Alkaline Phosphatase (IAP), and (C) Trypsin. Asterisks indicate significant differences in comparison with day 0 ( p<0.05; p<0.00001).
  • Fig 2. PCA model of digestive enzyme activities measured in experiment 1, in contrast with quantitative variables (Fig 2A): fish biometric parameters (weight, length, K: Fulton’s Condition Factor, GSI: Gonado-somatic index), gut morphometric parameters (RGM: Relative Gut Mass, RGL: Relative Gut Length, ZI: Zihler’s Index), water parameters (temperature, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, pH), and time as qualitative variables (Fig 2B).
  • Fig 3. Effect of water temperature and time on the activity of three digestive enzymes in G. aculeatus. (A) Amylase, (B) Intestinal Alkaline Phosphatase (IAP), and (C) Trypsin. Different letters indicate significant differences between temperature groups of the same time condition (mean ± S.D; n = 10, P<0.05). Asterisks indicate significant differences with respect to initial values measured on day 15 ( p<0.05; p<0.001; p<0.00001).
  • Table 4. Biometric and gut morphometric parameters measured in fish exposed to three fixed water temperatures (16, 18 and 21˚C) for 120 days.
  • Fig 4. PCA model of digestive enzyme activities measured in experiment 2, in contrast with quantitative variables (Fig 4A): fish biometric parameters (weight, length, K: Fulton’s Condition Factor, GSI: Gonado-somatic index), gut morphometric parameters (RGM: Relative Gut Mass, RGL: Relative Gut Length, ZI: Zihler’s Index), water parameters (temperature, conductivity, dissolved oxygen, pH), and time as qualitative variables (Fig 4B). (IAP: Intestinal Alkaline Phosphatase. In Fig 4B, capital letters A, B and C represent the experimental water temperatures of 16, 18, 21˚C, respectively. 1, 2 and 3 represent the experimental time periods of 15, 60 and 120 days, respectively.

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APA

Hani, Y. M. I., Marchand, A., Turies, C., Kerambrun, E., Palluel, O., Bado-Nilles, A., … Dedourge-Geffard, O. (2018). Digestive enzymes and gut morphometric parameters of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus): Influence of body size and temperature. PLoS ONE, 13(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0194932

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