The green unicellular microalga Dunaliella viridis has the ability to cope with a wide variety of environmental
stressful conditions, such as thermal and osmotic shocks, high PAR, UV radiation and nitrogen deficiency. The
lack of a rigid cell wall makes D. viridis an excellent model organism to study stress signaling in eukaryotic
unicellular organisms. Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are highly conserved serine/threonine kinases
that convert extracellular stimuli into a wide range of responses at both cellular and nuclear levels. In eukaryotic
cells, MAPKs are involved in both cell proliferation and differentiation (ERK pathway) and stress responses (JNK
and p38 pathways), through protein kinase cascades. Significantly lesser phosphorylation levels of ERK-like
protein were observed in D. viridis cultures acclimated to high salinity (3–4M NaCl). In contrast, JNK-like and
p38-like proteins phosphorylation levels increased in stressed cells. Likewise, the efficacy of specific commercial
inhibitors of the phosphorylation of ERK (PD98059), JNK (SP600125) and p38 (SB203580) revealed the importance
of JNK-like proteins in the maintenance of cell viability, the highlighted participation of p38-like
proteins and the non-direct implication of the ERK-like proteins in the acclimatization process. In summary,
specific blockade of JNK- and p38-like cascades in stressed cells led to rapid cell death. The behavior of MAPKlike
proteins in algae is not known in depth, so the analysis of their mechanism of action, as well as their function
in this model microalga, will allow to estimate the fate of unicellular eukaryotic organisms in aquatic ecosystems
subjected to environmental stress derived from the conditions prevailing within a framework of global climate
change.