Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua)

The eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) population has been decreasing in the Baltic Sea for at least 30 years. Condition indices of the Baltic cod have decreased, and previous studies have suggested that this might be due to overfishing, predation, lower dissolved oxygen or changes in salinity. Howev...

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Main Authors: Engelhardt, Josefin, Frisell, Oscar, Gustavsson, Hanna, Hansson, Tomas, Sjöberg, Rajlie, Collier, Tracy K., Balk, Lennart
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/1/engelhardt_j_et_al_200616.pdf
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author Engelhardt, Josefin
Frisell, Oscar
Gustavsson, Hanna
Hansson, Tomas
Sjöberg, Rajlie
Collier, Tracy K.
Balk, Lennart
author_facet Engelhardt, Josefin
Frisell, Oscar
Gustavsson, Hanna
Hansson, Tomas
Sjöberg, Rajlie
Collier, Tracy K.
Balk, Lennart
author_sort Engelhardt, Josefin
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
description The eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) population has been decreasing in the Baltic Sea for at least 30 years. Condition indices of the Baltic cod have decreased, and previous studies have suggested that this might be due to overfishing, predation, lower dissolved oxygen or changes in salinity. However, numerous studies from the Baltic Sea have demonstrated an ongoing thiamine deficiency in several animal classes, both invertebrates and vertebrates. The thiamine status of the eastern Baltic cod was investigated to determine if thiamine deficiency might be a factor in ongoing population declines. Thiamine concentrations were determined by chemical analyses of thiamine, thiamine monophosphate and thiamine diphosphate (combined SumT) in the liver using high performance liquid chromatography. Biochemical analyses measured the activity of the thiamine diphosphate-dependent enzyme transketolase to determine the proportion of apoenzymes in both liver and brain tissue. These biochemical analyses showed that 77% of the cod were thiamine deficient in the liver, of which 13% had a severe thiamine deficiency (i.e. 25% transketolase enzymes lacked thiamine diphosphate). The brain tissue of 77% of the cod showed thiamine deficiency, of which 64% showed severe thiamine deficiency. The thiamine deficiency biomarkers were investigated to find correlations to different biological parameters, such as length, weight, otolith weight, age (annuli counting) and different organ weights. The results suggested that thiamine deficiency increased with age. The SumT concentration ranged between 2.4-24 nmol/g in the liver, where the specimens with heavier otoliths had lower values of SumT (P = 0.0031). Of the cod sampled, only 2% of the specimens had a Fulton's condition factor indicating a healthy specimen, and 49% had a condition factor below 0.8, indicating poor health status. These results, showing a severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod from the only known area where spawning presently occurs for this species, are of grave ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Gadus morhua
genre_facet Gadus morhua
id ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:17176
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/1/engelhardt_j_et_al_200616.pdf
Engelhardt, Josefin and Frisell, Oscar and Gustavsson, Hanna and Hansson, Tomas and Sjöberg, Rajlie and Collier, Tracy K. and Balk, Lennart (2020). Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua). PLoS ONE. 15 , e0227201 , 1-23 [Research article]
publishDate 2020
record_format openpolar
spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:17176 2025-04-27T14:29:10+00:00 Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) Engelhardt, Josefin Frisell, Oscar Gustavsson, Hanna Hansson, Tomas Sjöberg, Rajlie Collier, Tracy K. Balk, Lennart 2020 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/1/engelhardt_j_et_al_200616.pdf en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/1/engelhardt_j_et_al_200616.pdf Engelhardt, Josefin and Frisell, Oscar and Gustavsson, Hanna and Hansson, Tomas and Sjöberg, Rajlie and Collier, Tracy K. and Balk, Lennart (2020). Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua). PLoS ONE. 15 , e0227201 , 1-23 [Research article] Fish and Aquacultural Science Research article NonPeerReviewed 2020 ftslunivuppsala 2025-03-28T11:17:59Z The eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) population has been decreasing in the Baltic Sea for at least 30 years. Condition indices of the Baltic cod have decreased, and previous studies have suggested that this might be due to overfishing, predation, lower dissolved oxygen or changes in salinity. However, numerous studies from the Baltic Sea have demonstrated an ongoing thiamine deficiency in several animal classes, both invertebrates and vertebrates. The thiamine status of the eastern Baltic cod was investigated to determine if thiamine deficiency might be a factor in ongoing population declines. Thiamine concentrations were determined by chemical analyses of thiamine, thiamine monophosphate and thiamine diphosphate (combined SumT) in the liver using high performance liquid chromatography. Biochemical analyses measured the activity of the thiamine diphosphate-dependent enzyme transketolase to determine the proportion of apoenzymes in both liver and brain tissue. These biochemical analyses showed that 77% of the cod were thiamine deficient in the liver, of which 13% had a severe thiamine deficiency (i.e. 25% transketolase enzymes lacked thiamine diphosphate). The brain tissue of 77% of the cod showed thiamine deficiency, of which 64% showed severe thiamine deficiency. The thiamine deficiency biomarkers were investigated to find correlations to different biological parameters, such as length, weight, otolith weight, age (annuli counting) and different organ weights. The results suggested that thiamine deficiency increased with age. The SumT concentration ranged between 2.4-24 nmol/g in the liver, where the specimens with heavier otoliths had lower values of SumT (P = 0.0031). Of the cod sampled, only 2% of the specimens had a Fulton's condition factor indicating a healthy specimen, and 49% had a condition factor below 0.8, indicating poor health status. These results, showing a severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod from the only known area where spawning presently occurs for this species, are of grave ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Gadus morhua Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
spellingShingle Fish and Aquacultural Science
Engelhardt, Josefin
Frisell, Oscar
Gustavsson, Hanna
Hansson, Tomas
Sjöberg, Rajlie
Collier, Tracy K.
Balk, Lennart
Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua)
title Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua)
title_full Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua)
title_fullStr Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua)
title_full_unstemmed Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua)
title_short Severe thiamine deficiency in eastern Baltic cod (Gadus morhua)
title_sort severe thiamine deficiency in eastern baltic cod (gadus morhua)
topic Fish and Aquacultural Science
topic_facet Fish and Aquacultural Science
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/17176/1/engelhardt_j_et_al_200616.pdf