Search results for "Gills"

showing 10 items of 63 documents

Evaluating the Hypoxia Response of Ruffe and Flounder Gills by a Combined Proteome and Transcriptome Approach

2015

Hypoxia has gained ecological importance during the last decades, and it is the most dramatically increasing environmental factor in coastal areas and estuaries. The gills of fish are the prime target of hypoxia and other stresses. Here we have studied the impact of the exposure to hypoxia (1.5 mg O2/l for 48 h) on the protein expression of the gills of two estuarine fish species, the ruffe (Gymnocephalus cernua) and the European flounder (Platichthys flesus). First, we obtained the transcriptomes of mixed tissues (gills, heart and brain) from both species by Illumina next-generation sequencing. Then, the gill proteomes were investigated using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass sp…

Fish ProteinsGillsProteomicsGillProteomelcsh:MedicineFlounderFlounderBiologyBioinformaticsFish ProteinsProteomicsTranscriptomeFish physiologyDatabases GeneticAnimalsEUROPEAN FLOUNDERHypoxialcsh:ScienceGeneticsMultidisciplinarylcsh:Rbiology.organism_classificationProteomelcsh:QTranscriptomeResearch ArticlePLOS ONE
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Neuroendocrine indicators of allostatic load reveal the impact of environmental acidification in fish

2020

Abstract When mobilized from surrounding soils and binding to gills at moderately low pH, aluminum (Al) cations can adversely affect fish populations. Furthermore, acidification may lead to allostatic overload, a situation in which the costs of coping with chronic stress affects long-term survival and reproductive output and, ultimately, ecosystem health. The brain's serotonergic system plays a key role in neuroendocrine stress responses and allostatic processes. Here, we explored whether sublethal effects of Al in acidified water affects serotonergic neurochemistry and stress coping ability in a unique land-locked salmon population from Lake Bygelandsfjorden, in southern Norway. Fish were …

GillGillsCoping (psychology)HydrocortisonePhysiologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPopulationSalmo salarPhysiologyBiologyToxicologySerotonergicBiochemistry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineWater Pollution ChemicalAnimalsNeurochemistryChronic stresseducation030304 developmental biology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyNorwayVDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Basale medisinske odontologiske og veterinærmedisinske fag: 710Cell BiologyGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAllostatic loadTurnover030217 neurology & neurosurgeryWater Pollutants ChemicalAluminum
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Comparison of thiol subproteome of the vent mussel Bathymodiolus azoricus from different Mid-Atlantic Ridge vent sites

2012

Deep-sea hydrothermal mussels Bathymodiolus azoricus live in the mixing zone where hydrothermal fluid mixes with bottom seawater, creating large gradients in the environmental conditions and are one of the most studied hydrothermal species as a model of adaptation to extreme conditions. Thiol proteins, i.e. proteins containing a thiol or sulfhydryl group (SH) play major roles in intracellular stress defense against reactive oxygen species (ROS) and are especially susceptible to oxidation. However, they are not particularly abundant, representing a small percentage of proteins in the total proteome and therefore are difficult to study by proteomic approaches. Activated thiol sepharose (ATS) …

GillGillsEnvironmental EngineeringProteomeBiologyHydrothermal circulationThiol sub-proteomeBathymodiolus azoricusHydrothermal VentsEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsSulfhydryl CompoundsAdaptationWaste Management and Disposalchemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesSepharoseActivated thiol sepharoseProteinsMusselSulfhydryl compoundsPollutionAdaptation PhysiologicalBivalviaOxidative StressHydrothermal ventschemistryBiochemistryOxidative stressProteomeThiolSeawaterReactive Oxygen SpeciesReactive oxygen speciesHydrothermal vent
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Development of monogenean communities on the gills of roach fry (Rutilus rutilus).

1999

The formation and development of monogenean communities on the gills of roach fry was followed in 1992 from early June to October (size range 9 to 47 mm). Roach fry (n=291) were sampled weekly from the small, humic River Rutajoki in central Finland. A further 209 roach fry were reared in a fish farm supplied by water from the river. Four Dactylogyrus species were found: D. nanus, D. crucifer, D. micracanthus and D. suecicus. Other species found on the gills were Gyrodactylus sp. and Paradiplozoon homoion. The first Dactylogyrus juvenile occurred on a 12 mm long fish fry in late June and the first adult (D. nanus) 1 week later in Tank 1. D. nanus was also the most common parasite in the rive…

GillGillsGyrodactylusFish farmingPopulationCyprinidaeZoologyFresh WaterFish DiseasesCyprinidaePrevalenceAnimalseducationFinlandDactylogyruseducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologybiology.organism_classificationCestode InfectionsInfectious DiseasesAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologySeasonsTrematodaRutilusMonogeneaParasitology
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Effects of sublethal exposure to lead on levels of energetic compounds in Procambarus clarkii (Girard, 1852).

1994

Lead is neither essential nor beneficial to living organisms; all existing data show that its metabolic effects are adverse. Lead is toxic to all phyla of aquatic biota. Most of the lead discharged into surface water is rapidly incorporated into suspended and bottom sediments. The American red crayfish, Procambarus clarkii, lives in a wide range of environmental conditions that include highly polluted waters. Lead present in take sediments can be available to aquatic animals such as P. clarkii because it is a detritivor and burrow into the sediment. In fact, we found remarkable levels of lead in tissues of P. clarkii caught in Albufera Lake and kept 15 days in clean water (e. g. 223 [mu]g/g…

GillGillsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisAstacoideaToxicologyEcotoxicologyAnimalsPancreasHeavy metal detoxificationProcambarus clarkiibiologyEcologyDecapodaAquatic animalGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationCrayfishLipid MetabolismPollutionLeadLiverEnvironmental chemistryHepatopancreasEnergy MetabolismGlycogenWater Pollutants ChemicalBulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology
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Diclidophora merlangi (Monogenea: Diclidophoridae) on Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua.

2006

Diclidophora merlangi (Kuhn, in Nordmann, 1832), as species specific to whiting, Merlangius merlangus (Linnaeus, 1758), is reported and described for the first time on the gills of Atlantic cod Gadus morhua (Linnaeus, 1758). Of the about 1,200 cod examined in this article, only 2 specimens of D. merlangi occurred on 2 fish, suggesting that they represented accidental infections. The 2 specimens showed specific traits of D. merlangi, but their size was considerably smaller than that of D. merlangi on whiting. Principal-component analyses showed that the morphology of the specimens on cod was more similar to that of D. merlangi than those of other congeneric species from the North Atlantic, a…

GillGillsMalePrincipal Component AnalysisbiologyReproductionZoologyTrematode InfectionsGadidaebiology.organism_classificationWhitingHost-Parasite InteractionsFisheryMerlangius merlangusFish DiseasesGadus morhuaPlatyhelminthsParasite hostingGadusAnimalsParasitologyFemaleAtlantic codEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMonogeneaThe Journal of parasitology
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Changes in biochemical composition of gills, hepatopancreas and muscle of the red crayfish Procambarus clarkii (Girard) after sublethal exposure to m…

1992

Abstract 1. 1. The changes in the biochemical composition of gills, hepatopancreas and muscle after exposure to 0.25 mg Hg/l were studied in Procambarus clarkii . 2. 2. Sublethal exposure to mercury in P. clarkii resulted in significant decreases in protein concentration and caloric concentration in gills over the 96 hr period. Glycogen/lipid and glycogen/protein ratios increased after 48 and 96 hr of mercury exposure. 3. 3. Lipid and caloric concentration in the hepatopancreas were significantly lower in 96 hr mercury exposed group. 4. 4. Glycogen concentration in muscle was depleted as consequence of 96 hr mercury exposure.

GillGillsMalemedicine.medical_specialtyImmunologychemistry.chemical_elementAstacoideaLethal Dose 50chemistry.chemical_compoundInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsPancreasPharmacologyProcambarus clarkiibiologyGlycogenDose-Response Relationship DrugDecapodaMusclesAnatomyMercurybiology.organism_classificationCrayfishMercury (element)EndocrinologychemistryLiverToxicityHepatopancreasFemaleComparative biochemistry and physiology. C, Comparative pharmacology and toxicology
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Skoulekia meningialis n. gen., n. sp. (Digenea: Aporocotylidae Odhner, 1912) a parasite surrounding the brain of the Mediterranean common two-banded …

2010

This study describes a new aporocotylid genus and species, Skoulekia meningialis n. gen., n. sp. which was detected in the ectomeningeal veins surrounding the optic lobes of the brain of the common two-banded seabream Diplodus vulgaris (Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, 1817) from the Gulf of Valencia (Mediterranean Sea). A detailed morphological description of S. meningialis is provided, including drawings, measurements and scanning electron microscopy images as well as a phylogenetic study of S. meningialis and closely related taxa using DNA sequence data obtained from whole ITS2 and partial 18S and 28S rDNA regions. Morphology as well as molecular phylogeny strongly support the erection of a new g…

GillGillsPathologymedicine.medical_specialtySparidaeDigeneaHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesMediterranean seaGenusRNA Ribosomal 28SmedicineMediterranean SeaPrevalenceRNA Ribosomal 18SDiplodus vulgarisAnimalsMeningitisEcosystemPhylogenyTeleosteibiologyBrainbiology.organism_classificationSea BreamInfectious DiseasesMolecular phylogeneticsParasitologyTrematodaParasitology international
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Effect of hypoosmotic stress by low salinity acclimation of Mediterranean mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis on biological parameters used for polluti…

2008

In the present study, we investigated the progressive acclimation of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis to different reduced seawater (SW) salinities and its effect on several biochemical markers and biotests. Mussels were purchased from a local mariculture facility during summer (SW temperature 27 degrees C, salinity 37.5 psu) and winter (13 degrees C, 37 psu) seasons, and transferred to the laboratory for acclimation to reduced SW salinities (37, 28, 18.5 and 11 psu). At the beginning and at the end of acclimation processes tests of mussel survival in air were provided. After 14 days of acclimation the DNA integrity, p38-MAPK activation, metallothionein induction, oxygen consumption rat…

GillGillsSalinityanimal structuresHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisMuscle ProteinsAquatic ScienceAcclimatizationp38 Mitogen-Activated Protein KinasesCondition indexAnimal scienceOxygen ConsumptionOsmotic PressureAnimalsMaricultureFluorometrySeawaterPhosphorylationMytilusPrincipal Component AnalysisbiologyEcologyfungiMusselMytilus galloprovincialis; biomarkers; salinity; temperature; environmental condition variations; hypoosmotic stressbiology.organism_classificationBivalviaMytilusSalinityElectrophoresis Polyacrylamide GelMetallothioneinSeasonsDNA DamageEnvironmental Monitoring
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Acute toxicity and oxygen consumption in the gills of Procambarus clarkii in relation to chlorpyrifos exposure.

1992

GillGillsTime FactorsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPhysiologyAstacoideaToxicologyToxicologyAcetoneLethal Dose 50chemistry.chemical_compoundOxygen ConsumptionEcotoxicologyAnimalsProcambarus clarkiiAnalysis of VariancebiologyDose-Response Relationship DrugDecapodaGeneral MedicinePesticidebiology.organism_classificationPollutionAcute toxicitychemistryChlorpyrifosToxicityChlorpyrifosBulletin of environmental contamination and toxicology
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