The effect of parental age on germline mutation rate across generations is not fully understood. While some studies report a positive linear relationship of mutation rate with increasing age, others suggest that mutation rate varies with age but not in a linear fashion. We investigated the effect of parental age on germline mutations by generating replicated mutation accumulation lines in at three parental ages ("Young T1" [Day 1], "Peak T2" [Day 2], and "Old T5" [Day 5] parents).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe disposable soma theory is a central tenet of the biology of aging where germline immortality comes at the cost of an aging soma [T. B. L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn many teleosts, the stimulatory control of gonadotrope axis by GnRH is opposed by an inhibitory control by dopamine (DA). The functional importance of this inhibitory pathway differs widely from one teleostean species to another. The zebrafish (Danio rerio) is a teleost fish that has become increasingly popular as an experimental vertebrate model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) is one of the most economically important cultured fish and also a key model species in fish nutrition. During digestion, dietary proteins are enzymatically cleaved and a fraction of degradation products in the form of di- and tripeptides translocates from the intestinal lumen into the enterocyte via the Peptide Transporter 1 (PepT1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA study was conducted to assess the effect of substituting high levels of dietary fish oil (FO) and fishmeal (FM) for vegetable oil (VO) and plant protein (PP) on the intestinal arachidonic acid (AA) cascade in the carnivorous fish species Atlantic salmon. Four diets were fed to salmon over a period of 12 months, including a control FMFO diet, with varying replacements of plant-derived ingredients: 80 % PP and 35 % VO; 40 % PP and 70 % VO; 80 % PP and 70 %VO. Subsequently, fish were examined pre- (0 h) and post- (1 h) acute stress for blood parameters and intestinal bioactive lipidic mediators of inflammation (prostaglandins).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have previously developed a novel in vitro assay that utilises cultures of primed female stickleback kidney cells for the screening of potential androgenic and anti-androgenic environmental contaminants. Stickleback kidney cells are natural targets for steroid hormones and are able to produce a protein, spiggin, in response to androgenic stimulation. We undertook a combined in vivo/in vitro study where we used the magnitude of spiggin production as an endpoint to test the anti-androgenic properties of the pharmaceutical androgen antagonist flutamide and three environmental contaminants: the organophosphate insecticide fenitrothion, the urea-based herbicide linuron and the fungicide vinclozolin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) is currently validating a short-term fish screening protocol for endocrine disrupters (estrogens, androgens, and their antagonists and aromatase inhibitors), using three core species: fathead minnow, Japanese medaka, and zebrafish. The main endpoints proposed for the first phase of validation of the screen are vitellogenin (VTG) concentration, gross morphology (secondary sexual characteristics and gonado-somatic index), and gonadal histopathology. A similar protocol is concurrently being developed in the United Kingdom using the three-spined stickleback, with identical endpoints to those for the core species and, in addition, a unique androgen-specific endpoint in the form of spiggin (glue protein) induction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIssues raised by the presence in the environment of chemicals able to mimic or antagonize the action of androgenic hormones are of growing concern. Here we report the development of a novel in vitro test for the screening of (anti-)androgenic chemicals, based on primary cultures of stickleback kidney cells that produce a protein, the spiggin, in response to androgenic stimulation. Cell spiggin content was measured by ELISA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganic matrix from molluscan shells has the potential to regulate calcium carbonate deposition and crystallization. Control of crystal growth thus seems to depend on control of matrix protein secretion or activation processes in the mantle cells, about which little is known. Biomineralization is a highly orchestrated biological process.
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