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Our previous report showed that rapid wound closure in Xenopus laevis embryos was associated with a decrease in the extracellular concentration of either Na or Cl- ions. In this study, we examined the wound closure in Xenopus embryos when epithelial Na channel (ENaC), Na/K ATPase (Na pump) or CICs (members of Cl- channel) were blocked by each specific inhibitor. Blockage of ENaC and CIC restricted the rate of wound closure during the first 30 min PW and during the subsequent period, respectively. In contrast, inhibition of Na pump had no effect on the rate of wound closure. Furthermore, simultaneous administration of both ENaC and CIC inhibitors resulted in the cumulative reduction of wound closure. Thus, it is plausible that these ion channels play active roles in wound closure in Xenopus embryos. NPPB is known to inhibit both CIC-2 and CIC-3. Immunohistochemical experiments showed that CIC-3, but not CIC-2, was expressed in Xenopus embryos, suggesting that the reduced wound closure by NPPB was due to blockage of CIC-3. A local enhancement of CIC-3 expression at the leading edge of the wounded epidermis was found to be specific to closing wounds that were kept in 10% NAM. An in vitro wounding assay also showed a pattern of CIC-3 expression at the margin of the scratch wound comparable to the results in vivo. These findings suggest that intracellular translocation of CIC-3 is involved in wound closure. We propose that the ion channels, including CIC-3, play a crucial role in wound closure in Xenopus embryos.
The mitochondrial DNA phylogeographical structure of the freshwater atyid shrimp Neocaridina denticulata denticulata was investigated near the Yura and Kako Rivers in western Japan. To assess the biological significance of drainage evolution, fragments of 390 base pairs (bp) extending from the NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 gene to the tryptophan transfer RNA gene were sequenced for 246 specimens from twenty locations. The phylogenetic tree detected two distinct clades corresponding to the region along the Sea of Japan and Seto Inland Sea, respectively. Geographical mapping of the two clades well reflected the river capture, in which the upper reaches of the Yura River draining into the Sea of Japan had been captured from the Kako River into the Seto Inland Sea. The clear pattern of mitochondrial DNA distribution may be accounted for by the ecological characteristics of species that minimize passive downstream drift, local adaptation, and mountain topography.
Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) exhibits a potent antidipsogenic effect in seawater (SW) eels to limit excess Na uptake, thereby effectively promoting SW adaptation. Recently, cardiac ANP, BNP and VNP and brain CNP1, 3 and 4, have been identified in eels. We examined the antidipsogenic effect of all homologous NPs using conscious, cannulated eels in both FW and SW together with parameters that affect drinking. A dose-response study (0.01–1 nmol/kg) in SW eels showed the relative potency of the antidipsogenic effect was in the order ANP ≥ VNP > BNP = CNP3 > CNP1 ≥ CNP4, while the order was ANP = VNP = BNP > CNP3 = CNP1 = CNP4 for the vasodepressor effect. The minimum effective dose of ANP for the antidipsogenic effect is much lower than that in mammals. ANP, BNP and VNP at 0.3 nmol/kg decreased drinking, plasma Na concentration and aortic pressure and increased hematocrit in SW eels. The cardiac NPs induced similar changes in drinking, aortic pressure and hematocrit in FW eels, but aside from BNP no change in plasma Na concentration. CNPs had no effect on drinking, plasma Na concentration and hematocrit but induced mild hypotension in both FW and SW eels, except for CNP3 that inhibited drinking in SW eels. These results show that ANP, BNP and VNP are potent antidipsogenic hormones in eels in spite of other regulatory factors working to induce drinking, and that CNPs are without effects on drinking except for the ancestor of the cardiac NPs, CNP3.
Aromatase cytochrome P450 (P450arom) is an enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of androgen to estrogen. Expression of P450arom in extra-gonadal sites and locally-synthesized estrogen play an important role in physiological conditions. The purpose of this study was to investigate the cellular immunolocalization of androgen receptor (AR), P450arom, estrogen receptor alpha (ERa) and estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) in muskrat scent glands during the breeding season. Histological observation and immunohistochemistry of AR, P450arom, ERa and ERβ were performed in the muskrat scent glands. In addition, total proteins were extracted from scent glandular tissues in the breeding season and were used for Western blotting analysis for AR, P450arom, ERα and ERβ. Histologically, glandular cells, interstitial cells, epithelial cells of the excretory duct and the excretory tubules were identified in the muskrat scent glands during the breeding season. AR was only observed in glandular cells of scent glands; P450arom was expressed in glandular cells and epithelial cells of the excretory duct; ERα was found in glandular cells, interstitial cells and epithelial cells of the excretory duct, whereas ERβ was present in glandular cells and epithelial cells of the excretory duct. Also, the positive signals of AR, P450arom, ERα and ERβ by Western blotting were all observed in scent glandular tissues. These results suggested that the scent gland is the target organ of androgens and estrogens, and that estrogens may play an important autocrine or paracrine role in glandular function of the muskrats.
In tilapia, hormone treatment during the period of sexual differentiation can alter the phenotype of the gonads, indicating that endocrine factors can cause gonadal sex reversal. However, the endocrine mechanism underlying sex reversal of reproductive behaviors remains unsolved. In the present study, we detected sexual dimorphism of gonadotropin-releasing hormone type III (GnRH3) neurons in Mozambique tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus. Our immunohistochemical observations showed sex differences in the number of GnRH3 immunoreactive neurons in mature tilapia; males had a greater number of GnRH3 neurons in the terminal ganglion than females. Treatment with androgen (11-ketotestosterone (11-KT) or methyltestosterone), but not that with 17β-estradiol, increased the number of GnRH3 neurons in females to a level similar to that in males. Furthermore, male-specific nest-building behavior was induced in 70% of females treated with 11-KT within two weeks after the onset of the treatment. These results indicate androgen-dependent regulation of GnRH3 neurons and nest-building behavior, suggesting that GnRH3 is importantly involved in sex reversal of male-specific reproductive behavior.
The aim of this study was to develop a rapid, simple, sensitive, and accurate duplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to sex Nipponia nippon, a monomorphic bird. Amplification by duplex PCR of a sex-related gene on the female chromosome and the 12S rRNA gene yielded good results using genomic DNA extracted from a feather follicle or the membranes of eggshell samples. To simplify the DNA extraction procedure, a simple boiling method was used. Our simple boiling DNA extraction method produced similar PCR amplification results as when using DNA extracted using TRIzol. Sex determination in the endangered Nipponia nippon is of crucial value to breeding programs. The duplex PCR protocol that we developed provides a simple sex identification method that is based on amplification of a sex-related gene, and we anticipate that it will facilitate effective conservation and management of Nipponia nippon.
We studied beneficial difference of the skin of two snakes. Two snakes were chosen from two different habitats and two families: Colubridae (Natrix tessellata) and Viperidae (Cerastes vipera). The investigations were performed by light and electron microscopy. Histologically, the skin of the studied species show pronounced modifications that correlated with functional demands. The scales in Natrix tessellata overlapped slightly, while in Cerastes vipera they were highly overlapped. SEM shows that scales of Natrix tessellata had bidentate tips while the scales of Cerastes vipera were keeled. Histochemically, in both studied species, melanocytes and collagenous fibres were distributed throughout the dermis. Polysaccharides were highly concentrated in the epidermis and dermis of both species while proteins were highly concentrated only in the epidermis. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) showed that the skin of both snakes consisted of keratins located in the epidermis. Some lipids and mucus were incorporated into the outer scale surfaces such that lipids were part of the fully keratinised hard layer of the snakes' skins. Lipids are probably responsible for limiting water loss and ion movements across the skin. Melanosomes from epidermal melanocytes were present only in Cerastes vipera. In aggregate, these results indicate that snakeskin may provide an ecological indicator whereby epidermal and integumentary specializations may be ecologically correlated.
Phylogenetic relationships within Tanaidacea were analyzed based on sequence data for the 18S rRNA gene. Our results strongly supported a monophyletic group composed of Neotanaidae, Tanaoidea, and Paratanaoidea, with the first two taxa forming a clade. These results contradict three previously suggested hypotheses of relationships. Based on the molecular results, and considering morphological similarities/differences between Neotanaidomorpha and Tanaidomorpha, we demoted Suborder Neotanaidomorpha to Superfamily Neotanaoidea within Tanaidomorpha; with this change, the classification of extant tanaidaceans becomes a two-suborder, four-superfamily system. This revision required revision of the diagnoses for Tanaidomorpha and its three super-families. The results for Apseudomorpha were ambiguous: this taxon was monophyletic in the maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses, but paraphyletic in the maximum parsimony and minimum evolution analyses.
The mating season of Japanese newt Cynops pyrrhogaster is generally thought to occur once a year in spring to early summer, during the months of April to June, as in many other Japanese amphibians. However, in fall, from September to October, we often observed breeding colored males demonstrating a mating behavior with females in the field. In this study, in order to identify their true mating season, we anatomically and histologically investigated the annual maturation cycle of gonads and reproductive organs, including cloacal spermathecae in females, and, using a molecular marker, identified the seasonal origins of sperm, which are released in spring to perform insemination. We found that, in fall, ovaries are somewhat immature, while the testes were mature and the sperm already stored in the deferent ducts. Females stored a significant amount of sperm in around 80% of the spermatechae examined in October and 100% in December. When artificially ovulated in March before contact with male partners after hibernation, the females spawned fertilized eggs and these developed normally. Finally, we identified heterozygous genotypes of the visual pigment gene for the two different population types in the embryos, which were derived from a female who established contact with males of the same population in fall and then switched to males from another population until oviposition in spring. We therefore, conclude that the true mating season of this species occurs from fall to early summer, interrupted only by winter, and lasts six months longer (from October to June) than generally believed.
Previously, gonad-stimulating substance (GSS), which acts as a gonadotropin, was purified from radial nerves of the starfish Asterina pectinifera and its structure was elucidated. Here, the interaction of GSS with receptors was examined in ovarian follicle cells, a target of GSS. In competitive experiments using radioiodinated and radioinert GSS, highly specific binding was observed in the microsomal/plasma membrane fraction of follicle cells. GSS scarcely bound in the cytosolic fraction. Scatchard plots showed the numbers of binding sites (NBS) in whole homogenate and the crude membrane to be 1.65 and 3.42 pmoles/mg protein, respectively. Dissociation constant (Kd) values in these two preparations were almost the same at about 0.6–0.7 nM. Furthermore, it was shown that GSS stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in follicle cell membranes in a dose-dependent manner that required GTP. Immunoblotting with specific antibodies for G-protein subunits after SDS-PAGE of the membrane preparation showed both stimulatory (Gs) and inhibitory (Gi) regulatory α-subunits for adenylyl cyclase and a β-subunit. The results strongly suggest that GSS interacts with G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) located in the follicle cell membrane to stimulate Gs-protein and adenylyl cyclase activity.
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