scholarly journals Does red eye fluorescence in marine fish stand out? In situ and in vivo measurements at two depths

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. K. Harant ◽  
F. Wehrberger ◽  
T. Griessler ◽  
M. G. Meadows ◽  
C. M. Champ ◽  
...  

AbstractSince the discovery of red fluorescence in fish, much effort has been made to elucidate its potential contribution to vision. However, whatever that function might be, it always implies that the combination of red fluorescence and reflectance of the red iris is sufficient to generate a visual contrast. Here, we present in vivo iris radiance measurements of T. delaisi under natural light fields at 5 and 20 m depth. We also took substrate radiance measurements of shaded and exposed foraging sites at those depths. To assess the visual contrast that can be generated by the red iris, we then calculated iris brightness in the 600-650 nm “red” waveband relative to substrate radiance. At 20 m depth, T. delaisi iris radiance substantially exceeded substrate radiance in the red waveband, regardless of exposure, and despite substrate fluorescence. Given that downwelling light in the 600-650 nm range is negligible at this depth, we can attribute this effect to iris fluorescence. As expected, contrasts were much weaker in 5 m – despite the added contribution of iris reflectance, but we identified specific substrates and conditions under which the pooled radiance caused by red reflectance and fluorescence still exceeded substrate radiance in the same waveband. Due to the negative effect of anesthesia on iris fluorescence these estimates are conservative. We conclude that the requirements to create visual brightness contrasts are fulfilled for a wide range of conditions in the natural environment of T. delaisi.

2014 ◽  
Vol 281 (1790) ◽  
pp. 20141211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa G. Meadows ◽  
Nils Anthes ◽  
Sandra Dangelmayer ◽  
Magdy A. Alwany ◽  
Tobias Gerlach ◽  
...  

Why do some marine fishes exhibit striking patterns of natural red fluorescence? In this study, we contrast two non-exclusive hypotheses: (i) that UV absorption by fluorescent pigments offers significant photoprotection in shallow water, where UV irradiance is strongest; and (ii) that red fluorescence enhances visual contrast at depths below −10 m, where most light in the ‘red’ 600–700 nm range has been absorbed. Whereas the photoprotection hypothesis predicts fluorescence to be stronger near the surface and weaker in deeper water, the visual contrast hypothesis predicts the opposite. We used fluorometry to measure red fluorescence brightness in vivo in individuals belonging to eight common small reef fish species with conspicuously red fluorescent eyes. Fluorescence was significantly brighter in specimens from the −20 m sites than in those from −5 m sites in six out of eight species. No difference was found in the remaining two. Our results support the visual contrast hypothesis. We discuss the possible roles fluorescence may play in fish visual ecology and highlight the possibility that fluorescent light emission from the eyes in particular may be used to detect cryptic prey.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (03) ◽  
pp. 4927 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shubhi Srivastava ◽  
Paul A. K.

Plant associated microorganisms that colonize the upper and internal tissues of roots, stems, leaves and flowers of healthy plants without causing any visible harmful or negative effect on their host. Diversity of microbes have been extensively studied in a wide variety of vascular plants and shown to promote plant establishment, growth and development and impart resistance against pathogenic infections. Ferns and their associated microbes have also attracted the attention of the scientific communities as sources of novel bioactive secondary metabolites. The ferns and fern alleles, which are well adapted to diverse environmental conditions, produce various secondary metabolites such as flavonoids, steroids, alkaloids, phenols, triterpenoid compounds, variety of amino acids and fatty acids along with some unique metabolites as adaptive features and are traditionally used for human health and medicine. In this review attention has been focused to prepare a comprehensive account of ethnomedicinal properties of some common ferns and fern alleles. Association of bacteria and fungi in the rhizosphere, phyllosphere and endosphere of these medicinally important ferns and their interaction with the host plant has been emphasized keeping in view their possible biotechnological potentials and applications. The processes of host-microbe interaction leading to establishment and colonization of endophytes are less-well characterized in comparison to rhizospheric and phyllospheric microflora. However, the endophytes are possessing same characteristics as rhizospheric and phyllospheric to stimulate the in vivo synthesis as well as in vitro production of secondary metabolites with a wide range of biological activities such as plant growth promotion by production of phytohormones, siderophores, fixation of nitrogen, and phosphate solubilization. Synthesis of pharmaceutically important products such as anticancer compounds, antioxidants, antimicrobials, antiviral substances and hydrolytic enzymes could be some of the promising areas of research and commercial exploitation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
An Liu ◽  
Wenyuan Shi ◽  
Dongdong Lin ◽  
Haihui Ye

C-type allatostatins (C-type ASTs) are a family of structurally related neuropeptides found in a wide range of insects and crustaceans. To date, the C-type allatostatin receptor in crustaceans has not been deorphaned, and little is known about its physiological functions. In this study, we aimed to functionally define a C-type ASTs receptor in the mud crab, Scylla paramamosian. We showed that C-type ASTs receptor can be activated by ScypaAST-C peptide in a dose-independent manner and by ScypaAST-CCC peptide in a dose-dependent manner with an IC50 value of 6.683 nM. Subsequently, in vivo and in vitro experiments were performed to investigate the potential roles of ScypaAST-C and ScypaAST-CCC peptides in the regulation of ecdysone (20E) and methyl farnesoate (MF) biosynthesis. The results indicated that ScypaAST-C inhibited biosynthesis of 20E in the Y-organ, whereas ScypaAST-CCC had no effect on the production of 20E. In addition, qRT-PCR showed that both ScypaAST-C and ScypaAST-CCC significantly decreased the level of expression of the MF biosynthetic enzyme gene in the mandibular organ, suggesting that the two neuropeptides have a negative effect on the MF biosynthesis in mandibular organs. In conclusion, this study provided new insight into the physiological roles of AST-C in inhibiting ecdysone biosynthesis. Furthermore, it was revealed that AST-C family peptides might inhibit MF biosynthesis in crustaceans.


1987 ◽  
Vol 252 (5) ◽  
pp. H906-H915 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. E. Gayeski ◽  
R. J. Connett ◽  
C. R. Honig

Probability distributions of myoglobin (Mb) saturation and intracellular PO2 were determined with subcellular spatial resolution in dog gracilis muscles during steady-state twitch contraction at 5-100% of maximal rate of O2 consumption (VO2). Calculations (Clark, A., and P. A.A. Clark. Biophys. J. 48: 931-938, 1985) and measurements (Gayeski, T. E. J., and C. R. Honig. Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 200: 487-494, 1986) indicate that the PO2 in equilibrium with Mb is virtually identical to the PO2 at cytochrome aa3. Median intracellular PO2 and PO2 in the lower tails of probability distributions were poorly correlated with VO2. The variability of cell PO2 was greatly diminished when median PO2 was less than the PO2 for half saturation of MB, since Mb acts as a PO2 buffer. The lower tails of PO2 distributions contained almost no anoxic loci even when median PO2 was less than 1 Torr. VO2 was well correlated with the concentration ratio of phosphocreatine to free creatine (PCr/Crf) over a wide range of PO2. PO2 greater than or equal to 0.5 Torr supported maximal VO2 and energy demand. We conclude that 1) the mechanism of action of cytochrome aa3 is the same in red muscle in vivo as in mitochondria in vitro, and 2) an upper bound on the apparent Michaelis constant for maximal VO2 of red muscle is approximately 0.06 Torr.


2011 ◽  
Vol 300 (1) ◽  
pp. C124-C137 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. Allen ◽  
Amanda S. Loh

Expression of the antigrowth factor myostatin (MSTN) differs between fast and slow skeletal muscles and is increased in nearly every form of muscle atrophy, but the contribution of transcriptional vs. posttranscriptional mechanisms to its differing expression in these states has not been defined. We show here that levels of mature MSTN mRNA were sixfold greater in fast vs. slow muscle and were increased twofold in fast muscle in response to dexamethasone (Dex) injection in vivo and in C2C12 myotubes following Dex treatment in vitro, but that levels of MSTN pre-mRNA, a readout of transcription, only minimally and nonsignificantly differed in these states. Moreover, Dex treatment with or without cotransfection with a glucocorticoid receptor expression construct had only modest effects on mouse MSTN promoter activity in C2C12 myotubes. We therefore explored the potential contribution of posttranscriptional mechanisms, and the role of the microRNAs miR-27a and b in particular, on MSTN expression. The MSTN 3′-untranslated region (UTR) contains a putative recognition sequence for miR-27a and b that is conserved across a wide range of vertebrate species. Cotransfection of a MSTN 3′-UTR-luciferase construct with a miR-27b expression construct significantly attenuated by approximately half while mutation of the miR-27 recognition sequence significantly increased by approximately twofold the activity of a MSTN 3′-UTR construct and decreased mRNA degradation of a luciferase reporter construct in C2C12 myotubes. Expression of miR-27a and b was almost sixfold greater in slow-twitch than in fast-twitch muscle in vivo, and miR-27a expression was significantly decreased by nearly half by glucocorticoid treatment in vitro. Finally, the miR-27a and b promoters were activated by cotransfection with the slow-specific signaling molecules calcineurin and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator-1α. The present data represent the first demonstration that posttranscriptional mechanisms involving miR-27a and b may contribute to fast-specific and glucocorticoid-dependent myostatin expression in muscle.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2467-2467
Author(s):  
Mi roslav Koulnis ◽  
Alberto Porpiglia ◽  
Ying Liu ◽  
Merav Socolovsky

Abstract Erythropoietic rate varies through a large dynamic range. Its principal regulator is the hormone erythropoietin (Epo), which, in response to hypoxic stress increases up to 1000 fold its basal level, driving erythropoietic rate by up to ten fold. The mechanisms in erythroid progenitors that regulate large, rapid and yet precise changes in erythropoietic rate are not yet understood. It’s been suggested that survival pathways activated by the Epo receptor (EpoR) underlie its regulation of erythropoietic rate. Studies of cultured erythroid cells have identified several anti-apoptotic regulators as EpoR targets. However, their potential contribution to erythropoietic rate in vivo had not been investigated. Here we assessed the in-vivo role of two EpoR-activated survival pathways: EpoR induction of the anti-apoptotic regulator bcl-xL, and EpoR-mediated suppression of erythroblast Fas and FasL expression. We found that these pathways differ markedly in their regulation of erythropoietic rate. We used flow-cytometric measurement of bclxL, Fas and FasL in each of four erythroblast subsets of increasing maturity (Liu et al. Blood 2006), ProE (Ter119medCD71highFSChigh), EryA (Ter119highCD71highFSChigh), EryB (Ter119highCD71highFSClow) and EryC (Ter119highCD71lowFSClow). Acute erythropoietic stress was induced by Epo injection or by subjecting mice to reduced atmospheric oxygen. Measurements were made on freshly explanted mouse bone-marrow and spleen, either in the basal state or at different time points following induction of stress. Acute erythropoietic stress caused a rapid but transient induction of bcl-xL that peaked at 12 to 18 hours, principally in splenic ProE and EryA. Bcl-xL levels returned to baseline by 24 hours, before resolution of stress. A similar time course was found for induction of the bcl-xL mRNA. In contrast to the acute response, in mouse models of chronic erythropoietic stress, including anemic mice with beta thalassemia, bcl-xL was not increased above baseline. However, an acute Epo injection in these mice caused transient bcl-xL induction similar to that seen in healthy mice. The magnitude of bcl-xL induction in acute stress was similar, regardless of the absolute change in Epo concentration. We conclude that EpoR-mediated bcl-xL induction is designed to detect a rapid change in Epo, rather than the absolute level of Epo concentration. It undergoes rapid adaptation, and in both these properties is reminiscent of sensory pathways or bacterial chemotaxis. We suggest this pathway provides a ‘stop-gap’ that enhances erythroblast survival until slower but more permanent pathways are activated. EpoR signaling also causes suppression of erythroblast Fas and FasL, which are co-expressed in splenic ProE and EryA. The size of the EryA subset increases with erythropoietic stress over a wide range. We found that Epo-mediated suppression of Fas/FasL is inversely related to the size of the EryA subset, regardless of whether erythropoietic stress is acute or chronic. Therefore, unlike bcl-xL induction, EpoR-mediated suppression of Fas/FasL does not undergo adaptation, is a function of the absolute degree of stress and Epo concentration, and likely responsible for long-term maintenance of EryA subset size. To investigate this further, we generated mice deficient in Fas (lpr) or FasL (gld) on an immune deficient background (rag1−/−) in order to circumvent the autoimmune syndrome of lpr and gld mice. Both these mouse strains showed a significant increase in their CFU-e, ProE and EryA subsets, particularly in spleen, and the gld/rag1−/− strain also showed increased basal hematocrit. This confirms a negative regulatory effect for Fas in erythropoiesis. Of note, we also found a striking increase in variance for the size of each of these subsets in the mutant mice. We conclude that, in addition to determining the size of the EryA and other erythroid precursor subsets appropriate for each stress level, the Fas-FasL interaction provides a stabilizing mechanism that filters out inappropriate variation in the number of CFU-e, ProE and EryA subsets and in erythropoietic rate. Taken together, our studies in vivo elicited system-level functions for two survival pathways which were not apparent from their investigation in vitro. In combination, these pathways endow the erythropoietic system with a fast response time and with robustness against inappropriate fluctuations in erythropoietic rate.


1989 ◽  
Vol 256 (4) ◽  
pp. R898-R906 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Connett ◽  
C. R. Honig

Observations used to test biochemical models of the regulation of O2 consumption (VO2) by cytosolic phosphate energy state must include a change in intracellular pH and/or a change in the adenine nucleotide or phosphate pools [Connett, R. J. Analysis of metabolic control: new insights using a scaled creatine kinase model. Am. J. Physiol. 254 (Regulatory Integrative Comp. Physiol. 23): R949-R959, 1988]. Data were collected over a wide range of energy turnover from canine muscles in situ. Intracellular PO2, glycolytic intermediates, adenine nucleotides, creatine, phosphocreatine (PCr), phosphate, and intracellular pH were determined for each muscle. PO2 was used to eliminate muscles in which VO2 could have been O2 limited (PO2 less than 0.5 Torr). This removed an important source of heterogeneity. Because adenine nucleotide and phosphate pools were constant relative to the creatine pool, discrimination among models depended solely on pH. The observed pH range from 7.2 to 5.9 did not permit separation of [PCr] from log[( ATP4-]/[ADP3-][H2PO4-]) (phosphorylation potential) as a regulatory parameter for VO2. However, [ADP] could be eliminated as an independent regulator. Because 90% of variability in VO2 was accounted for by phosphate energetics, an independent redox component must be small when intracellular PO2 greater than 0.5 Torr.


1998 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. 131-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Hvelplund ◽  
M. R. Weisbjerg

Abstract Expressing the protein value of a food involves measurements of several of its characteristics. Many in vivo studies have shown, that the protein degradability in the rumen varies substantially both between and within foods and therefore estimation of protein degradability in the rumen is an important task in protein evaluation. The most common method used has been the in situ (in sacco, nylon bag) method but many in vitro methods have been introduced and are based on use of either buffer solubility, chemical methods, rumen fluid or enzymes. None of these in vitro methods has proven to be of general use. In further development of in vitro methods as well as the in situ method a major problem is lack of a set of samples with a ‘true’ in vivo degradability which can be used for calibration of alternative methods. Microbial protein synthesis in the rumen has to be related to food characteristics which can be analysed easily. In vitro methods which can predict organic matter digestibility in foods are available and can be used to predict microbial protein synthesis in the rumen. Intestinal digestibility of undegraded dietary protein varies substantially both between and within foods and easy methods to estimate intestinal digestibility are therefore essential. The mobile bag method is easy to use and seems to give reliable results on most foods but requires access to duodenal cannulated animals which prevents this method from being routine. Alternative in vitro methods have been developed but further research is required for validation of these methods on a wide range of foods before they can be accepted for general use.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Elagin ◽  
E. Gubarkova ◽  
O. Garanina ◽  
D. Davydova ◽  
N. Orlinskaya ◽  
...  

AbstractThere is a wide range of equivocal melanocytic lesions that can be clinically and dermoscopically indistinguishable from early melanoma. In the present work, we assessed the possibilities of combined using of multiphoton microscopy (MPM) and optical coherence angiography (OCA) for differential diagnosis of the equivocal melanocytic lesions. Clinical and dermoscopic examinations of 60 melanocytic lesions revealed 10 benign lesions and 32 melanomas, while 18 lesions remained difficult to diagnose. Histopathological analysis of these lesions revealed 4 intradermal, 3 compound and 3 junctional nevi in the “benign” group, 7 superficial spreading, 14 lentigo maligna and 11 nodular melanomas in the “melanoma” group and 2 lentigo simplex, 4 dysplastic nevi, 6 melanomas in situ, 4 invasive lentigo melanomas and 2 invasive superficial spreading melanomas in the “equivocal” group. On the basis of MPM, a multiphoton microscopy score (MPMS) has been developed for quantitative assessment of melanoma features at the cellular level, that showed lower score for benign lesions compare with malignant ones. OCA revealed that the invasive melanoma has a higher vessel density and thicker blood vessels than melanoma in situ and benign lesions. Discriminant functions analysis of MPM and OCA data allowed to differentiate correctly between all equivocal melanocytic lesions. Therefore, we demonstrate, for the first time, that a combined use of MPM and OCA has the potential to improve early diagnosis of melanoma.


Author(s):  
Simon W Partridge ◽  
Matthew J Benning ◽  
Matthew J German ◽  
Kenneth W Dalgarno

This article describes a proof of concept study designed to evaluate the potential of an in vivo three-dimensional printing route to support minimally invasive repair of the musculoskeletal system. The study uses a photocurable material to additively manufacture in situ a model implant and demonstrates that this can be achieved effectively within a clinically relevant timescale. The approach has the potential to be applied with a wide range of light-curable materials and with development could be applied to create functionally gradient structures in vivo.


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