Abstract
Thousands of fish species belonging to the Superorder Ostariophysi possess specialized club cells in their epidermis. Damage to the cells, as would occur during a predator attack, releases chemical substances that evoke antipredator responses in nearby shoalmates. These chemical substances have often been referred to as alarm substances and the cells that release them as alarm cells. Understanding the evolution of the cells in an alarm context has been difficult. The fish needs to be captured prior to the chemicals being released, hence the benefit to the receiver is unclear. Recent studies have suggested that the club cells are part of the immune system and are maintained by natural selection owing to the benefits that they confer against pathogens, parasites, and general injury to the epidermis. In the present study, we gave fathead minnows intraperitoneal injections of cortisol, a known immunosuppressant, or injections of a control substance (corn oil). We found that fish exposed to cortisol had suppressed immune systems (as measured by a respiratory burst assay) and that they also reduced their investment in club cells. This is the best evidence to date indicating that the club cells of Ostariophysan fishes are part of the innate immune system and that the alarm function of the cells evolved secondarily.
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