Publications by authors named "Angela Etayo"

Fish rely on mucosal surfaces as their first defence barrier against pathogens. Maintaining mucosal homeostasis is therefore crucial for their overall well-being, and it is likely that secreted immunoglobulins (sIg) play a pivotal role in sustaining this balance. In mammals, the poly-Ig receptor (pIgR) is an essential component responsible for transporting polymeric Igs across mucosal epithelia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Vaccinating farmed fish against diseases is crucial, requiring knowledge about their immune system development, particularly in the ballan wrasse (Labrus bergylta), where kidney and spleen development stages were characterized.
  • B-cell development occurs mainly in the head kidney and surprisingly also in the pancreatic tissue, suggesting that the pancreas plays a role in early immune responses by producing IgM-secreting cells.
  • While B-cells and T-cells develop simultaneously, B-cells migrate to mucosal tissues earlier, indicating their role in providing early immunity, and maternal transfer of IgM to offspring contributes to enhancing their immune competence early on.
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Marine fish larvae often experience high mortality unrelated to predation during early life stages, and farmed ballan wrasse () is no exception. Knowing when the adaptive immune system is developed and fully functional, and how nutrition may modulate these processes is therefore of importance to establish effective prophylactic measures and will also extend the relatively limited knowledge on the immune system in lower vertebrates. The thymus anlage of ballan wrasse was found to be histologically visible for the first time at larval stage 3 (20-30 days post hatch, dph) and becomes lymphoid at stage 5 (50-60 dph) correlating with an increase of T-cell marker transcripts.

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As mucosal barriers in fish are the main sites where pathogens are encountered, mucosal immunity is crucial to avoid infection in the aquatic environment. In teleost fish, immunoglobulins are present in gut, gill and skin mucus, although not in the same amounts as in higher vertebrates. In mammals, the poly-Ig receptor (pIgR) is synthesized in epithelial cells and mediates the active transport of poly-immunoglobulins (pIgs) across the epithelium.

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Serotonin (5-HT) is pivotal in the complex regulation of gut motility and consequent digestion of nutrients multiple receptors. We investigated the serotonergic system in an agastric fish species, the ballan wrasse as it represents a unique model for intestinal function. Here we present evidence of the presence of enterochromaffin cells (EC cells) in the gut of ballan wrasse comprising transcriptomic data on EC markers like , as well as the localization of 5-HT and mRNA of the rate limiting enzyme; tryptophan hydroxylase () in the gut epithelium.

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The effects of nutrient and mechanical sensing on gut motility and intestinal metabolism in lower vertebrates remains largely unknown. Here we present the transcriptome response to luminal stimulation by nutrients and an inert bolus on nutrient response pathways and also the response on gut motility in a stomachless fish with a short digestive tract; the ballan wrasse (Labrus berggylta). Using an in vitro model, we differentiate how signals initiated by physical stretch (cellulose and plastic beads) and nutrients (lipid and protein) modulate the gut evacuation rate, motility patterns and the transcriptome.

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Immunoglobulins are glycoproteins which are produced as membrane-bound receptors on B-cells or in a secreted form, known as antibodies. In teleosts, three immunoglobulin isotypes, IgM, IgT, and IgD, are present, each comprising two identical heavy and two identical light polypeptide chains. The basic mechanisms for generation of immunoglobulin diversity are similar in teleosts and higher vertebrates.

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