Transient Increase in Chloride Cell Number and Heat Shock Protein Expression (hsp70) in Brown Trout (Salmo trutta fario) Exposed to Sudden Temperature Elevation
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH in Biological Chemistry
- Vol. 379 (10) , 1227-1234
- https://doi.org/10.1515/bchm.1998.379.10.1227
Abstract
The native cold-adapted brown trout (Salmo trutta fario) is often the subject of biomonitoring field studies. Groups of trout were exposed to a sudden temperature rise, from 8 degrees C to 19 degrees C for two hours, and thereafter set back to 8 degrees C. Gill samples of control animals, of fish after the exposure period, and after 24 and 48 hours of recovery at a temperature of 8 degrees C were examined histologically, immunohistochemically, electron microscopically, and by Western blot analysis. By means of immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy, an increase of chloride cells was observed after the temperature elevation. During the recovery period the number of chloride cells decreased. Western blot analysis for stress proteins (hsp70), widely used as a biomarker for environmental stress, was performed from skin and gill. Whereas in the gill both isoforms, the constitutive and the heat inducible form, of hsp70 were detected in all groups, in the skin the control animals only showed the constitutive form. After two hours of exposure both isoforms were visible. An increased expression of hsp70 could be demonstrated in both organs after the exposure. Comparison of the hsp70 values between gill and skin showed tissue-specific differences during the recovery period. In the gill hsp70 rapidly decreased, while in the skin the level remained elevated over the whole observation period. When hsp70 is used as a biomarker in field studies, the fast and organ-specific reaction in the gill and skin of brown trout has to be taken into consideration.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Waste‐water management plant effluents cause cellular alterations in the skin of brown troutJournal of Fish Biology, 1997
- Immunolocalization of Na + , K + -ATPase in the gill epithelium of rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykissCell and tissue research, 1996
- ACCUMULATION OF HSP70 IN JUVENILE AND ADULT RAINBOW TROUT GILL EXPOSED TO METAL-CONTAMINATED WATER AND/OR DIETEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 1996
- Seasonal variation in heat shock proteins (hsp 70) in stream fish under natural conditionsJournal of Thermal Biology, 1994
- PURIFICATION OF THE 70-kDa HEAT-SHOCK PROTEIN FROM CATFISH LIVER: IMMUNOLOGICAL COMPARISON OF THE PROTEIN IN DIFFERENT FISH SPECIES AND ITS POTENTIAL USE AS A STRESS INDICATOREnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 1994
- Tissue-specific patterns of synthesis of heat-shock proteins and thermal tolerance of the fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas)Canadian Journal of Zoology, 1991
- Effects of cortisol on gill chloride cell morphology and ionic uptake in the freshwater trout,Salmo gairdneriCell and tissue research, 1990
- Cultured animal cells exposed to amino acid analogues or puromycin rapidly synthesize several polypeptidesJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1980
- The cell kinetics of teleost fish epidermis: mitotic activity of the normal epidermis at varying temperatures in plaice (Pleuronectes platessa)Journal of Zoology, 1978
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970