PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Epigenetics study draws link between hatchery conditions and steelhead trout fitness

Epigenetics study draws link between hatchery conditions and steelhead trout fitness
2021-05-18
(Press-News.org) PULLMAN, Wash. - Alterations in the epigenetic programming of hatchery-raised steelhead trout could account for their reduced fertility, abnormal health and lower survival rates compared to wild fish, according to a new Washington State University study.

The study, published May 18 in Environmental Epigenetics, establishes a link between feeding practices that promote faster growth, as well as other environmental factors in fish hatcheries, and epigenetic changes found in the sperm and red blood cells of of steelhead trout.

The research was done at a national fish hatchery on the Methow River in Winthrop, Washington and at another hatchery close by on the Colombia River. It could have broader implications as hatchery-raised steelhead reproduce with wild steelhead after being released.

"Despite being genetically very similar, steelhead trout raised under hatchery conditions don't have the same level of health and survivability of wild-raised fish," said Michael Skinner, study co-author and professor in the WSU School of Biological Sciences.  "This research provides a molecular explanation for why we are seeing these differences."

Skinner is an expert in the field of epigenetics, which is the study of molecular factors and processes around DNA that regulate genome activity independent of the DNA sequence.

While exposure to environmental conditions doesn't typically affect an organism's genetic code, previous research has shown that a range of factors including toxicants, stress and nutrition can developmentally alter the phenotype of a variety of species through epigenetics.

In the current study, Skinner and colleagues performed a molecular analysis of sperm and red blood cells taken both from steelhead trout raised in two Washington fish hatcheries and trout that spent their entire life in the wild.

While there were negligible genetic differences between the two fish populations, the researchers identified a set of epigenetic features, called DNA methylation regions, in the sperm and red blood cells of the hatchery-raised steelhead that weren't present in their wild-raised counterparts.

Skinner's study connects the dots to identify a molecular mechanism that can help explain many of the physiological differences scientists have noted between hatchery-raised and wild fish.

For instance, it has been shown that the offspring of fish experiencing even a single generation of hatchery-rearing can have decreased fitness, changes in age at spawning, altered morphologies, and mal-adapted anti-predator behavior.

In fact, hatchery rearing has been shown to decrease reproductive success in steelhead trout by as much as 40% in the first two generations after fish are moved back to their natural environment.

Another important aspect of the epigenetic alterations Skinner identified is that they can be passed via the sperm to subsequent generations.

In places like the Methow and Columbia rivers where hatchery-raised trout are frequently released and bred with wild trout, epigenetic inheritance could have already had a substantial impact on the overall health and fitness of the fish population, Skinner said.

"We think that the large number of hatchery fish that have been released and bred with the wild fish population on the Methow River over the past 60 years has had a significant influence on the health of the overall population," he said. "Moving forward, our research suggests hatchery operations should consider not allowing interbreeding with wild fish populations. If not, impacts on wild-raised steelhead trout and the environment could be dramatic and alter the future trajectory of the overall population."

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Epigenetics study draws link between hatchery conditions and steelhead trout fitness

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Novel method of labeling DNA bases for sequencing

Novel method of labeling DNA bases for sequencing
2021-05-18
An international research team headed by Michal Hocek of the Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the Czech Academy of Sciences (IOCB Prague) and Charles University and Ciara K. O'Sullivan of Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV) in Spain have developed a novel method for labeling DNA, which in the future can be used for sequencing DNA by means of electrochemical detection. The researchers presented their results in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. A DNA molecule comprises four basic building blocks, nucleotides. The genetic information carried within the molecule is determined by the order of the nucleotides. Knowledge of the order of these building blocks, which is known ...

Portable, affordable, accurate, fast: Team invents new COVID-19 test

Portable, affordable, accurate, fast: Team invents new COVID-19 test
2021-05-18
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A new coronavirus test can get accurate results from a saliva sample in less than 30 minutes, researchers report in the journal Nature Communications. Many of the components of the hand-held device used in this technology can be 3D-printed, and the test can detect as little as one viral particle per 1-microliter drop of fluid. "We developed a rapid, highly sensitive and accurate assay, and a portable, battery-powered device for COVID-19 testing that can be used anywhere at any time," said University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign chemical and biomolecular engineering professor Huimin Zhao, who led the research. Though it is still in the ...

Researchers announce new discovery to evaluate tuberculosis treatments

2021-05-18
A new study published in Nature Communications provides an important new basis for comparing the effectiveness of different tuberculosis treatments. Tuberculosis, a disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), is typically the leading infectious cause of death globally, killing 1.2 million people each year. The availability of a new way to evaluate treatments can save lives. In the study, faculty at the University of Colorado School of Medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus partnered with the University of California ...

Scientists debut most efficient 'optical rectennas,' devices that harvest power from heat

2021-05-18
Scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder have tapped into a poltergeist-like property of electrons to design devices that can capture excess heat from their environment--and turn it into usable electricity. The researchers have described their new "optical rectennas" in a paper published today in the journal Nature Communications. These devices, which are too small to see with the naked eye, are roughly 100 times more efficient than similar tools used for energy harvesting. And they achieve that feat through a mysterious process called "resonant ...

How to become 'ant-i-social'

How to become ant-i-social
2021-05-18
Ants are renowned in the insect world for their complex social structure and behaviors. Workers and foragers support the queen, faithfully carrying out their social roles for the overall health of the colony. This complex "superorganism" ---as scientists have dubbed it --- has become a prime model to explore the genetic and behavioral roots of social organisms. Remarkably, there are also rare instances of ants not playing well with others and shrugging off their societal duties to become free-loading parasites amongst their free-living relatives. Now, in a new study published in Nature ...

Synaptic transmission: Not a one-way street

Synaptic transmission: Not a one-way street
2021-05-18
Information flows in a well-defined direction in the brain: Chemical and electrical signals are passed from one neuron to the other across the synapse, from the pre-synaptic to the post-synaptic neuron. Now, Peter Jonas and his group at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (IST Austria) show that information also travels in the opposite direction at a key synapse in the hippocampus, the brain region responsible for learning and memory. At the so-called mossy fiber synapse, the post-synaptic CA3 neuron influences how the pre-synaptic neuron, the so-called mossy fiber neuron, fires. "We have shown, for the first time, that a retrograde information flow ...

Black, Hispanic and Asian populations saw greatest rise in cardiac deaths during pandemic

2021-05-18
BOSTON - In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States experienced higher rates of heart disease and cerebrovascular disease deaths, relative to the corresponding months the previous year. While a large body of evidence has shown that Black and Hispanic communities have borne a disproportionately high burden of disease and death from COVID-19, little is known about whether the rise in cardiovascular deaths during the pandemic has been disproportionately concentrated among racial and ethnic minority populations. A new study led by clinician-researchers at the Richard A. and Susan F. Smith Center for Outcomes Research in Cardiology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) characterized heart disease ...

Intensive agriculture could drive loss of bees and other tropical pollinators

Intensive agriculture could drive loss of bees and other tropical pollinators
2021-05-18
Pollinators in the tropics are less likely to thrive in intensive croplands, finds a new study led by UCL researchers suggesting bees and butterflies are at risk of major losses. Across the globe, lower levels of land use intensity are good for pollinators, finds the new Nature Communications paper which shows the importance of sustainable land management in cities and agricultural regions. As insect pollinators were found to be more than 70% less abundant in areas with intensive cropland, compared to wild sites, the researchers say that more sustainable agricultural ...

Gut check

2021-05-18
We are truly never alone, not even within our own bodies. Human beings play host to trillions of bacteria, fungi, viruses, and other microorganisms that make up the human microbiome. In recent years, the mix of these resident bacteria, and the presence of specific bacterial species, has been linked to conditions ranging from obesity to multiple sclerosis. Now, going a step farther, researchers at Harvard Medical School and Joslin Diabetes Center have gone beyond microbial species. Analyzing the genetic makeup of bacteria in the human gut, the team has successfully linked groups of bacterial genes, or "genetic signatures," to multiple diseases. The work brings scientists closer to developing ...

The environmental trade-offs of autonomous vehicles

2021-05-18
Optimistic predictions expect reliable autonomous vehicles to be commercially available by 2030, at a time when mobility is undergoing a profound shift away from traditional modes of transportation and towards door-to-door services. Previous analysis suggested that public transport will lose market share to autonomous vehicles, but the environmental impact of changing transport use has hardly been considered. New research shows that the convenience of autonomous vehicles would likely come at an environmental cost. A recent paper by researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison addresses the use-phase implications of autonomous vehicles using a stated preference ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Parts of the brain that are needed to remember words identified

Anti-amyloid drug shows signs of preventing Alzheimer’s dementia

Sharing mealtimes with others linked to better wellbeing

New DESI results: Evidence mounts for evolving dark energy

New DESI results strengthen hints that dark energy may evolve

DESI opens access to the largest 3D map of the universe yet

New study reveals high levels of fusarium mycotoxins in seized cannabis from Arizona and California

Sleepier during the day? For some older people, it’s linked to twice the dementia risk

Is increased sleepiness in our 80s tied to higher dementia risk?

South Africa and China establish record-breaking 12,900 km ultra-secure quantum satellite link

A rule-changer for ceramic fuel cells

Good vibrations: Scientists discover a groundbreaking method for exciting phonon-polaritons

CNIC scientists discover a type of immune cell that produces defensive "shields" in the skin

Science behind “Polly want a cracker” could guide future treatment design for speech disorders

Brain imaging reveals surprises about learning

Scientists see the first steps of DNA unwinding

Earliest stages and possible new cause of stomach cancer revealed

Unique cell shape keeps lymphatic vessels and plant leaves stable

New understanding of B cell mutation strategies could have implications for vaccines

Sea level rise after the last ice age: More knowledge

New mechanism behind adaptive immunity revealed. It could impact how we design vaccines.

Hyperuricemia: Current state and prospects

What happens in the male mouse brain during sex

Prescription stimulant use, misuse, and use disorder among US adults ages 18 to 64

Suicide and self-harm events with GLP-1 receptor agonists in adults with diabetes or obesity

Pregnancy irreversibly remodels the mouse intestine

Blocking gut cannabinoids may prevent leaky gut

Plant patch can detect stress signals in real time

NFL’s Buffalo Bills continue CPR education kicking off year 3 of the HeartBEAT initiative

Team finds regional, age-related trends in exposure to drug-resistant pathogen

[Press-News.org] Epigenetics study draws link between hatchery conditions and steelhead trout fitness