• Title/Summary/Keyword: Calanus glacialis

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The Effect of Translationally Controlled Tumor Protein (TCTP) of the Arctic Copepod Calanus glacialis on Protecting Escherichia coli Cells against Oxidative Stress (북극 동물플랑크톤 Calanus glacialis TCTP (Translationally Controlled Tumor Protein)가 산화적 스트레스 상태에서 E. coli 세포의 저항성에 미치는 효과)

  • Park, Yu Kyung;Lee, Chang-Eun;Lee, Hyoungseok;Koh, Hye Yeon;Kim, Sojin;Lee, Sung Gu;Kim, Jung Eun;Yim, Joung Han;Hong, Ju-Mi;Kim, Ryeo-Ok;Han, Se Jong;Kim, Il-Chan
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.30 no.11
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    • pp.931-938
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    • 2020
  • Translationally controlled tumor protein (TCTP) is one of the most abundant proteins in various eukaryotic organisms. TCTPs play important roles in cell physiological processes in cancer, cell proliferation, gene regulation, and heat shock response. TCTP is also considered an important factor in the resistance to oxidative stress induced by dithiothreitol or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Arctic calanoid copepods have a variety of antioxidant defense systems to regulate the levels of potentially harmful reactive oxygen species generated by ultraviolet radiation in the Arctic marine ecosystem. However, information on the antioxidant activity of TCTP in the Arctic Calanus glacialis is still scarce. To understand the putative antioxidant function of the Arctic copepod C. glacialis TCTP (Cg-TCTP), its gene was cloned and sequenced. The Cg-TCTP comprised 522 bp and encoded a 174-amino acid putative protein with a calculated molecular weight of ~23 kDa. The recombinant Cg-TCTP (Cg-r TCTP) gene was overexpressed in Escherichia coli (BL21), and Cg-rTCTP-transformed cells were grown in the presence or absence of H2O2. Cg-rTCTP-transformed E. coli showed increased tolerance to high H2O2 concentrations. Therefore, TCTP may be an important antioxidant protein related to tolerance of the Arctic copepod C. glacialis to oxidative stress in the harsh environment of the Arctic Ocean.

On the Distribution of Zooplankton in the Southeastern Barents Sea during July 2002

  • Lee, Kang-Hyun;Chung, Kyung-Ho;Soh, Ho-Young;Lee, Wonchoel
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.392-399
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    • 2003
  • The spatial distribution and composition of the mesozooplankton community in the southeastern Barents Sea were observed at 17 stations, from 12 to 28 July 2002. Six taxa of zooplankton were found, including tintinnids, copepods, cumaceans, appendicularians, polychaetes, and barnacle larvae. Copepods were dominant, comprising 74% of the community. The copepod species Limnocalanus grimaldii, Pseudocalanus acuspes, Calanus glacialis, Calanus finmarchicus, and Microsetella norvegica, and the cumacean species Diastylis rathkei and Campylaspis rubicunda were identified. The overall mean abundance of the zooplankton was 72 indiv.l0 $\mu \textrm m^{-3}$ in the study area, ranging from 4 to 197 indiv.l0$\mu \textrm m^{-3}$. Zooplankton was more abundant at the oceanic than the coastal stations. The highest biomass measured was 97.4mg $\mu \textrm m^{-3}$, the mean biomass was 36.9 mg 10$\mu \textrm m^{-3}$, 93% of which was copepods. Pseudocalanus acuspes, C. glacialis, and C. finmarchicus predominated, accounting for 61% of abundance and 86% of biomass. Spatial distributions of the zooplankton community in the study area depended on the variations in water temperature and salinity, which were influenced by freshwater runoff from the continent.