Skin-type antifreeze protein expression in integumental cells of larval winter flounder
H.M.
Murrayhttp, C.L. Hew, G.L.
Fletcher-2002
Journal of Fish Biology, 60(6): 1391-1406
Abstract:
Wholemount
in situ hybridization using an antisense riboprobe complementary
to a winter flounder Pleuronectes americanus skin-type
antifreeze protein mRNA (WFp9) and
immunohistochemistry using polyclonal antibodies to
the corresponding protein detected cells expressing this gene in larval winter flounder integument. Immunohistochemistry
revealed two distinct populations of cells. One population
extended laterally along the length of the fish
and was detectable using in situ hybridization. Staining
in these cells declined following yolk-sac absorption
suggesting that expression was only important here during
early larval development. The polyclonal antibody for
skin-type antifreeze protein also reacted with another
population of cells scattered throughout the integument.
These cells stained with alcian blue suggesting that
they were integumental mucous cells. In situ
hybridization using the above probe was not able to
detect the corresponding transcript within the same
cells. This suggests that another gene may be involved
in the production of a similar protein in this case.
These data suggest that two distinct populations of
cells within the larval integument are involved in
skin-type antifreeze protein expression and possibly
involve the activity of at least two different genes.
(Institute
for Marine Biosciences, National Research Council of Canada, 1411 Oxford
Street, Halifax, NS B3H 3Z1, Canada. Tel.: +1 902 426 4319; fax: +1 902 426
9413; email: Harry.Murray@nrc.ca)