LC-MS Based Metabolomic Profiling of Largehead Hairtail (Trichiurus japonicus) Ovary Reveals Metabolic Signatures of Ovarian Developmental Process (II–IV)

Trichiurus japonicus is an economically important fish that ranks 11th in global marine fish capture production. However, the reproductive characteristics of this fish have undergone notable changes in recent decades, potentially affecting the quality of offspring and sustainable utilization. To imp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFishes Vol. 8; no. 5; p. 262
Main Authors Feng, Liu-Ying, Yan, Li-Ping, Li, Run-Wei, Li, Sheng-Fa, Cheng, Jia-Hua, Jin, Yan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 14.05.2023
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Summary:Trichiurus japonicus is an economically important fish that ranks 11th in global marine fish capture production. However, the reproductive characteristics of this fish have undergone notable changes in recent decades, potentially affecting the quality of offspring and sustainable utilization. To improve our understanding of the physiological regulation of maturation in T. japonicus, untargeted liquid chromatography mass spectrometry was utilized to identify the small molecules that characterize the comprehensive metabolic profiles of ovaries during ovary development from stage II to stage IV. According to the results of OPLS-DA, the ovarian metabolite profiles of the three developmental stages were separated. The concentrations of 124 and 100 metabolites were significantly altered between stage II vs. III and III vs. IV, respectively. Lipids and lipid-like molecules accounted for the largest proportion of the altered metabolites, followed by amino acids, peptides, and analogues. The significantly altered metabolites-enriched pathways differed slightly between stages II and III and stages III and IV. Steroid-related pathways were heavily affected during stages II to III, while significantly altered metabolites from stages III to IV were involved in oocyte-maturation-related pathways. Through metabonomics analysis, potentially important metabolic pathways and metabolites between different ovarian stages were detected, providing basic information for further investigation of maturation mechanisms in wild fish.
ISSN:2410-3888
2410-3888
DOI:10.3390/fishes8050262