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Featured researches published by E.G. Grau.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2003

Effects of fasting on growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor I axis in the tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus

Katsuhisa Uchida; Shingo Kajimura; Larry G. Riley; Tetsuya Hirano; K Aida; E.G. Grau

Effects of fasting on the growth hormone (GH)-insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) axis were examined in the tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) acclimated to fresh water. Fasting for 2 weeks resulted in significant reductions in body weight, specific growth rate and hepatosomatic index in both males and females. Significant reductions in specific growth rates were observed after 1 and 2 weeks in both sexes, although the decrease in body weight was not significant in the female. A significant reduction was also seen in the condition factor of females after 2 weeks. No change was seen in the gonadosomatic index in either sex. Two weeks of fasting also produced a significant reduction in plasma IGF-I but not in plasma GH, prolactin (PRL(188)) or cortisol. Significant reductions in the hepatic IGF-I mRNA were seen in both sexes. On the other hand, a significant increase was observed in cortisol receptor mRNA in the female liver. Plasma IGF-I levels were correlated significantly with specific growth rate, condition factor and hepatosomatic index, indicating that plasma IGF-I is a good indicator of growth in the tilapia. No change was seen in plasma glucose or osmolality after 2 weeks of fasting. During fasting, tilapia appears to convert metabolic energy from growth to basal metabolism including maintenance of ion and water balance.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1991

CORTISOL RAPIDLY REDUCES PROLACTIN RELEASE AND CAMP AND 45CA2+ ACCUMULATION IN THE CICHLID FISH PITUITARY IN VITRO

R.J. Borski; Lisa M. H. Helms; N.H. Richman; E.G. Grau

During in vitro incubation, prolactin release is inhibited in a dose-related manner by cortisol. This action is mimicked by the synthetic glucocorticoid agonist dexamethasone but not by other steroids tested. Perifusion studies indicate that the inhibition of [3H]prolactin release by cortisol occurs within 20 min. Cortisol (50 nM) also inhibits cAMP accumulation and reduces 45Ca2+ accumulation in the tilapia rostral pars distalis within 15 min. Cortisols action on prolactin release is blocked in the presence of either the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 or a combination of dibutyryl cAMP and 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, which increase intracellular Ca2+ and cAMP, respectively. Taken together, these findings suggest that cortisol may play a physiologically relevant role in the rapid modulation of prolactin secretion in vivo. Our studies also suggest that the inhibition of prolactin release by cortisol is a specific glucocorticoid action that may be mediated, in part, through cortisols ability to inhibit intracellular cAMP and Ca2+ metabolism.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2011

Switching of Na+, K+-ATPase isoforms by salinity and prolactin in the gill of a cichlid fish

Christian K. Tipsmark; Jason P. Breves; Andre P. Seale; Darren T. Lerner; Tetsuya Hirano; E.G. Grau

We identified and investigated the changes in expression of two gill Na(+), K(+)-ATPase α-subunit isoforms (α-1a and α-1b) in relationship with salinity acclimation in a cichlid fish, Mozambique tilapia. Transfer of freshwater (FW)-acclimated fish to seawater (SW) resulted in a marked reduction in α-1a expression within 24 h and a significant increase in α-1b expression with maximum levels attained 7 days after the transfer. In contrast, transfer of SW-acclimated fish to FW induced a marked increase in α-1a expression within 2 days, while α-1b expression decreased significantly after 14 days. Hypophysectomy resulted in a virtual shutdown of α-1a mRNA expression in both FW- and SW-acclimated fish, whereas no significant effect was observed in α-1b expression. Replacement therapy by ovine prolactin (oPrl) fully restored α-1a expression in FW-acclimated fish, while cortisol had a modest, but significant, stimulatory effect on α-1a expression. In hypophysectomized fish in SW, replacement therapy with oPrl alone or in combination with cortisol resulted in a marked increase in α-1a mRNA to levels far exceeding those observed in sham-operated fish. Expression of α-1b mRNA was unaffected by hormone treatment either in FW-acclimated fish or in SW-acclimated fish. The mRNA expression of fxyd-11, a regulatory Na(+), K(+)-ATPase subunit, was transiently enhanced during both FW and SW acclimation. In hypophysectomized fish in FW, oPrl and cortisol stimulated fxyd-11 expression in a synergistic manner. The clear Prl dependence of gill α-1a expression may partially explain the importance of this hormone to hyperosmoregulation in this species.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2002

Effects of environmental osmolality on release of prolactin, growth hormone and ACTH from the tilapia pituitary

Andre P. Seale; Larry G. Riley; Thomas A. Leedom; Shingo Kajimura; Robert M. Dores; Tetsuya Hirano; E.G. Grau

Prolactin (PRL) plays a central role in freshwater (FW) adaptation in teleost fish. Evidence now suggests that growth hormone (GH) acts in the seawater (SW) adaptation in at least some euryhaline fish. Reflecting its important role in FW adaptation, plasma levels of PRL(188) and PRL(177) are higher in tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) adapted to FW than in those adapted to SW. A transient but significant increase in plasma GH was observed 6h after transfer from FW to SW. Elevated plasma PRL levels were seen in association with reductions in plasma osmolality after blood withdrawal in FW fish whereas no significant change was seen in plasma GH levels. When pituitaries from FW tilapia were incubated for 7 days, secretion of both PRLs was significantly greater in hyposmotic medium than in hyperosmotic medium for the first 24h. Secretion of GH from the same pituitary was relatively low during this period compared with PRL secretion. No consistent effect of medium osmolality on GH release was seen for the first day, but its cumulative release was increased significantly in hyperosmotic medium after 2 days and thereafter. On the other hand, ACTH release was extremely low compared with the secretion of PRLs and GH and there was no consistent effect of medium osmolality. These results indicate that PRL release from the tilapia pituitary is stimulated both in vivo and in vitro as extracellular osmolality is reduced, whereas the secretion of GH increases temporarily when osmolality is increased. ACTH seems to be relatively insensitive to the changes in environmental osmolality.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2003

Effects of transfer from seawater to fresh water on the growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor-I axis and prolactin in the Tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus.

Larry G. Riley; Tetsuya Hirano; E.G. Grau

The effect of freshwater (FW) transfer on growth and on the growth hormone (GH)/insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) axis was examined in the tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus. Tilapia were raised in seawater (SW) for 5 months and then transferred to FW for an additional 40 days. The growth rate of the fish transferred to FW was significantly reduced compared with the growth rate of fish that remained in SW. Plasma levels of GH were significantly elevated in FW-transferred fish, as were plasma IGF-I levels. Pituitary GH and liver IGF-I mRNA levels, on the other hand, were significantly reduced in the fish transferred to FW. There was a significant correlation between body mass and mRNA levels of GH and IGF-I, but not with plasma levels of GH and IGF-I. Fish transferred to FW had significantly higher prolactin (PRL)(177) levels than the SW control fish, although there was no difference in plasma PRL(188) levels. Consistent with the hyperosmoregulatory effects of PRL, mRNA levels of both PRL(177) and PRL(188) were significantly higher in FW-transferred fish than in the fish in SW. These results suggest that transferring tilapia from SW to FW activates the GH/IGF-I axis, but growth is still inhibited, possibly due to the greater metabolic cost of osmoregulation in FW than in SW.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 1987

Somatostatin and altered medium osmotic pressure elicit rapid changes in prolactin release from the rostral pars distalis of the tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus, in vitro

E.G. Grau; Carol-Ann Ford; Lisa M. H. Helms; Steven K. Shimoda; Ian M. Cooke

Prolactin (PRL) cells in the rostral pars distalis of the tilapia Oreochromis mossambicus respond to somatostatin (SRIF) and reduced medium osmotic pressure within 10-20 min of exposure during perifusion incubation. Pieces of rostral pars distalis tissue were removed from freshwater-adapted tilapia and were preincubated in [3H]leucine in static culture (355 m phi smolal) for 48 hr. Following preincubation, they were placed in the perifusion apparatus and baseline release was established for 3 hr in hyperosmotic medium (355 m phi smolal). Exposure to hyposmotic medium (280 m phi smolal) resulted in a rapid and steep rise in the release of [3H]PRL, which remained elevated for more than 2 hr. When SRIF was added simultaneously with hyposmotic medium, the rise in PRL release normally initiated by reduced osmotic pressure was prevented. Somatostatin also quickly reduced release that had been previously elevated by exposure to hyposmotic medium. The time course of these changes suggests that SRIF and altered osmotic pressure act on PRL secretion in at least partial independence of effects which they may have on PRL synthesis in the tilapia pituitary.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2010

Acute salinity challenges in Mozambique and Nile tilapia: Differential responses of plasma prolactin, growth hormone and branchial expression of ion transporters

Jason P. Breves; Sanae Hasegawa; M. Yoshioka; Bradley K. Fox; Lori K. Davis; Darren T. Lerner; Yoshio Takei; Tetsuya Hirano; E.G. Grau

The responses of Mozambique and Nile tilapia acclimated to fresh water (FW) and brackish water (BW; 17 per thousand) were compared following acute salinity challenges. In both species, plasma osmolality increased to above 450 mOsm by 2h after transfer from FW to seawater (SW); these increases in osmolality were accompanied by unexpected increases in plasma prolactin (PRL). Likewise, PRL receptor gene expression in the gill also increased in both species. In Nile tilapia, hyperosmotic transfers (FW to BW and SW) resulted in increased plasma growth hormone (GH) and in branchial GH receptor gene expression, responses that were absent in Mozambique tilapia. Branchial gene expression of osmotic stress transcription factor 1 (OSTF1) increased in both species following transfer from FW to SW, whereas transfer from BW to SW induced OSTF1 expression only in the Nile tilapia. Branchial expression of Na(+)/Cl(-) cotransporter was higher in FW in both species than in BW. Branchial gene expression of Na(+)/K(+)/2Cl(-) cotransporter (NKCC) increased after transfer from BW to SW in Mozambique tilapia, whereas expression was reduced in the Nile tilapia following the same transfer. The difference in the SW adaptability of these species may be related to a limited capacity of Nile tilapia to up-regulate NKCC gene expression, which is likely to be an essential component in the recruitment of SW-type chloride cells. The differential responses of GH and OSTF1 may also be associated with the disparate SW adaptability of these two tilapiine species.


Fish Physiology and Biochemistry | 1997

Effects of salinity, dietary level of protein and 17α-methyltestosterone on growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (tPRL177 and tPRL188) levels in the tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus

B.S. Shepherd; A. Burch; R. Sparks; N.H. RichmanIII; S.K. Shimoda; M.H. Stetson; Chhorn Lim; E.G. Grau

In the present study, we examined the long-term effects of environmental salinity, diet (35% and 25% crude protein) and 17α-methyltestosterone (MT) on corresponding levels of pituitary and serum growth hormone (GH) and prolactins (tPRL177 and tPRL188) in the tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus). We observed no discernible patterns in serum GH that would suggest an effect of salinity, diet or MT. However, serum GH levels in all treatments declined at 1 and 3h after first feeding. Serum tPRL177 and tPRL188 were significantly higher in freshwater (FW) than in seawater (SW) and levels were significantly affected by dietary protein. tPRL177 levels were higher in all groups fed a 35% protein diet, but tPRL188 levels were higher only in the groups fed the MT-treated 35% protein diet; only serum tPRL188 levels were affected by MT. Moreover, serum tPRL177 and tPRL188 increased throughout the sampling time-course. Subsequent work using fasted tilapia suggests that first feeding is likely to initiate the post-prandial suppression of serum GH levels. In contrast with the picture observed in blood, pituitary glands of SW animals showed higher levels of GH than FW fish. Pituitary GH was elevated by MT in both FW and SW. We also observed that pituitary tPRL177 and tPRL188 levels were higher in FW fish than in SW fish; tPRL177 and tPRL188 levels were elevated by MT only in FW animals. To assess the somatomedin activity of plasma from FW- and SW-reared tilapia, we measured [35S]-sulfate incorporation into ceratobranchial cartilage explants in vitro. Plasma from SW-adapted tilapia showed greater activity in this assay than plasma from FW-reared tilapia, suggesting that the GH-dependent IGF bioactivity of plasma is higher in SW-reared tilapia. Collectively, these studies suggest that the growth-promoting actions of SW rearing and of MT administration in tilapia may be linked to elevations in GH and/or prolactin (tPRL177 and tPRL188)levels.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2012

Osmoreception: perspectives on signal transduction and environmental modulation.

Andre P. Seale; Soichi Watanabe; E.G. Grau

Osmoregulation is essential to life in vertebrates and osmoreception is a fundamental element in osmoregulation. Progress in characterizing the mechanisms that mediate osmoreception has been made possible by using a uniquely accessible cell model, the prolactin (PRL) cell of the euryhaline tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus. In addition to a brief historical overview, we offer a summary of our recent progress on signal transduction and osmosensitivity in the tilapia PRL cell model. Prolactin is a central regulator of hydromineral balance in teleosts in freshwater (FW). Consistent with its essential role in FW osmoregulation, PRL release in tilapia is inversely related to extracellular osmolality, both in vivo and in vitro. Osmotically-driven changes in PRL cell volume control PRL release. A decrease in extracellular osmolality increases cell volume, leading to a rapid influx of Ca(2+) through stretch-activated channels followed by a sharp rise in PRL release. Our recent studies also suggest that cAMP is involved in the osmotic signal transduction, and that acclimation salinity can modulate PRL cell osmosensitivity. Prolactin cells from FW tilapia show a larger rise in PRL release after a reduction in medium osmolality than those from SW fish. Paradoxically, hyposmotically-induced increase in PRL mRNA was observed only in cells from SW fish. Our studies have revealed differences in the abundance of the water channel, aquaporin 3 (AQP3), and the stretch activated Ca(2+) channel, transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) in PRL cells of FW and SW fish that may explain their differing osmosensitivity and osmoreceptive output in differing acclimation salinities.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2010

Transcriptional activity and biological effects of mammalian estrogen receptor ligands on three hepatic estrogen receptors in Mozambique tilapia

Lori K. Davis; Yoshinao Katsu; Taisen Iguchi; Darren T. Lerner; Tetsuya Hirano; E.G. Grau

Like other fish species, Mozambique tilapia has three forms of estrogen receptor, ERα, ERβ1, and ERβ2. A primary function of 17β-estradiol (E(2)) in oviparous species is the hepatic induction of the yolk precursor protein, vitellogenin (Vg). To characterize the roles of ERs in Vg production, transactivation assays and an in vivo study were carried out utilizing agonists for mammalian ERα and ERβ, and an antagonist for mammalian ERα, propyl-pyrazole-triol (PPT), diarylpropionitrile (DPN), and methyl-piperidino-pyrazole (MPP), respectively. ERα was more sensitive and responsive to PPT than ERβ1 or ERβ2 in transactivation assays. All ER isoforms indicated equivalent responsiveness to DPN compared with E(2), although sensitivity to DPN was lower. MPP exhibited antagonistic action on transactivation of all ER isoforms and reduced the E(2) effect on Vg and ERα 48h post-injection. DPN increased ERα and Vg expression and plasma Vg post-injection, whereas PPT was without effect; DPN seems to stimulate Vg production through activation of ERα. The ligand binding domain of all tilapia ER forms shares only 60-65% amino acid identity with human ERα and ERβ. This, together with our results, clearly indicates that agonistic or antagonistic characteristics of PPT, DPN and MPP cannot be extrapolated from mammalian to piscine ERs.

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