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1.
For teleost fish living in seawater, drinking the surrounding medium is necessary to avoid dehydration. This is a key component of their osmoregulatory strategy presenting the challenge of excreting excess salts while achieving a net retention of water. The intestine has an established role in osmoregulation, and its ability to effectively absorb fluid is crucial to compensating for water losses to the hyperosmotic environment. Despite this, the potential for the teleost intestine to serve as a comparative model for detailed, integrative experimental studies on epithelial water transport has so far gone largely untapped. The following review aims to present an assessment of the teleost intestine as a fluid-transporting epithelium. Beginning with a brief overview of marine teleost osmoregulation, emphasis shifts to the processing of ingested seawater by the gastrointestinal tract and the characteristics of intestinal ion and fluid transport. Particular attention is given to acid–base transfers by the intestine, specifically bicarbonate secretion, which creates the distinctly alkaline gut fluids responsible for the formation of solid calcium carbonate precipitates. The respective contributions of these unique features to intestinal fluid absorption, alongside other recognised ion transport processes, are then subsequently considered within the wider context of the classic physiological problem of epithelial water transport.  相似文献   

2.
Undisturbed toads, acclimated to a simulated terrestrial habitat with access to water, generally visited the water resource for cutaneous drinking before evaporative water losses had resulted in dehydration of the body, and often the bladder still contained ample amounts of urine. The toads did not urinate when they stayed out of water, but exposure to water in the terrestrially-acclimated state facilitated urination, even when the bladder contained only insignificant amounts of urine. Daily emptying of the bladder often resulted in substantial water deficits prior to drinking, but the severity and frequency of the deficits declined with time, concurrently with an increase in the frequency of cutaneous drinking. Volumes of urine stored in the bladder when the toads suspended cutaneous drinking varied from negligible to large, corresponding to up to 20% of the body mass. Daily emptying of the bladder tended to increase the volume of urine stored at the end of drinking episodes. It is concluded that toads and other terrestrial amphibians primarily maintain normal water balance by anticipatory cutaneous drinking; emergency drinking in response to dehydration plays a secondary role.  相似文献   

3.
This review focuses on recent developments in the molecular biology of ion and water transporter genes in fish and the potential role of their products in osmoregulation in both freshwater and seawater environments. In particular details of isoforms of various ATPases, co-transporters, exchangers and ion channels in the eel as well as other teleost species are described. Many of the teleost transporter isoforms discovered so far, appear to occur as twin or duplicate copies compared to their homologous counterparts in higher vertebrates, although these duplicate isoforms often have distinct tissue-specific and developmental stage-dependent expression patterns. The possible meaning of this information will be examined in relation to the fish genome duplication debate.  相似文献   

4.
Amphibian water balance has been studied at many levels of biological order. Terrestrial species must react to environmental cues that relate to water availability while some arboreal species have cutaneous skin secretions that can reduce evaporative water loss. The Indian tree frog. Polypedates maculatus, uses cutaneous secretions and wiping behavior to lower evaporation but also relies on moist microclimates to endure prolonged survival away from water. The related species, P. leucomystax, inhabits wetter forest habitats. Preliminary studies with this species are unable to demonstrate the expression of wiping behavior, indicating that arid habitats may be a powerful selective force for this behavior. Laboratory experiments on rehydrating toads in the genus Bufo indicate that animals are able to detect changes in barometric pressure and humidity that might result in the availability of water under field situations. Experiments with Bufonid species and with spadefoot toads, Scaphiopus couchi, show that the peptide hormone, angiotensin II, stimulates cutaneous drinking in a similar manner seen for oral drinking by other vertebrate classes. Amphibian tissues have long been used as a model for the study of basic physiological principles of epithelial ion and water transport. Recent progress with tissue cultures has provided information on the molecular structure of ion and water channels that can be applied to obtain a better understanding, at the molecular level, of ion and water balance strategies used by the wide variety of amphibian species. Terrestrial amphibians are more tolerant of dehydration than are other vertebrates and are able to store dilute urine in their urinary bladder. Toads appear to be able to detect the presence of water in their bladders in addition to the availability of water in their environment. Dehydrated toads are able to rehydrate very rapidly by the coordination of behavioral and physiological mechanisms to enhance cutaneous water absorption. The integration of behavior with cutaneous water gain, renal handling of ions and water and the role of the lymphatic system in overall water balance involves complex interactions between neural and hormonal factors. Experiments are summarized that describe the contribution of individual factors however much more information is needed before the nature of these interactions are fully understood.  相似文献   

5.
The aquaporin isoform, AQP3 has now been identified in a number of different teleost fish species, with additional DNA sequence information on AQP3 genes in further fish species available in genome databases. In zebrafish (Danio rerio), the AQP3 gene is present as two duplicate isoforms resulting from a teleostean fish genome-wide duplication. A further splicoform/isoform has also been identified in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). The identification of these AQP3 isoforms in other fish species is consequently explored. The role of AQP3 in physiological/osmoregulatory processes, in various teleost organs is then described. In teleost gill, AQP3 is expressed in 'chloride' cells, and in some species, in other epithelial cell types, where it may have a number of different functions including the prevention of dehydration. In eel esophagus, immunohistochemistry shows that AQP3 is expressed in surface epithelial cells in the anterior esophagus, but in mucus cells within the epithelium of the posterior esophagus. In eel intestine, AQP3 is found in macrophage-like cells and probably plays no part in osmoregulatory processes. In the rectum, as in the posterior esophagus AQP3 is expressed in mucus cells. In eel kidney, AQP3 is expressed in a subset of renal tubules, and localizes to the apical pole of tubule cells. There is no apparent change in the location or protein abundance of renal AQP3 following the acclimation of eels from freshwater to seawater.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of this study was to answer the question of whether dehydrated harp seals (Phoca groenlandica) are able to obtain a net gain of water from the intake of seawater. Following 24 h of fasting, three subadult female harp seals were dehydrated by intravenous administration of the osmotic diuretic, mannitol. After another 24 h of fasting, the seals were given 1,000 ml seawater via a stomach tube. Urine and blood were collected for measurement of osmolality and osmolytes, while total body water (TBW) was determined by injections of tritiated water. In all seals, the maximum urinary concentrations of Na+ and Cl were higher than in seawater, reaching 540 and 620 mM, respectively, compared to 444 and 535 mM in seawater. In another experiment, the seals were given ad lib access to seawater for 48 h after mannitol-induced hyper-osmotic dehydration. In animals without access to seawater, the mean blood osmolality increased from 331 to 363 mOsm kg−1 during dehydration. In contrast, the blood osmolality, hematocrit and TBW returned to normal when the seals were permitted ad lib access to seawater after dehydration. In conclusion, this study shows that harp seals have the capacity to gain net water from mariposa (voluntarily drinking seawater) and are able to restore water balance after profound dehydration by drinking seawater.  相似文献   

7.
Iron is a vital micronutrient for teleost fish, being an integral component of proteins involved in cellular respiration and oxygen transfer. However, in excess iron is toxic, and fish need to balance uptake to prevent deficiency vs. potential toxicity. This review assesses the current physiological and molecular knowledge of the mechanisms of iron acquisition in the teleost fish. It focuses on freshwater teleost fish when assessing the gill as a possible site for iron acquisition, and includes a summary of geochemical processes that govern aquatic iron bioavailability. It focuses on marine teleost fish for assessing the mechanism of intestinal iron uptake. Physiological evidence indicates that iron preferentially crosses the apical membrane of both the gills and intestine in the ferrous (Fe2+) state. Molecular evidence supports this, demonstrating the presence of homologues in fish to the large Slc 11a family of evolutionary conserved proteins linked to Fe2+ transport. This symporter is probably linked to a reductase, which reduces either ferric (Fe3+) or organic complexed iron to Fe2+ prior to uptake.  相似文献   

8.
Kang KS  Yahashi S  Matsuda K 《Peptides》2011,32(11):2242-2247
Ghrelin was first identified and characterized from rat stomach as an endogenous ligand for the growth hormone secretagogue receptor. Ghrelin and its receptor system are present not only in peripheral tissues such as stomach and intestine, but also in the central nervous system of mammals. Interestingly, administration of ghrelin induces an orexigenic effect and also modifies locomotor activity, suggesting its involvement in feeding control and the regulation of energy balance, in addition to the regulation of growth hormone release. Information about ghrelin in non-mammals, such as teleost fish, has also been increasing, and important data have been obtained. An understanding of the evolutionary background of the energy regulation system and the central and peripheral roles of ghrelin in teleost fish could provide indications as to their roles in mammals, particularly humans. In this review, we overview the central and peripheral effects of ghrelin on energy balance, locomotor activity, and lipid metabolism in teleost fish.  相似文献   

9.
Salinity and its variations are among the key factors that affect survival, metabolism and distribution during the fish development. The successful establishment of a fish species in a given habitat depends on the ability of each developmental stage to cope with salinity through osmoregulation. It is well established that adult teleosts maintain their blood osmolality close to 300 mosM kg(-1) due to ion and water regulation effected at several sites: tegument, gut, branchial chambers, urinary organs. But fewer data are available in developing fish. We propose a review on the ontogeny of osmoregulation based on studies conducted in different species. Most teleost prelarvae are able to osmoregulate at hatch, and their ability increases in later stages. Before the occurrence of gills, the prelarval tegument where a high density of ionocytes (displaying high contents of Na+/K+-ATPase) is located appears temporarily as the main osmoregulatory site. Gills develop gradually during the prelarval stage along with the numerous ionocytes they support. The tegument and gill Na+/K+-ATPase activity varies ontogenetically. During the larval phase, the osmoregulatory function shifts from the skin to the gills, which become the main osmoregulatory site. The drinking rate normalized to body weight tends to decrease throughout development. The kidney and urinary bladder develop progressively during ontogeny and the capacity to produce hypotonic urine at low salinity increases accordingly. The development of the osmoregulatory functions is hormonally controlled. These events are inter-related and are correlated with changes in salinity tolerance, which often increases markedly at the metamorphic transition from larva to juvenile. In summary, the ability of ontogenetical stages of fish to tolerate salinity through osmoregulation relies on integumental ionocytes, then digestive tract development and drinking rate, developing branchial chambers and urinary organs. The physiological changes leading to variations in salinity tolerance are one of the main basis of the ontogenetical migrations or movements between habitats of different salinity regimes.  相似文献   

10.
1. There were few changes in the water balance of gerbils drinking 0.25 and 0.50 M NaCl solutions for 5 days. 2. Imbibition of 0.75 and 1.0 M saline resulted in some dehydration of the body fluids and considerable depletion of the neural lobe vasopressin store. 3. Although large amounts of NaCl were excreted, the maximum urine osmolality was considerably less than that found following water deprivation. 4. The imbibition of 1.0 M saline caused similar changes in water balance to water deprivation showing that little, if any, water was gained from this solution.  相似文献   

11.
As yet, our understanding of teleost muscle development has relied upon interpretation of a variety of studies of a small number of different species, spanning the tropics to the North Atlantic, sea water to fresh water. The zebrafish Danio rerio has become the most widely used model species for laboratory-based investigations of the earliest steps of developing muscle architecture. The present pattern of teleost muscle formation is likely to provide a common basis for understanding the variety of mechanisms that control myogenesis, but is not yet tested for its applicability to fish from a wide variety of teleost taxa. Using examples from different areas of developmental research in fish, it is argued that a more flexible and dynamic scheme of muscle development needs to be envisaged. This would extend the present basic pattern to encompass expression of the full spectrum of ecological and evolutionary variation, particularly in relation to rate of muscle development and final morphology.  相似文献   

12.
Many of the mechanisms used by active insects to maintain water balance are not available to dormant individuals. Physiological and biochemical mechanisms of dehydration tolerance and resistance in dormant insects and some other invertebrates are reviewed, as well as linkages of dehydration with energy use and metabolism, with cold hardiness, and with diapause. Many dormant insects combine several striking adaptations to maintain water balance that-in addition to habitat choice-may include especially reduction of body water content, decreased cuticular permeability, absorption of water vapour, and tolerance of low body water levels. Many such features require energy and hence that metabolism, albeit much reduced, continues during dormancy. Four types of progressively dehydrated states are recognized: water is managed internally by solute or ion transport; relatively high concentrations of solutes modify the behaviour of water in solutions; still higher concentrations of certain carbohydrates lead to plasticized rubbers or glasses with very slow molecular kinetics; and anhydrobiosis eliminates metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
(1) The marine teleost fish, Lagodon rhomboides, can only tolerate fresh water (5 mM Na) if Ca is also present (10 mM). Transfer to Ca-free fresh water is followed by a substantial increase in radioactive Na efflux with little or no change in the transepithelial potential. Addition of the chelating agent EDTA (2 mM) further increases Na efflux. Fish left in Ca-free fresh water for 2-5 h die with a total body Na less than 50% of that found in animals acclimated to Ca-supplemented fresh water. (2) Rates of Na uptake were measured on either sea-water-acclimated or Ca-supplemented fresh water-acclimated fish transferred to various low Na media. In both cases Na uptake has a high Km, is saturable, inhibited by external NH4, H and amiloride, and is not related to changes in the trans-epithelial potential. (3) It is suggested that L. rhomboides is dependent upon external Ca to decrease diffusional Na loss in low salinities so that a relatively inefficient Na uptake can balance diffusional and urinary Na loss.  相似文献   

14.
Because the ghrelinergic system in teleost fishes is broadly expressed in organs that regulate appetite as well as those that contribute to the regulation of salt and water balance, we hypothesized that manipulating salt and water balance in goldfish (Carassius auratus) would modulate the ghrelinergic system. Goldfish were acclimated to either freshwater (FW) or ion-poor FW (IPW) and were fed either a control diet containing 1% NaCl or low-salt diet containing 0.1% NaCl. Endpoints of salt and water balance, i.e., serum Na+ and Cl levels, muscle moisture content and organ-specific Na+-K+-ATPase (NKA) activity, were examined in conjunction with brain, gill and gut mRNA abundance of preproghrelin and its receptor, growth hormone secretagogue receptor (ghs-r). Acclimation of fish to IPW reduced serum osmolality and Cl levels and elevated kidney NKA activity, while FW fish fed a low NaCl diet exhibited a modest reduction in muscle moisture content but otherwise no apparent osmoregulatory disturbance. In contrast, a combined treatment of IPW acclimation and low dietary NaCl content reduced serum osmolality and Cl levels, elevated muscle moisture content and increased gill, kidney and intestinal NKA activity. This intensified response to the combined effects of water and dietary ion deprivation is consistent with an increased effort to enhance ion acquisition. In association with these latter observations, a significant upregulation of preproghrelin mRNA expression in brain and gut was observed. A significant increase in ghs-r mRNAs was also observed in the gill of goldfish acclimated to IPW alone but a reduction in dietary NaCl content did not impact the ghrelinergic system of goldfish in FW. The results support the hypothesis that the ghrelinergic system is modulated in response to manipulated salt and water balance. Whether the central and peripheral ghrelinergic system contributes to ionic homeostasis in goldfish currently remains unclear and warrants further research.  相似文献   

15.
Effects of 72 h water-deprivation on plasma corticosterone concentration have been investigated in male Brattleboro rats homozygous for hypothalamic diabetes insipidus (DI) and in male Long-Evans rats (LE), as controls. To determine the global effect of water deprivation, drinking water deprived rats were compared with hydrated animals. Because water deprived rats showed a depressed food intake, to elucidate the specific effect of dehydration alone, drinking water deprived rats were compared with similar food-restricted but water supplied animals. Increases in adrenal weights and in plasma corticosterone content, following 72 h water-deprivation, were greater in DI than in LE rats. In LE rats, they seemed to be the result of both dehydration and denutrition. Conversely in DI rats lacking vasopressin, dehydration alone increased neither adrenal weights nor plasma concentration of corticosterone; the whole plasma corticosterone content was reduced. So, in DI rats, the global response to drinking water deprivation was essentially due to food restriction, whose effect was partly suppressed by dehydration. Whatever the circumstances, plasma concentrations of corticosterone were higher in DI than in LE rats. Interrelationships between water deprivation, stress, vasopressin and glucocorticoids are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The gulf toadfish, Opsanus beta, is a marine teleost fish with an aglomerular kidney that is highly specialized to conserve water. Despite this adaptation, toadfish have the ability to survive when in dilute hypoosmotic seawater environments. The objectives of this study were to determine the joint role of the kidney and intestine in maintaining osmotic and ionic balance and to investigate whether toadfish take advantage of their urea production ability and use urea as an osmolyte. Toadfish were gradually acclimated to different salinities (0.5, 2.5, 5, 10, 15, 22, 33, 50 and 70 ppt (1.5%, 7.5%, 15%, 30%, 45%, 67%, 100%, 151% and 212% seawater)) and muscle tissue, urine, blood and intestinal fluids were analyzed for ion and in some cases urea concentration. The renal and intestinal ionoregulatory processes of toadfish responded to changes in salinity and when gradually acclimated, toadfish maintain a relatively constant plasma osmolality at environmental salinities of 5 to 50 ppt. However, at salinities lower (2.5 ppt) or higher (70 ppt) than this range, a significant deviation from resting plasma and urine osmolality as well as changes in muscle water content was measured, suggesting osmoregulatory difficulties at these salinities. The renal system compensates for dilute seawater by reducing Na+ reabsorption by the bladder, which allowed excess water to be excreted. In the case of hypersalinity, Na+ reabsorption was increased, which resulted in a conservation of water and the concentration of Mg2+, Cl-, SO(4)2- and urea. A similar pattern was observed within the gastrointestinal system. Notably, Mg2+, HCO3- and SO4(2-) were the dominant ions in the intestinal fluid under control and hypersaline conditions due to the absorption of Na+, Cl- and water. When exposed to dilute seawater conditions, the absorption of Na+ was greatly reduced which likely increased water elimination. As a result of decreased environmental levels and a reduction in drinking rate, Mg2+ and SO4(2-) in intestinal fluids under hypoosmotic conditions were greatly reduced. While urea did play a minor role in renal osmoregulation, toadfish appear to preferentially regulate Na+ and to some extend Cl- in urine and intestinal fluids.  相似文献   

17.
18.
In developmental and reproductive toxicity studies, drinking water is a common means of delivering the test agent. Reduced consumption of toxicant-containing water raises questions about indirect effects of reduced maternal fluid consumption resulting from unpalatability, versus direct effects of the test compound. Issues to consider include: objective assessment of dehydration and thirst, the relative contributions of innate and learned behaviors to drinking behavior and flavor preference, and the objective assessment of physiologic stress. Not only do lab animals under ad lib conditions consume more water than the minimum required to maintain fluid balance, animals faced with water restriction have substantial physiologic capacity for protection of metabolic processes. Measures of blood biochemistry can provide quantifiable, objective indications of fluid balance, but changes in these parameters could result from other causes such as effects of a test toxicant. Consummatory behaviors in response to perceived need are highly influenced by learning. Hence, the drinking behavior, water intake, and flavor acceptance/preference of animals used in toxicology experiments could be subject to learning experiences with the test compound. Physiological symptoms of stress produced by water deprivation may be distinguishable from the symptoms associated with other generalized stressors, such as food deprivation, but doing so may be beyond the scope of most developmental or reproductive toxicity studies. Use of concurrent controls, paired to test groups for water consumption, could help distinguish between the direct effects of a test toxicant as opposed to effects of reduced water consumption alone. Birth Defects Res (Part B), 86:157–175, 2009. ©2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
P A Doris  F R Bell 《Life sciences》1984,34(17):1683-1689
The effect of dehydration and sodium depletion on plasma prolactin levels in steer calves is very different from the changes seen in the rat and possibly in man. Removal of drinking water was followed by progressive dehydration for 96 h during which time packed cell volume (PCV) increased from 39.9% to 44.7% and plasma osmolarity (pOsm) rose from 303.3 mOsm to 342.0 mOsm/l with hypernatraemia. At the same time plasma prolactin ( pPRL ) was rapidly reduced from a basal value of 2.3 ng/ml to barely measurable amounts and remained low during dehydration. Restoration of ad lib drinking water was followed by rapid reduction of PCV and pOsm to sub-basal levels during which time the pPRL increased significantly to persist at 15 ng/ml. Sodium depletion was produced by continuous loss of sodium-rich saliva from unilateral fistulation of a parotid duct. During sodium deficiency PCV increased from 38.6% to 45.6% but pOsm fell significantly from 299.9 mOsm/l to 286 mOsm/l with hyponatraemia. As in dehydration, during sodium depletion pPRL was suppressed, and after 7 days was reduced from a basal level of 5.4 ng/ml to 0.5 ng/ml. The sodium depleted steers when given 0.3M NaHCO3, which they consumed readily to restore sodium homeostasis, restored the deficiency gradually in 5 days when pPRL , pOsm and PCV all returned to basal levels without any 'overshoot' or hypersecretion of pPRL . Our finding indicate that extracellular fluid volume changes, not electrolyte content, affect pPRL . This is in agreement with results obtained in the rat, and possibly in man, but the fact that in the steer, the endogenous changes in prolactin level show a profound reduction provides an extreme example of species difference. The means whereby both divergent physiological processes of dehydration and sodium depletion generate stimuli which inhibit prolactin secretion and the relevance of this response in fluid balance homeostasis requires further research.  相似文献   

20.
The gills and intestinal epithelia of teleost fish express cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), and utilize this low conductance anion channel in the apical membrane for ion secretion in seawater gill and in the basolateral membrane for ion absorption in freshwater gill. Similarly, in the intestine CFTR is present in the basolateral membrane for intestinal absorption and also in the apical membrane of secreting intestine. The expression of CFTR and the directed trafficking of the protein to the apical or basolateral membrane is salinity-dependent. The CFTR gene has been cloned and sequenced from several teleost species and although all the major elements in the human gene are present, including two nucleotide binding domains that are common to all ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters, the sequences are divergent compared to shark or human. In euryhaline fish adapting to seawater, CFTR, localized immunocytochemically, redistributes slowly from a basolateral location to the apical membrane while ion secretory capacity increases. The facility with which teleosts regulate CFTR expression and activation during salinity adaptation make this system an appealing model for the expression and trafficking operation of this labile gene product.  相似文献   

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