Time Course of Metabolic Capacities in Paralarvae of the Common Octopus, Octopus vulgaris, in the First Stages of Life. Searching Biomarkers of Nutritional Imbalance
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Morales Hernández, Amalia; Cardenete Hernández, Gabriel Ramón; Hidalgo Jiménez, Carmen; Garrido, Diego; Virginia Martín, M.; Almansa, EduardoEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
Octopus vulgaris paralarvae metabolic organization
Date
2017-06-16Referencia bibliográfica
Morales, A.E. et. al. Front. Physiol. 8:427. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2017.00427]
Sponsorship
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spanish Government) through the Projects OCTOWELF (AGL2013-49101-C2-1-R and AGL2013-49101- C2-2-R); Action FA1301 “A network for improvement of cephalopod welfare and husbandry in research, aquaculture and fisheries (CephsInAction),” supporting this work. DG was financed by Ph.D; Spanish Institute of Oceanography (MINECO, Spanish Government) (BOE 3rd November 2011)Abstract
The culture of the common octopus (Octopus vulgaris) is promising since the species
has a relatively short lifecycle, rapid growth, and high food conversion ratios. However,
recent attempts at successful paralarvae culture have failed due to slow growth and high
mortality rates. Establishing an optimal nutritional regime for the paralarvae seems to
be the impeding step in successful culture methods. Gaining a thorough knowledge
of food regulation and assimilation is essential for paralarvae survival and longevity
under culture conditions. The aim of this study, then, was to elucidate the characteristic
metabolic organization of octopus paralarvae throughout an ontogenic period of 12
days post-hatching, as well as assess the effect of diet enrichment with live prey
containing abundant marine phospholipids. Our results showed that throughout the
ontogenic period studied, an increase in anaerobic metabolism took place largely due to
an increased dependence of paralarvae on exogenous food. Our studies showed that
this activity was supported by octopine dehydrogenase activity, with a less significant
contribution of lactate dehydrogenase activity. Regarding aerobic metabolism, the use of
amino acids was maintained for the duration of the experiment. Our studies also showed
a significant increase in the rate of oxidation of fatty acids from 6 days after-hatching. A
low, although sustained, capacity for de novo synthesis of glucose from amino acids
and glycerol was also observed. Regardless of the composition of the food, glycerol
kinase activity significantly increased a few days prior to a massive mortality event. This
could be related to a metabolic imbalance in the redox state responsible for the high
mortality. Thus, glycerol kinase might be used as an effective nutritional and welfare
biomarker. The studies in this report also revealed the important finding that feeding larvae
with phospholipid-enriched Artemia improved animal viability and welfare, significantly
increasing the rate of survival and growth of paralarvae.