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      A Brief History of the Study of Fish Osmoregulation: The Central Role of the Mt. Desert Island Biological Laboratory

      review-article
      1 , 2
      Frontiers in Physiology
      Frontiers Research Foundation
      fish osmoregulation, kidney, gill, epithelial transport

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          Abstract

          The Mt. Desert Island Biological Laboratory (MDIBL) has played a central role in the study of fish osmoregulation for the past 80 years. In particular, scientists at the MDIBL have made significant discoveries in the basic pattern of fish osmoregulation, the function of aglomerular kidneys and proximal tubular secretion, the roles of NaCl cotransporters in intestinal uptake and gill and rectal gland secretion, the role of the shark rectal gland in osmoregulation, the mechanisms of salt secretion by the teleost fish gill epithelium, and the evolution of the ionic uptake mechanisms in fish gills. This short review presents the history of these discoveries and their relationships to the study of epithelial transport in general.

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          Most cited references131

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          The multifunctional fish gill: dominant site of gas exchange, osmoregulation, acid-base regulation, and excretion of nitrogenous waste.

          The fish gill is a multipurpose organ that, in addition to providing for aquatic gas exchange, plays dominant roles in osmotic and ionic regulation, acid-base regulation, and excretion of nitrogenous wastes. Thus, despite the fact that all fish groups have functional kidneys, the gill epithelium is the site of many processes that are mediated by renal epithelia in terrestrial vertebrates. Indeed, many of the pathways that mediate these processes in mammalian renal epithelial are expressed in the gill, and many of the extrinsic and intrinsic modulators of these processes are also found in fish endocrine tissues and the gill itself. The basic patterns of gill physiology were outlined over a half century ago, but modern immunological and molecular techniques are bringing new insights into this complicated system. Nevertheless, substantial questions about the evolution of these mechanisms and control remain.
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            Endocrine Control of Osmoregulation in Teleost Fish

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              Teleost fish osmoregulation: what have we learned since August Krogh, Homer Smith, and Ancel Keys.

              H. Evans (2008)
              In the 1930s, August Krogh, Homer Smith, and Ancel Keys knew that teleost fishes were hyperosmotic to fresh water and hyposmotic to seawater, and, therefore, they were potentially salt depleted and dehydrated, respectively. Their seminal studies demonstrated that freshwater teleosts extract NaCl from the environment, while marine teleosts ingest seawater, absorb intestinal water by absorbing NaCl, and excrete the excess salt via gill transport mechanisms. During the past 70 years, their research descendents have used chemical, radioisotopic, pharmacological, cellular, and molecular techniques to further characterize the gill transport mechanisms and begin to study the signaling molecules that modulate these processes. The cellular site for these transport pathways was first described by Keys and is now known as the mitochondrion-rich cell (MRC). The model for NaCl secretion by the marine MRC is well supported, but the model for NaCl uptake by freshwater MRC is more unsettled. Importantly, these ionic uptake mechanisms also appear to be expressed in the marine gill MRC, for acid-base regulation. A large suite of potential endocrine control mechanisms have been identified, and recent evidence suggests that paracrines such as endothelin, nitric oxide, and prostaglandins might also control MRC function.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Front Physiol
                Front. Physiology
                Frontiers in Physiology
                Frontiers Research Foundation
                1664-042X
                27 May 2010
                18 June 2010
                2010
                : 1
                : 13
                Affiliations
                [1] 1simpleDepartment of Biology, University of Florida Gainesville, FL, USA
                [2] 2simpleMount Desert Island Biological Laboratory Salisbury Cove, ME USA
                Author notes

                Edited by: Shigehisa Hirose, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan

                Reviewed by: Pung P. Hwang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan; Greg G. Goss, University of Alberta, Canada

                *Correspondence: David H. Evans, Department of Biology, University of Florida, 317 Bartram Hall, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA. e-mail: devans@ 123456ufl.edu

                This article was submitted to Frontiers in Aquatic Physiology, a specialty of Frontiers in Physiology.

                Article
                10.3389/fphys.2010.00013
                3059943
                21423356
                6685e9b6-751e-43b6-a6fc-61cff79eab20
                Copyright © 2010 Evans.

                This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.

                History
                : 05 May 2010
                : 28 May 2010
                Page count
                Figures: 4, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 139, Pages: 10, Words: 10604
                Categories
                Physiology
                Review Article

                Anatomy & Physiology
                kidney,epithelial transport,fish osmoregulation,gill
                Anatomy & Physiology
                kidney, epithelial transport, fish osmoregulation, gill

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