18 research outputs found
O2-Filled Swimbladder Employs Monocarboxylate Transporters for the Generation of O2 by Lactate-Induced Root Effect Hemoglobin
The swimbladder volume is regulated by O2 transfer between the luminal space and the blood In the swimbladder, lactic acid generation by anaerobic glycolysis in the gas gland epithelial cells and its recycling through the rete mirabile bundles of countercurrent capillaries are essential for local blood acidification and oxygen liberation from hemoglobin by the âRoot effect.â While O2 generation is critical for fish flotation, the molecular mechanism of the secretion and recycling of lactic acid in this critical process is not clear. To clarify molecules that are involved in the blood acidification and visualize the route of lactic acid movement, we analyzed the expression of 17 members of the H+/monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) family in the fugu genome and found that only MCT1b and MCT4b are highly expressed in the fugu swimbladder. Electrophysiological analyses demonstrated that MCT1b is a high-affinity lactate transporter whereas MCT4b is a low-affinity/high-conductance lactate transporter. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that (i) MCT4b expresses in gas gland cells together with the glycolytic enzyme GAPDH at high level and mediate lactic acid secretion by gas gland cells, and (ii) MCT1b expresses in arterial, but not venous, capillary endothelial cells in rete mirabile and mediates recycling of lactic acid in the rete mirabile by solute-specific transcellular transport. These results clarified the mechanism of the blood acidification in the swimbladder by spatially organized two lactic acid transporters MCT4b and MCT1b
Populations of planets in multiple star systems
Astronomers have discovered that both planets and binaries are abundant
throughout the Galaxy. In combination, we know of over 100 planets in binary
and higher-order multi-star systems, in both circumbinary and circumstellar
configurations. In this chapter we review these findings and some of their
implications for the formation of both stars and planets. Most of the planets
found have been circumstellar, where there is seemingly a ruinous influence of
the second star if sufficiently close (<50 AU). Hosts of hot Jupiters have been
a particularly popular target for binary star studies, showing an enhanced rate
of stellar multiplicity for moderately wide binaries (>100 AU). This was
thought to be a sign of Kozai-Lidov migration, however recent studies have
shown this mechanism to be too inefficient to account for the majority of hot
Jupiters. A couple of dozen circumbinary planets have been proposed around both
main sequence and evolved binaries. Around main sequence binaries there are
preliminary indications that the frequency of gas giants is as high as those
around single stars. There is however a conspicuous absence of circumbinary
planets around the tightest main sequence binaries with periods of just a few
days, suggesting a unique, more disruptive formation history of such close
stellar pairs.Comment: Invited review chapter, accepted for publication in "Handbook of
Exoplanets", ed. H. Deeg & J. A. Belmont