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Shallow-water mussels show rapid adaptation to deep-sea life in 10 days

New insights into early adaptation of marine organisms to deep-sea environments
Rapid adaptation mechanism of shallow-water mussels exposed to deep-sea environment. Credit: QIBEBT

Researchers from the Qingdao Institute of Bioenergy and Bioprocess Technology (QIBEBT) and the Institute of Oceanology, both under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, have discovered new insights into how marine organisms adapt to extreme deep-sea environments.

Their study, in Communications Biology, investigates the transcriptional and metagenomic changes in shallow-water mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) exposed to conditions at a depth of 1,119 meters in the Site-F cold seep of the South China Sea.

The deep sea, covering over 90% of Earth's oceanic surface, is now recognized as a . Many deep-sea species are thought to have evolved from shallow-water ancestors, making their adaptations critical to marine biology research.

Using innovative in situ sampling and fixation techniques, the researchers minimized stress-induced changes during sample retrieval, enabling accurate capture of the mussels' adaptation responses.

In this study, after only 10 days of exposure to deep-sea conditions, the shallow-water mussels and their microbial communities exhibited significant similarities to native deep-sea mussels, indicating a remarkable host-microbiome convergence in response to adaptive shifts.

The researchers carried out comprehensive analyses using publicly available datasets. They found that this rapid adaptation primarily relates to stress response mechanisms, immune defense, and homeostasis, particularly in complex adjustments of gene expression.

New insights into early adaptation of marine organisms to deep-sea environments
In-situ experiment at Site-F Cold Seep in the South China Sea. Credit: QIBEBT

Notably, methanotrophic bacteria—key symbionts in deep-sea mussels—became dominant in the exposed shallow-water mussels. This shift correlated with changes in gene expression related to and endocytosis, highlighting a synergistic relationship between the mussels and their symbionts.

"Our study sheds light on the complex interactions between host genetic regulation and microbiome dynamics during adaptation to ," said Prof. Sun Luyang, the lead author of the study.

This research enhances our understanding of how and their microbial partners adapt to deep-sea challenges, with important implications for biodiversity conservation and ecological research.

More information: Luyang Sun et al, Shallow-water mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) adapt to deep-sea environment through transcriptomic and metagenomic insights, Communications Biology (2025).

Journal information: Communications Biology

Citation: Shallow-water mussels show rapid adaptation to deep-sea life in 10 days (2025, February 10) retrieved 28 May 2025 from /news/2025-02-shallow-mussels-rapid-deep-sea.html
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