Natriuretic peptides (NPs) are a group of hormones playing important roles in cardiovascular and osmoregulatory systems in vertebrates. Among the NP subtypes, atrial NP (ANP), B-type NP (BNP), and ventricular NP (VNP) are circulating hormones expressed exclusively in the heart (cardiac NPs). The constitution of cardiac NPs is variable among species of vertebrates. In order to understand the evolutionary and functional significance of such variation, we performed a systematic survey of cardiac NP cDNAs in nine taxonomically diverse teleosts inhabiting environments of varying salinity. The discovery of the coexistence of the ANP, BNP, and VNP genes in the eel and rainbow trout suggested that the ancestral teleost had all three cardiac NPs. As the VNP cDNA was undetectable in ayu and six species of Neoteleostei, it is possible that VNP was lost before the divergence of Osmeroidei. The ANP gene was also undetectable in the medaka. Thus, only the BNP gene is universal in species examined in the present study. Synthetic medaka BNP preferentially activated two medaka GC-A-type receptors, suggesting that the three cardiac NPs share the same receptor. However, the regulation of BNP expression may be the most strict because ATTTA repeats in the 3'-untranslated region and the dibasic motif in the ring are conserved among teleosts and tetrapods. Linkage analyses in the rainbow trout located ANP, BNP, and VNP genes on the same chromosome, which suggested the generation of the VNP gene by tandem duplication as observed with ANP and BNP genes. If the duplication occurred before the divergence of tetrapods and teleosts, VNP may exist in the tetrapod lineage.
To study the mechanism of faster growth of the sculpin Cottus kazika in seawater (SW) than in fresh water (FW), we transferred 120-day-old juveniles from FW to SW, 1/3 SW or FW, and survival, growth and levels of transcripts of growth hormone (GH) gene in the pituitary and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) gene in the liver were examined 20 and 40 days after transfer. The survival rates of fish reared in SW and 1/3 SW were higher than the FW controls. The growth was fastest in SW and slowest in the controls. IGF-I gene transcripts increased in SW-reared fish 40 days after transfer compared with the controls, while GH gene transcripts did not. Juveniles of 1 year of age were transferred from FW to SW or 1/3 SW, and GH and IGF-I gene transcripts were compared after 48 h. In this shortterm experiment, the level of GH gene transcripts was higher in fish reared in SW and 1/3 SW, while no difference was found in the IGF-I gene transcripts. Thus, the GH gene transcripts increased only transiently after SW transfer but the IGF-I gene transcripts increased gradually for 40 days, suggesting that the long-term increase in IGF-I gene expression is involved in the enhanced growth in SW and GH may play an initiation role for growth enhancement.
Annual changes in testicular development and occurrence of parasperm were investigated using 2-yearold male fourspine sculpins Cottus kazika, based on the histological observation of testes. The male reproductive organ of fourspine sculpins comprised a pair of testes and a sperm duct that functioned as a sperm-storage organ.
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