The brackish-water diatom Cyclotella cryptica is a polymorphic species. Nine clones are capable of producing the valve pattern characteristic of the species C. meneghiniana, as well as the C. cryptica pattern. A study of the effects of salinity and freshwater conditions on the morphology of the valve shows that the cryptica pattern is produced in salinities of about 4.3‰ to full-strength seawater, 28.7‰. The "meneghiniana" pattern is the freshwater or low salinity (1.4‰) form. Characteristics of the valve morphology and life history stages which distinguish C. cryptica from C. meneghiniana and Cyclotella sp., clone 03A, are presented and discussed.
Topminnows of the genus Poeciliopsis are susceptible to hepatocarcinogenesis by waterborne exposure to procarcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH). We examined induction of cytochrome P4501A (CYP1A) in liver and other organs of the species P. monacha and P. lucida exposed to benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P) in water (added in acetone carrier) at 1 mg/l for 48 and 90 h. Fish were fixed whole in formalin, and CYP1A was examined immunohistochemically in sagittal sections of whole animals by staining with monoclonal antibody 1-12-3, which recognizes a single cross-reacting CYP1A protein in Poeciliopsis liver microsomes. Fish exposed to B[a]P for 48 h showed moderate staining, and those exposed for 90 h showed strong specific staining in various epithelial cells in both species. These included hepatocytes, pancreatic cells, epithelial cells in gill, enterocytes of the gut, and kidney tubular epithelium. Endothelial cells in several organs, including gill pillar cells and endocardial cells in the heart, showed strong staining. Staining was stronger in P. monacha than in P. lucida. Untreated animals of both species showed mild staining of the same cells stained in B[a]P-treated fish. In P. monacha, carrier (acetone) elicited a moderate increase in staining in most cell types, including those of liver and gill; the basis for this acetone effect is not known. There was a very strong specific induction by B[a]P in olfactory epithelium and epidermal taste bud epithelium of P. monacha, the first demonstration of strong CYP1A induction in chemosensory epithelia exposed to inducer in a physiologically relevant way. This study clearly establishes that waterborne PAH can elicit induction of P4501A proteins in multiple cell types in many organs of fish, with some sites of induction (olfactory epithelium) possibly related directly to the route of exposure. The species differences in the induction response, with induction in liver and some other organs generally being greater in P. monacha than in P. lucida, could be related to previously recognized species differences in PAH toxicities in Poeciliopsis.
Vegetative cells of Cyclotella meneghiniana Kützing form male gametes and anxospores following transfer from a synthetic freshwater medium to a modified artificial seawater. Both spermatogenesis and auxospore formation are correlated with an increase in the Na(+) concentration in the medium. Spermatogenesis can also be induced in C. cryptica Reimann, Lewin, and Guillard in artificial seawater with an adjusted sodium level.
Several species of fish from the genus Poeciliopsis differ dramatically in their response to the carcinogen N-nitrosodiethylamine (NDEA). The differential induction of tumors among genotypes exposed to NDEA may, in part, result from differences in liver cytochrome P450pj activity (the piscine equivalent of mammalian P450j). Evidence for the existence of cytochrome P450pj activity and mRNA expression has been found in several Poeciliopsis genotypes (species and strains). Biochemical evidence suggests that a microsomal cytochrome P450 enzyme catalyzes the metabolism of NDEA to acetaldehyde and other intermediates in Poeciliopsis. This reaction was inhibited by carbon monoxide, and required molecular oxygen and reducing equivalents (NADPH). Differences were found in maximal activity as well as temperature optima among genotypes. Poeciliopsis, a livebearing fish from desert streams of northwestern Mexico, appears to have thermal optima for cytochrome P450pj activity between 25 and 30 degrees C depending on the genotype. Western blot analysis (using anti-rat P450IIE1 antibodies) detected a 55-60 kd band in microsomes isolated from rat and Poeciliopsis. Using a 49mer probe specific for rat cytochrome P450j, Northern blots revealed a 3.3 kb mRNA from livers of a Poeciliopsis genotype and rat, but none in muscle mRNA from either organism. S1 nuclease protection assays, using the same probe, revealed that a mRNA fragment protected by the probe against digestion was induced on exposure of the whole organism to ethanol (via uptake from the aquatic environment). The assays also demonstrated that ethanol treatments both induced and suppressed this mRNA, depending on concentration and exposure time.
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