Abstract

A new class of low-molecular-weight cysteine-rich regulatory growth factors, designated granulins, has been isolated from hematopoietic tissues of a teleost fish (Cyprinus carpio) and structurally characterized. Granulin-1, the predominant form found in carp spleen, was used to raise polyclonal antibodies in rabbits and to establish a radioimmunoassay. This permitted preliminary tissue distribution studies of granulin-1 to be undertaken in carp (Cyprinus carpio) and goldfish (Carassius auratus). Granulin-1 immunoreactivity was found in the melanomacrophage centers of the spleen and head kidney. Carp tissues anatomically involved in the first line of defense against infection, including skin, gills, gut, and also heart, showed intense granulin-1 immunoreactive staining within presumptive macrophage cells. Granulin-1 immunoreactive macrophages prepared from goldfish spleen and head kidney adhered to glass slides, actively phagocytosed carbon particles, and contained granulin-1 immunoreactivity as well as abundant endogenous peroxidase activity. This study demonstrates that granulin-1 is synthesized and stored in macrophages/monocytes of spleen, head kidney, and peripheral tissues of teleost fish.

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