Abstract

Permeability properties of the goldfish gill epithelium were examined in vivo and in vitro following exposure to ion-poor water (IPW) conditions. In gill tissue of IPW-acclimated goldfish, transcript abundance of tight junction (TJ) proteins occludin, claudin-b, -d, -e, -h, -7, and -8d increased, whereas ZO-1 and claudin 12 mRNA decreased and claudin-c was unaltered. In association with these changes, TJ depth increased among gill pavement cells (PVCs) and gill PVCs and mitochondria-rich cells (MRCs). PVC and MRC gill cell fractions were isolated using Percoll. Transcripts encoding for occludin, claudin-b, -c, -d, -e, -h, -7, -8d, -12, and ZO-1 were present in both fractions. After IPW acclimation, occludin, claudin-b and -e, and ZO-1 mRNA abundance increased in both fractions. In contrast, claudin-8d mRNA abundance increased in PVCs only while claudin-h decreased in MRCs. Gill permeability was examined using primary cultured goldfish PVC epithelia supplemented with serum derived from IPW-acclimated goldfish. IPW serum supplementation increased transepithelial resistance, reduced [(3)H]PEG-4000 permeability, and enhanced epithelial integrity during in vitro IPW exposure. IPW serum increased mRNA abundance of occludin, claudin-8d and -e in vitro. Using small interfering RNA, we found that occludin abundance was decreased in cultured gill epithelia, resulting in an increase in [(3)H]PEG-4000 flux. As occludin increased in the gills of IPW-acclimated fish as well as cultured gill epithelia exposed to IPW serum, results suggest that occludin is a barrier-forming TJ protein in fish gill epithelia. These studies support the idea that TJ proteins play an important role in regulating gill permeability in IPW.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call