AI Article Synopsis

  • - Glucose is crucial for zebrafish development, but many oviparous animals, including zebrafish, have limited maternal glucose in their yolk, prompting the need for alternative glucose sources.
  • - Researchers discovered that developing cloudy catshark, an elasmobranch, utilizes a tissue similar to zebrafish's yolk syncytial layer (YSL) to perform gluconeogenesis, converting glycerol into glucose.
  • - The presence of gluconeogenic activities and related gene expressions in the catshark's YSL-like tissue suggests that similar metabolic processes for yolk utilization may be conserved across teleosts and elasmobranchs, paving the way for future studies on vertebrate evolution.

Article Abstract

Glucose has important roles in the development of zebrafish, the vertebrate animal model; however, in most oviparous animals, the amount of maternally provided glucose in the yolk is scarce. For these reasons, developing animals need some ways to supplement glucose. Recently, it was found that developing zebrafish, a teleost fish, undergo gluconeogenesis in the yolk syncytial layer (YSL), an extraembryonic tissue that surrounds the yolk. However, teleost YSL is evolutionarily unique, and it is not clear how other vertebrates supplement glucose. In this study, we used cloudy catshark (or Torazame catshark), an elasmobranch species which possesses a YSL-like tissue during development, and sought for possible gluconeogenic activities in this tissue. In their yolk sac, glucose increased, and our isotope tracking analysis detected gluconeogenic activities with glycerol most preferred substrate. In addition, many of gluconeogenic genes were expressed at the YSL-like tissue, suggesting that cloudy catshark engages in gluconeogenesis in this tissue. The gluconeogenesis in teleost YSL and a similar tissue in elasmobranch species implies conserved mechanisms of yolk metabolism between these two lineages. Future studies on other vertebrate taxa will be helpful to understand the evolutionary changes in the modes of yolk metabolism that vertebrates have experienced.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11136554PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.16088DOI Listing

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