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Extracellular calcium-sensing receptor distribution in osmoregulatory and endocrine tissues of the tilapia

  • SUNY Buffalo
  • The University of Tokyo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

34 Scopus citations

Abstract

The extracellular calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR) serves an important detector function in vertebrate Ca2+ homeostasis. In this study, we surveyed using immunohistochemistry the tissue and cellular distribution of the CaSR protein in the Mozambique tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) and the Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica). Specifically, we examined receptor expression in ion-transporting barrier tissues that may be directly responsive to extracellular Ca2+ levels, and in tissues that are implicated in endocrine signaling to homeostatic effectors such as Ca2+-transporting epithelia. In tilapia osmoregulatory tissues, CaSR protein is strongly expressed in proximal segments of renal tubule, but not in distal segments (where Na+,K+-ATPase is prominently expressed) or in glomeruli. The receptor was also localized in the ion-transporting mitochondria-rich cells of gill and in ion- and nutrient-transporting epithelia of middle and posterior intestine. Consistent with our earlier RT-PCR assessment of mRNA expression in tilapia, CaSR protein expression was salinity dependent in some osmoregulatory tissues. In tilapia pituitary gland, CaSR expression was observed in the rostral pars distalis (containing prolactin-secreting cells, and in the pars intermedia (containing somatolactin-secreting and melanocyte-stimulating hormone-secreting cells), with notably greater expression in the latter. In the eel, weak immunostaining was seen in the stanniocalcin-secreting cells of the corpuscles of Stannius. Olfactory lobe CaSR expression suggests an environment-sensing role for the receptor. Altogether, these findings support the involvement of CaSR in piscine Ca2+ homeostasis at the levels of environmental sensing, of integrative endocrine signaling through both hypercalcemic (prolactin, and perhaps somatolactin) and hypocalcemic (stanniocalcin) hormones, and of direct local regulation of Ca2+-transporting tissues.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)216-228
Number of pages13
JournalGeneral and Comparative Endocrinology
Volume161
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2009

Keywords

  • Calcium homeostasis
  • Extracellular calcium-sensing receptor
  • Japanese eel
  • Mozambique tilapia
  • Osmoregulation

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