Publications by authors named "Naama Mizrahi"

Somatostatin (SST) plays diverse physiological roles in vertebrates, particularly in regulating growth hormone secretion from the pituitary. While the function of SST as a neuromodulator has been studied extensively, its role in fish and mammalian reproduction remains poorly understood. To address this gap, we investigated the involvement of the somatostatin system in the regulation of growth and reproductive hormones in tilapia.

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The manipulation of the somatotropic axis, governing growth, has been a focus of numerous transgenic approaches aimed at developing fast-growing fish for research, medicine and aquaculture purposes. However, the excessively high growth hormone (GH) levels in these transgenic fish often result in deformities that impact both fish health and consumer acceptance. In an effort to mitigate these issues and synchronize exogenous GH expression with reproductive processes, we employed a novel transgenic construct driven by a tilapia luteinizing hormone (LH) promoter.

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In mammals, the gonadotropins follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) are macromolecules secreted during specific reproductive phases and display strict specificity towards their cognate receptors. However, fish gonadotropins (GTH) and their receptors (GTHR) display diverse species-specific expression patterns, secretion patterns, and intra- and interspecies cross-activation. To uncover the molecular basis of this diversity, we generated and analyzed 29 in-silico models of intra- and inter-species combinations of sturgeon, carp, tilapia, and human gonadotropins with piscine receptors and analyzed the resulting receptor activation and signal transduction of these GTHR-GTH complexes in-vitro.

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We report an outbreak of Candida auris across multiple healthcare facilities in Israel. For the period of May 2014-May 2022, a total of 209 patients with C. auris infection or colonization were identified.

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Article Synopsis
  • Macrophages infected with Candida auris show metabolic changes, increasing glycolysis but not producing a strong immune response (IL-1β) or stopping the growth of the pathogen.
  • C. auris can evade the immune system by using its own metabolism to thrive and kills macrophages through metabolic stress caused by glucose starvation.
  • The pathogen does not activate the NLRP3 inflammasome, leading to low inflammatory responses, indicating that targeting metabolism in both host and pathogen could offer new treatment options for C. auris infections.
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NKB (Neurokinin B) is already known to play a crucial role in fish reproduction, but little is known about the structure and function of NKB receptors. Based on an model of the tilapia NKB receptor Tachykinin 3 receptor a (tiTac3Ra) found in the current study, we determined the key residues involved in binding to tilapia NKB and its functional homologue NKF (Neurokinin F). Despite studies in humans suggesting the crucial role of F251 and M289 in NKB binding, no direct peptide interaction was observed in tilapia homologs.

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Sturgeons belong to a subclass of fishes that derived from ray-finned fish ancestors preceding the emergence of teleosts. The Russian sturgeon (Acipenser gueldenstaedtii) is a late-maturing fish with the females reaching puberty under aquaculture conditions at 6-10 years of age. Since kisspeptin has been shown to be a key hormone involved in regulation of major reproductive processes of many vertebrate species, this study was conducted to better understand the kisspeptin receptor (KissR) in sturgeon.

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Sturgeons are being used in aquaculture because wild populations are now endangered due to overfishing for caviar. A challenge in working with sturgeon as an aquacultured species is its long and slow reproductive development. Reproduction is a hormonally regulated process that involves hierarchical signaling between the brain, pituitary gland, and gonads.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Reproduction in vertebrates is regulated by the brain-pituitary-gonad axis, where hormones like follicle-stimulating hormone (Fsh) and luteinizing hormone (Lh) activate their specific receptors in gonads, primarily analyzed in teleost fish.
  • - The study explored how teleost gonadotropin receptors respond to different ligands by using COS-7 cells to test the activation of Fsh and Lh receptors with ligands from Japanese medaka and Nile tilapia, revealing some cross-reactivity between species.
  • - Results indicated that while each gonadotropin mainly activates its corresponding receptor, there were instances of cross-species activity, especially for medaka and tilapia receptors,
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Neurokinin B (NKB) and its cognate receptor (NK3R) are emerging as important components of the neuroendocrine regulation of reproduction. Unlike mammalian , which encodes only one mature peptide (namely NKB), two mature peptides are predicted for each gene in fish and frogs. Therefore, it was designated as Neurokinin F (NKF).

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The hormone melatonin connects environmental cues, such as photoperiod and temperature, with a number of physiological and behavioural processes, including seasonal reproduction, through binding to their cognate receptors. This study reports the structural, functional and physiological characterization of five high-affinity melatonin receptors (Mtnr1aaα, Mtnr1aaβ, Mtnr1ab, Mtnr1al, Mtnr1b) in Atlantic salmon. Phylogenetic analysis clustered salmon melatonin receptors into three monophyletic groups, Mtnr1A, Mtnr1Al and Mtnr1B, but no functional representative of the Mtnr1C group.

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Neurokinin B (NKB) was recently identified as a key regulator of reproduction in mammals and fish. Fish were found to possess a specific novel neurokinin termed NKF. To study the role of NKB/NKF in the regulation of fish reproduction and to investigate the role of NKB/NKF and their receptors in the piscine pituitary, we have identified the NKB/tachikinin 3 receptor (tac3r) system in tilapia.

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LPXRFamide (LPXRFa) peptides have been characterized for their ability to inhibit gonadotropin (GTH) release in birds and stimulate growth hormone (GH) release in frogs. However, their involvement in regulating the reproductive hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis in mammals and fish is inconclusive. To study the role of LPXRFa peptides in the regulation of GTH secretion, we cloned tilapia LPXRFa and LPXRF receptor (LPXRF-R).

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