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Dive into the research topics where Adrianna Ianora is active.

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Featured researches published by Adrianna Ianora.


Nature | 1999

The insidious effect of diatoms on copepod reproduction

Antonio Miralto; G. Barone; G. Romano; Serge A. Poulet; Adrianna Ianora; G. L. Russo; Isabella Buttino; G. Mazzarella; M. Laabir; M. Cabrini; M. G. Giacobbe

The productive regions of the ocean are characterized by seasonal blooms of phytoplankton which are generally dominated by diatoms. This algal class has, therefore, traditionally been regarded as providing the bulk of the food that sustains the marine food chain to top consumers and important fisheries. However, this beneficial role has recently been questioned on the basis of laboratory studies showing that although dominant zooplankton grazers such as copepods feed extensively on diatoms, the hatching success of eggs thus produced is seriously impaired. Here we present evidence from the field showing that the hatching success of wild copepods feeding on a diatom-dominated bloom is also heavily compromised, with only 12% of the eggs hatching compared with 90% in post-bloom conditions. We report on the structure of the three aldehydes isolated from diatoms that are responsible for this biological activity, and show that these compounds arrest embryonic development in copepod and sea urchin bioassays and have antiproliferative and apoptotic effects on human carcinoma cells.


Nature | 2004

Aldehyde suppression of copepod recruitment in blooms of a ubiquitous planktonic diatom

Adrianna Ianora; Antonio Miralto; Serge A. Poulet; Ylenia Carotenuto; Isabella Buttino; Giovanna Romano; Raffaella Casotti; Georg Pohnert; Thomas Wichard; Luca Colucci-D'Amato; Giuseppe Terrazzano; Victor Smetacek

The growth cycle in nutrient-rich, aquatic environments starts with a diatom bloom that ends in mass sinking of ungrazed cells and phytodetritus. The low grazing pressure on these blooms has been attributed to the inability of overwintering copepod populations to track them temporally. We tested an alternative explanation: that dominant diatom species impair the reproductive success of their grazers. We compared larval development of a common overwintering copepod fed on a ubiquitous, early-blooming diatom species with its development when fed on a typical post-bloom dinoflagellate. Development was arrested in all larvae in which both mothers and their larvae were fed the diatom diet. Mortality remained high even if larvae were switched to the dinoflagellate diet. Aldehydes, cleaved from a fatty acid precursor by enzymes activated within seconds after crushing of the cell, elicit the teratogenic effect. This insidious mechanism, which does not deter the herbivore from feeding but impairs its recruitment, will restrain the cohort size of the next generation of early-rising overwinterers. Such a transgenerational plant–herbivore interaction could explain the recurringly inefficient use of a predictable, potentially valuable food resource—the spring diatom bloom—by marine zooplankton.


Phycologia | 2003

The effects of diatoms on copepod reproduction: a review

Adrianna Ianora; Serge A. Poulet; Antonio Miralto

Abstract Diatoms are small eukaryotic plants with over 10,000 known species, constituting one of the major components of the phytoplankton in freshwater and marine environments. Traditionally, they have been regarded as beneficial to the growth and survival of marine organisms, and to the transfer of organic material through the marine food chain to top consumers and important fisheries. From 1993 onwards, however, evidence has accumulated that has progressively challenged the classic view that diatoms are good and harmless food items for copepods, the dominant constituent of the zooplankton, which sustain the production and growth of larval fish. Laboratory results in recent years have shown that some diatoms potentially reduce copepod egg viability up to 100%; at times, egg production rates are adversely affected as well. Thus, while diatoms may provide a source of energy for copepod larval growth, they often reduce fecundity or hatching success or both. These results constitute the paradox of diatom–copepod interactions in the pelagic food web. This biological model is new and has no equivalent in marine plant–herbivore systems, since most of the known negative plant–animal interactions have been related to repellent or poisoning processes, but never to reproductive failure. This paper reviews the literature on the inhibitory effects of diatoms on the reproductive biology of copepods and focuses on the present status and problems regarding diatom–copepod interactions.


Archive | 2000

Ross Sea Ecology

Francesco Maria Faranda; Letterio Guglielmo; Adrianna Ianora

Italian research on Antarctic atmosphere started in a systematic way in 1986 when the Programma Nazionale di Ricerche in Antartide began its activity. Studies on the atmosphere have been developed in five different projects: planetary boundary layer physics; meteorology and climatology; aerosols radiation and clouds; minor components and greenhouse gases; physics and chemistry of the stratosphere. The monitoring activity has been developed considering two different aspects: (1) the need to have continuous and reliable measurements of the meteorological parameters in the area of the Italian base and (2) the possibility to carry out some specific studies concerning the physics, the dynamics and chemistry of the atmosphere. A climatological observatory has been arranged with a network of fixed automatic weather stations, that record meteorological data throughout the year. During the summer upper level soundings are also conducted. In the present chapter the climatological data, collected in about a decade,are analyzed to give a climatic picture of Terra Nova Bay. The parameters considered are radiation, pressure, temperature, humidity and wind. The obtained results have been compared, when possible, with the data collected at foreign stations, to verify their reliability. A short discussion about Antarctica and climate change closes the work.


Ecotoxicology | 2010

Toxigenic effects of diatoms on grazers, phytoplankton and other microbes: a review

Adrianna Ianora; Antonio Miralto

Traditionally, diatoms have been regarded as providing the bulk of the food that sustains the marine food chain and important fisheries. However, this view was challenged almost two decades ago on the basis of laboratory and field studies showing that when copepods, the principal predators of diatoms, feed on certain diatom diets, they produce abnormal eggs that either fail to develop to hatching or hatch into malformed (i.e. teratogenic) nauplii that die soon afterwards. Over the years, many explanations have been advanced to explain the causes for reproductive failure in copepods and other marine and freshwater invertebrates including diatom toxicity, or nutritional deficiency and poor assimilation of essential compounds in the animal gut. Here we review the literature concerning the first possibility, that diatoms produce cytotoxic compounds responsible for growth inhibition and teratogenic activity, potentially sabotaging future generations of grazers by inducing poor recruitment. The cytotoxic compounds responsible for these effects are short chain polyunsaturated aldehydes (PUAs) and other oxygenated fatty acid degradation products such as hydroxides, oxo-acids, and epoxyalcohols (collectively termed oxylipins) that are cleaved from fatty acid precursors by enzymes activated within seconds after crushing of cells. Such toxins are suggested to have multiple simultaneous functions in that they not only deter herbivore feeding but some also act as allelopathic agents against other phytoplankton cells, thereby affecting the growth of competitors, and also signalling population-level cell death and termination of blooms, with possible consequences for food web structure and community composition. Some oxylipins also play a role in driving marine bacterial community diversity, with neutral, positive or negative interactions depending on the species, thereby shaping the structure of bacterial communities during diatom blooms. Several reviews have already been published on diatom-grazer interactions so this paper does not attempt to provide a comprehensive overview, but rather to consider some of the more recent findings in this field. We also consider the role of diatom oxylipins in mediating physiological and ecological processes in the plankton and the multiple simultaneous functions of these secondary metabolites.


Journal of Phycology | 2005

GROWTH INHIBITION AND TOXICITY OF THE DIATOM ALDEHYDE 2‐TRANS, 4‐TRANS‐DECADIENAL ON THALASSIOSIRA WEISSFLOGII (BACILLARIOPHYCEAE)

Raffaella Casotti; Sabina Mazza; Christophe Brunet; Vincent Vantrepotte; Adrianna Ianora; Antonio Miralto

A common aldehyde present in marine and freshwater diatoms, 2‐trans, 4‐trans‐decadienal (A3), is involved in the wound‐activated response of diatoms to copepod grazing. Upon breakage of the diatom cell membrane, aldehydes are enzymatically produced by the rapid conversion of precursors and strongly impact copepod reproduction by impairing egg production and hatching success, inducing teratogenic embryos modifications. In this study, A3 was assayed with the marine diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii (Grunow) Fryxell et Hasle. The aldehyde concentration necessary to reduce 50% growth rate (EC50) was 0.29 mg·L−1. Decadienal was found to inhibit T. weissflogii cell growth in a dose‐ and time‐dependent manner, with irreversible effects after 24 h of exposure. Decadienal induced a degenerative process, through modifications of cell membrane characteristics, interference with cell cycle progression, and with cell metabolic activity, leading to cell death. A preferential action of A3 on dividing cells was observed. Photosynthetic efficiency significantly decreased upon exposure to the aldehyde, paralleled by an increase in diatoxanthin, suggesting a protective role of this xanthophyll, usually involved in photoprotection. Dying cells exhibited the morphological and biochemical features that bear close resemblance to apoptosis of mammalian cells, including cell shrinkage, chromatin condensation, and degradation of nuclear DNA to nucleosomal size fragments. These data are the first direct evidence to show aldehydes are toxic to diatoms. We suggest a possible nontoxic role of such compounds as chemical signals of unfavorable conditions within the phytoplankton communities, which may be relevant for the population dynamics of diatoms during blooms.


Hydrobiologia | 2011

Induced defences in marine and freshwater phytoplankton: a review.

Ellen Van Donk; Adrianna Ianora; Matthijs Vos

Many organisms have developed defences to avoid predation by species at higher trophic levels. The capability of primary producers to defend themselves against herbivores affects their own survival, can modulate the strength of trophic cascades and changes rates of competitive exclusion in aquatic communities. Algal species are highly flexible in their morphology, growth form, biochemical composition and production of toxic and deterrent compounds. Several of these variable traits in phytoplankton have been interpreted as defence mechanisms against grazing. Zooplankton feed with differing success on various phytoplankton species, depending primarily on size, shape, cell wall structure and the production of toxins and deterrents. Chemical cues associated with (i) mechanical damage, (ii) herbivore presence and (iii) grazing are the main factors triggering induced defences in both marine and freshwater phytoplankton, but most studies have failed to disentangle the exact mechanism(s) governing defence induction in any particular species. Induced defences in phytoplankton include changes in morphology (e.g. the formation of spines, colonies and thicker cell walls), biochemistry (such as production of toxins, repellents) and in life history characteristics (formation of cysts, reduced recruitment rate). Our categorization of inducible defences in terms of the responsible induction mechanism provides guidance for future work, as hardly any of the available studies on marine or freshwater plankton have performed all the treatments that are required to pinpoint the actual cue(s) for induction. We discuss the ecology of inducible defences in marine and freshwater phytoplankton with a special focus on the mechanisms of induction, the types of defences, their costs and benefits, and their consequences at the community level.


Marine Biology | 1995

A comparative study of the inhibitory effect of diatoms on the reproductive biology of the copepod Temora stylifera

Adrianna Ianora; Serge A. Poulet; Antonio Miralto

Egg production and viability in the copepod Temora stylifera (collected in the Bay of Naples, Italy in 1992) were strongly dependent on food type. A flagellate (Isochrysis galbana) diet induced the production of good quality eggs that developed to hatching. By contrast, two diatoms (Chaetoceros curvisetum, Phaeodactylum tricornutum) resulted in poor egg quality, with hatching success as low as 20% of total egg production. With the third diatom tested, Skeletonema costatum, females produced eggs for only 3 to 4 d, after which time they either became sterile or died. These results are discussed in relation to previous findings regarding the impact of the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum minimum and the diatom Thalassiosira rotula on the hatching success of T. stylifera eggs. Low egg viability was possibly not due to an absence of remating or a deficiency of some specific essential nutrient required for egg development but to the presence of inhibitory compounds blocking cell division during early copepod embryogenesis. This questions the traditional view that diatoms are an important food item regulating copepod secondary production.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2003

A marine diatom-derived aldehyde induces apoptosis in copepod and sea urchin embryos

Giovanna Romano; Gian Luigi Russo; Isabella Buttino; Adrianna Ianora; Antonio Miralto

SUMMARY The diatom-derived aldehyde 2-trans-4-trans-decadienal (DD) was tested as an apoptogenic inducer in both copepod and sea urchin embryos, using terminal-deoxynucleotidyl-transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling (TUNEL), DNA fragmentation profiling (laddering) and an assay for caspase-3 activity. DD induced TUNEL positivity and DNA laddering, but not caspase-like activation, in copepod embryos spawned by females fed for 10-15 days the diatom diet Thalassiosira rotula Meunier (in vivo), or when newly spawned eggs were exposed for 1 h to 5 μg ml-1 DD (in vitro). To our knowledge, this is the first time that evidence for an apoptotic process in copepods has been obtained by cytochemical (TUNEL) and biochemical (DNA fragmentation) approaches. The absence of caspase-like activity in copepod embryos suggests that caspase-independent programmed cell death occurs in these organisms. In sea urchin embryos, DD induced apoptosis and also activated a caspase-3-like protease. The saturated aldehyde decanal induced apoptosis at higher concentrations and after a longer incubation period than DD, indicating that α,β-unsaturation of the molecule, coupled with the aldehyde group, is responsible for the greater biological activity of DD. Since diatoms are an important food source for marine herbivores such as copepods and sea urchins, these findings may help explain why unsaturated aldehydes often induce reproductive failure, with important ecological consequences at the population level.


Marine Biology | 1996

The diatom Thalassiosira rotula affects reproductive success in the copepod Acartia clausi

Adrianna Ianora; Serge A. Poulet; Antonio Miralto; R. Grottoli

Fecundity, egg viability and fecal pellet production are reported for Acartia clausi females collected in the Bay of Naples, Italy, from April to October 1992 and fed either with a diatom (Thalassiosira rotula) or dinoflagellate (Prorocentrum minimum) diet, at food saturated conditions. The diatom diet significantly reduced both egg and fecal pellet production as well as hatching success. Blockage of egg development occurred with both axenic and non-axenic cultures of T. rotula, suggesting that inhibitors were provided by the diatoms and not by the bacteria associated with diatom cultures. Low hatching success was also artificially induced by exposing newly spawned A. clausi eggs to high concentrations of diatom extracts, indicating the presence of deleterious, inhibitory compounds blocking copepod embryogenesis. Fecundity and hatching success diminished significantly with female age. In contrast, female longevity was not significantly modified by food type. The presence of males did not significantly alter fecundity or egg viability. Females continued to produce viable eggs throughout the period of incubation, with and without males, in both food conditions, indicating that remating is infrequent and not necessary to sustain viable egg production in this species. The succession in low and high population densities may therefore be the outcome of variations in survival rates of eggs, rather than reproductive protential perse; such variations may strongly depend on the adult copepod diet.

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Dive into the Adrianna Ianora's collaboration.

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Giovanna Romano

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Antonio Miralto

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Chiara Lauritano

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Isabella Buttino

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Maria Costantini

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Raffaella Casotti

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Francesco Esposito

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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