47 research outputs found

    Hepatic transcriptomic profiles from barramundi, Lates calcarifer, as a means of assessing organism health and identifying stressors in rivers in northern Queensland

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    Resource managers need to differentiate between sites with and without contaminants and those where contaminants cause impacts. Potentially, transcriptomes could be used to evaluate sites where contaminant-induced effects may occur, to identify causative stressors of effects and potential adverse outcomes. To test this hypothesis, the hepatic transcriptomes in Barramundi, a perciforme teleost fish, (Lates calcarifer) from two reference sites, two agriculturally impacted sites sampled during the dry season, and an impacted site sampled during the wet season were compared. The hepatic transcriptome was profiled using RNA-Seq. Multivariate analysis showed that transcriptomes were clustered based on site and by inference water quality, but not sampling time. The largest differences in transcriptomic profile were between reference sites and a site sampled during high run-off, showing that impacted sites can be identified via RNA-Seq. Transcripts with altered abundance were linked to xenobiotic metabolism, peroxisome proliferation and stress responses, indicating putative stressors with the potential for adverse outcomes in barramundi

    How Abnormal Is the Behaviour of Captive, Zoo-Living Chimpanzees?

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    Background. Many captive chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) show a variety of serious behavioural abnormalities, some of which have been considered as possible signs of compromised mental health. The provision of environmental enrichments aimed at reducing the performance of abnormal behaviours is increasing the norm, with the housing of individuals in (semi-)natural social groups thought to be the most successful of these. Only a few quantitative studies of abnormal behaviour have been conducted, however, particularly for the captive population held in zoological collections. Consequently, a clear picture of the level of abnormal behaviour in zoo-living chimpanzees is lacking. Methods. We present preliminary findings from a detailed observational study of the behaviour of 40 socially-housed zoo-living chimpanzees from six collections in the United States of America and the United Kingdom. We determined the prevalence, diversity, frequency, and duration of abnormal behaviour from 1200 hours of continuous behavioural data collected by focal animal sampling. Results, conclusion, and significance. Our overall finding was that abnormal behaviour was present in all sampled individuals across six independent groups of zoo-living chimpanzees, despite the differences between these groups in size, composition, housing, etc. We found substantial variation between individuals in the frequency and duration of abnormal behaviour, but all individuals engaged in at least some abnormal behaviour and variation across individuals could not be explained by sex, age, rearing history or background (defined as prior housing conditions). Our data support a conclusion that, while most behaviour of zoo-living chimpanzees is ‘normal’ in that it is typical of their wild counterparts, abnormal behaviour is endemic in this population despite enrichment efforts. We suggest there is an urgent need to understand how the chimpanzee mind copes with captivity, an issue with both scientific and welfare implications

    DYNAMICS OF 17α-ETHYNYLESTRADIOL EXPOSURE IN RAINBOW TROUT (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS): ABSORPTION, TISSUE DISTRIBUTION, AND HEPATIC GENE EXPRESSION PATTERN

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    17α-Ethynylestradiol (EE 2 ) is a synthetic estrogen identified in sewage effluents. To understand better the absorption kinetics of EE 2 and the induction of vitellogenin (VTG) and estrogen receptor α (ERα) mRNA, we subjected male rainbow trout ( Onchorynchus mykiss ) to continuous water exposures of 125 ng/L of EE 2 for up to 61 d. Trout were either repetitively sampled for blood plasma or serially killed at selected time intervals. Vitellogenin, ERα mRNA, and EE 2 were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and using quantitative polymerase chain reaction and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry, respectively. In separate experiments, trout were exposed to EE 2 for 7 d, and hepatic gene expression was assessed using a low- and high-density cDNA microarray. The EE 2 was rapidly absorbed by the trout, with an apparent equilibrium at 16 h in plasma and liver. The ERα mRNA levels also increased rapidly, reaching near-peak levels by 48 h. In contrast, plasma levels of VTG continuously increased for 19 d. After 61 d, tissues with the highest levels of VTG were the liver, kidney, and testes. Microarray-based gene expression studies provided unexpected results. In some cases, known estrogen-responsive genes (e.g., ERα) were unresponsive, whereas many of the genes that have no apparent link to estrogen function or EE 2 toxicity were significantly altered in expression. Of the two microarray approaches tested in the present study, the high-density array appeared to be superior because of the improved quality of the hybridization signal and the robustness of the response in terms of the number of genes identified as being EE 2 responsive

    Estrogen receptor mRNA expression patterns in the liver and ovary of female rainbow trout over a complete reproductive cycle

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    ► Estrogen receptor gene expression quantified in female rainbow trout. ► Estrogen receptor alpha 1 was highest in the liver. ► Ovary estrogen receptor alpha 2 peaked toward the end of the reproductive cycle. ► Estrogen receptor beta levels were high at the onset of a new cycle then decreased. Estrogens are critical hormones involved in reproduction and need to bind to estrogen receptors in target organs for biological activity. Fishes have two distinct estrogen receptor subtypes, alpha (α) and beta (β), with variable combinations of additional isoforms of each subtype dependent on the history of genome duplication within a taxon. The comparative expression patterns of estrogen receptor isoforms during the female reproductive cycle will provide important insights into the unique function and importance of each. The purpose of this study was to measure the mRNAs for the four estrogen receptor isoforms (erα1, erα2, erβ1, erβ2) in the liver and ovary of adult, female rainbow trout over the course of an annual reproductive cycle. The expression of estrogen receptor mRNA isoforms was measured by quantitative real-time RT-PCR. Several reproductive indices (gonadosomatic index, maximum oocyte diameter, plasma estradiol-17β, plasma vitellogenin, and ovulation) were also quantified for comparison and used in a correlation analysis to examine any inter-relationships. Of the four isoforms, the expression of erα1 was highest in the liver, and had a significant positive correlation with liver erβ1 expression. Liver expression of erα2 mRNA was the lowest, but showed a significant positive correlation with maximum oocyte diameter in the ovary. The pattern of the erβ isoforms in liver was one of initially elevated mRNA expression followed by a gradual decrease as reproductive development proceeded. In the ovary the erβ1 isoform had the highest mRNA expression of all estrogen receptor isoforms, at the beginning of the reproductive cycle, but then decreased afterward. Both ovarian erβ isoforms had a significant positive correlation with one another. In contrast, erα2 mRNA expression showed a high maximum level in the ovary near the end of the cycle along with a significant positive correlation with plasma estradiol-17β levels; the highest gonadosomatic indices, maximum oocyte diameter, and vitellogenin levels occurred then too

    Next generation sequence analysis of the transcriptome of Sydney rock oysters (Saccostrea glomerata) exposed to a range of environmental stressors

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    Sydney rock oysters (Saccostrea glomerata) were exposed to environmental stressors at contaminated field sites or in a controlled laboratory setting. RNA seq transcriptome data were generated for the gill and digestive gland using Roche's 454 pyrosequencing technology. 28,685 contigs were de novo assembled which encoded 11,671 different protein products. The data will act as a reference for future studies in ecology, immunology and environmental toxicology.3 page(s

    Dissolved and Particulate Copper Exposure Induces Differing Gene Expression Profiles and Mechanisms of Toxicity in the Deposit Feeding Amphipod Melita plumulosa

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    Uptake of metals via ingestion is an important route of exposure for many invertebrates, and it has been suggested that the toxic response to metals accumulated via food differs from that of metals accumulated via the dissolved phase. To test this hypothesis, the deposit-feeding epibenthic amphipod Melita plumulosa was exposed to nontoxic or reproductively toxic concentrations of copper via the overlying water, via ingestion of sediment, or via a combination of the two. Rates of copper uptake from the two exposure routes were predicted using a biokinetic model. Gene expression profiles were measured via microarray analysis and confirmed via quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Differences in expression profiles were related to the exposure route more than to individual or combined rates of copper uptake. Chitinase and digestive protease transcript expression levels correlated to the copper uptake rate from sediment, rather than from the dissolved phase or combined total uptake rate. Overall, this study supports the hypothesis that metals accumulated via ingestion have a different mode of toxic action than metals taken up from water. Consequently, guidelines that only consider dissolved metal exposure, including equilibrium-partitioning-based guidelines, may underestimate the potential effects from deposited or resuspended metal-contaminated sediments
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