Since the collapse of the pelagic fisheries off southwest Africa in the late 1960s, jellyfish biomass has increased and the structure of the Benguelan fish community has shifted, making the bearded goby (Sufflogobius bibarbatus) the new predominant prey species. Despite increased predation pressure and a harsh environment, the gobies are thriving. Here we show that physiological adaptations and antipredator and foraging behaviors underpin the success of these fish. In particular, body-tissue isotope signatures reveal that gobies consume jellyfish and sulphidic diatomaceous mud, transferring "dead-end" resources back into the food chain.
Perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) are persistent compounds used in many industrial as well as consumer products. Despite restrictions, these compounds are found at measurable concentrations in samples of human and animal origin. In the present study we examined whether the effects on cell viability of two sulfonated and four carboxylated PFAAs in cultures of cerebellar granule neurons (CGNs), could be associated with deleterious activation of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDA-R). PFAA-induced effects on viability in rat CGNs and unstimulated PC12 cells were examined using the MTT assay. Cells from the PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cell line lack the expression of functional NMDA-Rs and were used to verify lower toxicity of perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) in cells not expressing NMDA-Rs. Protective effects of NMDA-R antagonists, and extracellular as well as intracellular Ca chelators were investigated. Cytosolic Ca ([Ca]) was measured using Fura-2. In rat CGNs the effects of the NMDA-R antagonists MK-801, memantine and CPP indicated involvement of the NMDA-R in the decreased viability induced by PFOS and perfluorohexanesulfonic acid (PFHxS). No effects were associated with the four carboxylated PFAAs studied. Further, EGTA and CPP protected against PFOS-induced decreases in cell viability, whereas no protection was afforded by BAPTA-AM. [Ca] significantly increased after exposure to PFOS, and this increase was completely blocked by MK-801. In PC12 cells a higher concentration of PFOS was required to induce equivalent levels of toxicity as compared to in rat CGNs. PFOS-induced toxicity in PC12 cells was not affected by CPP. In conclusion, PFOS at the tested concentrations induces excitotoxicity in rat CGNs, which likely involves influx of extracellular Ca via the NMDA-R. This effect can be blocked by specific NMDA-R antagonists.
Synthesis and release of FSH and LH are differentially regulated by GnRH, but the mechanisms by which this regulation is achieved are not well understood. Teleost fish are powerful models for studying this differential regulation because they have distinct pituitary cells producing either FSH or LH. By using pituitary cultures from Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua), we were able to investigate and compare the electrophysiological properties of fshb- and lhb-expressing cells, identified by single-cell quantitative PCR after recording. Both cell types fired action potentials spontaneously. The relative number of excitable cells was dependent on reproductive season but varied in opposing directions according to season in the 2 cell types. Excitable and quiescent gonadotropes displayed different ion channel repertoires. The dynamics of outward currents and GnRH-induced membrane responses differed between fshb- and lhb-expressing cells, whereas GnRH-induced cytosolic Ca²⁺ responses were similar. Expression of Ca²⁺-activated K⁺ channels also differed with cell type and showed seasonal variation when measured in whole pituitary. The differential presence of these channels corresponds to the differences observed in membrane response to GnRH. We speculate that differences in ion channel expression levels may be involved in seasonal regulation of hormone secretion as well as the differential response to GnRH in LH- and FSH-producing gonadotropes, through differences in excitability and Ca²⁺ influx.
Background Many cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) carry visible acquired chromosomal changes of pathogenetic, diagnostic, and prognostic importance. Nevertheless, from one-fourth to half of newly diagnosed ALL patients have no visible chromosomal changes detectable by G-banding analysis at diagnosis. The introduction of powerful molecular methodologies has shown that many karyotypically normal ALLs carry clinically important submicroscopic aberrations. Case presentation We used fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), RNA sequencing, reverse transcription (RT) and genomic polymerase chain reaction (PCR), as well as Sanger sequencing to investigate a case of pediatric ALL with a normal karyotype. FISH with a commercial PDGFRB breakapart probe showed loss of the distal part of the probe suggesting a breakpoint within the PDGFRB locus. aCGH revealed submicroscopic deletions in chromosome bands 5q32q35.3 (about 30 Mb long, starting within PDGFRB and finishing in the CANX locus), 7q34 (within TCRB ), 9p13 ( PAX5 ), 10q26.13 ( DMBT1 ), 14q11.2 ( TRAC ), and 14q32.33 (within the IGH locus). RNA sequencing detected an in-frame GTF2I – PDGFRB and an out-of-frame IKZF1 – TYW1 fusion transcript. Both fusion transcripts were verified by RT-PCR together with Sanger sequencing and interphase FISH. The GTF2I – PDGFRB fusion was also verified by genomic PCR and FISH. The corresponding GTF2I – PDGFRB fusion protein would consist of almost the entire GTF2I and that part of PDGFRB which harbors the catalytic domain of the tyrosine kinase. It would therefore seem to lead to abnormal tyrosine kinase activity in a manner similar to what has been seen for other PDGFRB fusion proteins. Conclusions The examined pediatric leukemia is a Ph-like ALL which carries novel GTF2I – PDGFRB and IKZF1 – TYW1 fusion genes together with additional submicroscopic deletions. Because hematologic neoplasms with PDGFRB -fusion genes can be treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors, the detection of such novel fusions may be clinically important. Since the GTF2I – PDGFRB could be detected only after molecular studies of the leukemic cells, further investigations of ALL-cases, perhaps especially but not exclusively with a normal karyotype, are needed in order to determine the frequency of ...
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