G. De Metrio
University of Bari
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Featured researches published by G. De Metrio.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2003
G. De Metrio; A. Corriero; Salvatore Desantis; D. Zubani; F. Cirillo; M. Deflorio; C.R. Bridges; J. Eicker; J.M. de la Serna; Persefoni Megalofonou; D.E. Kime
The first evidence of the presence of intersexuality in a wild population of Mediterranean swordfish (Xiphias gladius L.) is reported. Forty of 162 specimens (25%) macroscopically classified as males, showed the presence of female germ cells within the testes. In two specimens grouped previtellogenic oocytes were present; all the other specimens possessed single scattered previtellogenic oocytes. The presence of vitellogenin was demonstrated immunohistochemically in the liver of both intersex and normal males. These findings could be due to the exposure to oestrogen-mimicking substances.
General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2012
Hanna Rosenfeld; Constantinos C. Mylonas; C.R. Bridges; Gilad Heinisch; A. Corriero; R. Vassallo-Aguis; A. Medina; A. Belmonte; A. García; F. de la Gándara; C. Fauvel; G. De Metrio; I. Meiri-Ashkenazi; H. Gordin; Yonathan Zohar
A controlled-release implant loaded with GnRH agonist (GnRHa) was used to induce spawning in Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) during two consecutive reproductive seasons. The fish were implanted underwater and sampled between days 2 and 8 after treatment. At the time of GnRHa treatment, females were in full vitellogenesis and males in spermiation. There was a rapid burst of pituitary luteinizing hormone (LH) release at day 2 after treatment in GnRHa-treated fish, and circulating LH remained elevated up to day 8 after treatment. In contrast, control fish had significantly lower levels in the plasma, but higher LH content in the pituitary, as observed in many other cultured fishes that fail to undergo oocyte maturation, ovulation and spawning unless induced by an exogenous GnRHa. Plasma testosterone (T) and 17β-estradiol (E(2)) were elevated in response to the GnRHa treatment in females, while 11-ketotestosterone (11-KT) but not T was elevated in males. Even though oocyte maturation and ovulation did occur in GnRHa-induced fish, no significant elevations in 17,20β-dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one (17,20β-P) or 17,20β,21-trihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one (20β-S), in either the free, conjugated or 5β-reduced,3α-hydroxylated forms was observed in fish sampled within 6 days after treatment. Interestingly, a significant peak in plasma free 17,20β-P levels occurred in both males and females at day 8 after treatment. Histological sections of the ovaries in these females contained oocytes at the migrating germinal vesicle stage, suggesting the role of this hormone as a maturation-inducing steroid in Atlantic bluefin tuna. In conclusion, the GnRHa implants activated effectively the reproductive endocrine axis in captive Atlantic bluefin tuna broodstocks, through stimulation of sustained elevations in plasma LH, which in turn evoked the synthesis and secretion of the relevant sex steroids leading to gamete maturation and release.
Animal Reproduction Science | 2011
C. Pousis; C. De Giorgi; Constantinos C. Mylonas; C.R. Bridges; R. Zupa; R. Vassallo-Agius; F. de la Gándara; Caterina Dileo; G. De Metrio; A. Corriero
The sequence of vitellogenin A (VgA) and vitellogenin B (VgB) cDNAs in Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus L.) were determined, and vitellogenin expression levels in the liver and oocyte yolk accumulation were compared in wild and captive-reared individuals. Liver and ovary samples were taken from 31 individuals reared experimentally in three commercial Atlantic bluefin tuna fattening sites in the Mediterranean Sea and from 33 wild individuals caught by commercial traps during the fishs migration towards their Mediterranean spawning grounds. The total length of VgA cDNA was 5585 nucleotides and that of VgB was 5267 nucleotides. The identity and similarity between deduced amino acid sequences of VgA and VgB were 60% and 78%, respectively. The Atlantic bluefin tuna VgA and VgB amino acid sequences have high similarities with those of other teleost fishes. Relative levels of VgA and VgB mRNAs were low in April, increased significantly during the reproductive period in May and June, and declined in July. There was a trend towards higher relative levels of VgA and VgB mRNAs in captive fish compared to wild individuals during the reproductive period. The surface occupied by eosinophilic yolk granules in fully vitellogenic oocytes, as well as the frequency of oocytes in late vitellogenesis, was significantly higher in captive compared to wild individuals. The study suggests that the experimental conditions under which Atlantic bluefin tuna individuals were reared allowed the occurrence of normal vitellogenesis, based on gene expression of VgA and VgB in the liver and yolk accumulation in the oocytes. The higher yolk accumulation and frequency of vitellogenic oocytes observed in the ovaries of captive fish suggest that improvements in feeding practices may result in an improved vitellogenic process.
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 1995
P. Megalofonou; John Mark Dean; G. De Metrio; C. Wilson; S. Berkeley
Abstract Age estimates were made on otoliths of 21 juvenile swordfish, Xiphias gladius Linnaeus, captured in the Mediterranean Sea. Increments were observed in swordfish sagittae sectioned in a transverse plane and viewed with light and scanning electron microscopy. Increment counts, presumed to be daily, were made for age estimation. Estimated ages ranged from 87 to 147 days of fish ranging in size from 51 to 74 cm lower jaw fork length (LJFL). A growth rate of 2.3 cm · day −1 for the range of size of the fish was estimated. Spawning dates were estimated to occur from June 27 to August 25, which is consistent with reported times of gonad maturation and occurrence of swordfish larvae in the plankton.
Journal of Fish Diseases | 2011
A. Corriero; R. Zupa; G Bello; Constantinos C. Mylonas; M. Deflorio; S Genovese; G Basilone; G Buscaino; G Buffa; C. Pousis; G. De Metrio; N. Santamaria
The effects of different stressors on the atretic degeneration of ovarian vitellogenic follicles, as well as on the ovarian mass, were examined in female Atlantic bluefin tuna, Thunnus thynnus (L.), from the Mediterranean Sea. The stressors taken into consideration were short-term starvation (up to 14 days), long-term cage rearing (1 year) and crowding-induced severe panic frenzy. Wild-caught individuals were used as a control group. Fish subjected to either severe panic frenzy or starvation exhibited a decrease in gonad mass and had significantly higher intensity of α atresia in the vitellogenic follicles (means: 78% and 58%, respectively; range: 36-100%) than either wild or long-term caged individuals (means: 32% and 30%, respectively; range: 19-44%). The extensive atresia in fish stressed by severe panic frenzy was observed as early as 24 h after the stressing event. The present study represents the first evidence of the extreme susceptibility of Atlantic bluefin tuna to severe acute stress during vitellogenesis; it also shows that starvation is associated with progressive reabsorption of vitellogenic oocytes.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2009
R. Zupa; A. Corriero; M. Deflorio; N. Santamaria; D Spedicato; C. Marano; M Losurdo; C.R. Bridges; G. De Metrio
The presence of non-reproductive Atlantic bluefin tuna Thunnus thynnus females in the Mediterranean Sea was investigated through histological analysis of the gonads. Three hundred and twenty-six ovary samples were collected from adults captured at different locations in the Mediterranean Sea during the reproductive seasons between 1998 and 2008. Only three specimens were considered to be in a non-reproductive state: two of them were in a reabsorbing state showing ovaries with early vitellogenic oocytes and extensive alpha and beta atresia of vitellogenic follicles; the third showed gonads with perinucleolar oocytes and was considered to be in a resting state. The low occurrence of non-reproductive individuals found in this study makes it unlikely that non-reproductive individuals aggregate with reproductive ones during their migration towards spawning grounds. Further research is suggested in order to investigate the potential presence of non-reproductive individuals on non-spawning grounds during the reproductive season.
Journal of Morphology | 1997
G. De Metrio; Hans Ditrich; Giovanni Palmieri
In swordfish (Xiphias gladius), the dorsal rectus muscle of the eye (M. rectus dorsalis) is partly differentiated for heat production similar to brown adipocytes. Other parts of the dorsal rectus show a typical muscular structure. This modified muscle and its anatomical relationships to neighboring organs were investigated using macroscopic dissections, light and transmission electron microscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance tomography, and scanning electron microscopy of vascular corrosion casts. The ophthalmic artery off the efferent pseudobranchial artery supplies the dorsal rectus muscle. The ophthalmic artery branches in a brush‐like manner as it enters the origin of the muscle. In this region, numerous arterioles and venules are arranged in parallel, suggesting a countercurrent heat exchange mechanism. Thermogenic cells, morphologically similar to brown adipocytes, surround small vascular branches in the middle of the muscle. Muscular cells also extend into this area. The vessels then divide into a tree‐like pattern, forming an extensively capillarized area near the surface of the muscle at the basisphenoid bone. The basisphenoid is reduced to a thin connective tissue layer in this area, hence facilitating thermal transfer between the blood in the muscle and the brain base. The Tela lymph‐adiposa surrounds the brain with large masses of fat. Additionally, voluminous masses of periocular fat provide thermal insulation lateral to the lateral rectus muscle of the eye. It is suggested that this system for raising the temperature of areas of the brain a few degrees above ambient temperature allows an optically oriented predator such as the swordfish to respond to optical input in cold water more efficiently. J. Morphol. 234:89–96, 1997.
Theriogenology | 2009
Salvatore Desantis; G. Ventriglia; Sara Zizza; T. De Santis; A. Di Summa; G. De Metrio; M.E. Dell’Aquila
Equine cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) were analyzed by means of 13 lectins to evaluate their glycoconjugate patterns and to verify differences between COCs recovered with compact (Cp) and expanded (Exp) cumulus. Cumulus cells showed a similar staining pattern in both Cp and Exp COCs with all lectins used, except for a higher reactivity with SNA and GSA II in Cp COCs and SBA in Exp COCs. The zona pellucida (ZP) showed (1) uniform staining with MAL II, RCA(120), and SBA in both Cp and Exp COCs, (2) trilaminar binding pattern with WGA as well as higher Con A reactivity in the outer region of both types of COCs, (3) uniform staining with PNA only in Exp COCs, (4) uniform and trilaminar binding pattern with SNA in Cp and Exp COCs, respectively, and (5) major reactivity with GSA II in Exp COCs. Ooplasm showed similar staining intensity with Con A, HPA, GSA I-B(4), and WGA in both Cp and Exp COCs, with stronger reactivity to GSA II in Exp COCs, whereas SNA, UEA I, and LTA binding sites were present only in Cp COCs. Oocyte cortical granules of both Cp and Exp COCs reacted with Con A and WGA. These results suggest that, in the mare, viable (Cp) and atretic (Exp) COCs display different glycoconjugate staining pattern, which may account for the different maturation and developmental competence of COCs.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2003
A. Corriero; Salvatore Desantis; M. Deflorio; Franca Acone; C.R. Bridges; J.M. de la Serna; Persefoni Megalofonou; G. De Metrio
Journal of Applied Ichthyology | 2004
Saadet Karakulak; I. K. Oray; A. Corriero; M. Deflorio; N. Santamaria; Salvatore Desantis; G. De Metrio