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Homeostasis
Chapter 7
Zoology 1450
Topics





Osmoregulation
Endocrine regulation
Thermal regulation
Immune Response (briefly)
Part 1: Osmoregulatory
Systems in Fishes
Maintaining homeostasis with
respect to solute concentrations
and water content
Introduction


Maintaining steady-state equilibrium in the
internal environment of aquatic and marine
organisms is challenging.



Much is done involuntarily (hormones, enzymes,
osmoregulation, etc.) so little physical action is
required, however…



“Pick-up-and-move” still an option!
(Poor environment.)
Definitions






Homeostasis = maintaining steady state
equilibrium in the internal environment of an
organisms
Solute homeostasis = maintaining equilibrium
with respect to solute (ionic and neutral solutes)
concentrations (i.e. salts)
Water homeostasis = maintaining equilibrium
with respect to the amount of water retained in
the body fluids and tissues
Definitions, continued
Osmotic concentration - Total
concentration of all solutes in an aqueous
solution.
Units
osmolals = 1 mole of solute/liter of water
milliosmolals = 1/1000th of one osmolal

Osmoregulation in different environments


Challenge to homeostasis depends on




Solute concentration of body fluids and
tissues…
…concentration of environmental solutes
marine: ~34 ppt salinity = 1000 mosm/l
 freshwater: < 3 ppt salinity = 1 - 10 mosm/l

Osmoregulation in different environments


Each species has a range of environmental
osmotic conditions in which it can function:
 stenohaline - tolerate a narrow range of
salinities in external environment
 euryhaline - tolerate a wide range of salinities
in external environment
 short term changes: estuarine - 10 - 32 ppt,
intertidal - 25 - 40
 long term changes: diadromous fishes
(salmon)
Four osmoregulatory strategies in fishes
1. Isosmotic (nearly isoionic, osmoconformers)
2. Isosmotic with regulation of specific ions
3. Hyperosmotic (fresh H20 fish)
4. Hyposmotic (salt H2O fish)
Osmoregulation Strategies
Osmoconforming (no strategy) Hagfish internal salt
concentration = seawater. However, since they live IN the
ocean....no regulation required!
Osmoregulation Strategies
Elasmobranchs (sharks, skates, rays, chimeras)


Maintain internal salt concentration ~ 1/3 seawater,
make up the rest of internal salts by retaining high
concentrations of urea & trimethylamine oxide
(TMAO).



Bottom line…total internal osmotic concentration
equal to seawater!



How is urea retained?


Gill membrane has low permeability to urea so it is
retained within the fish. Because internal inorganic
and organic salt concentrations mimic that of their
environment, passive water influx or efflux is
minimized.
Osmotic regulation by marine teleosts...





ionic conc. approx 1/3 of seawater
drink copiously to gain water
Chloride cells eliminate Na+ and Clkidneys eliminate Mg++ and SO4=

advantages and disadvantages?
active tran.

Saltwater teleosts:

passive diff.

H2O
drink
Na+, Cl-

Na , Cl

Na+, Cl-

Mg++, SO4=

Mg++, SO4=

chloride cells

kidneys

+

-
active
passive

Chloride Cell fig 6.2:

sea water

PC

pavement
cell
Cl-

+
carrier

internal

PC

Na+
Na+

Cl-

Na+, Cl-

gut

accessory
cell

Na+

Cl-

Na+
Cl-

K

+

chloride cell

pump

Na+
Na+ K+ ATPase

mitochondria
tubular system
Osmotic regulation by FW teleosts







Ionic conc. Approx 1/3 of seawater
Don’t drink
Chloride cells fewer, work in reverse
Kidneys eliminate excess water; ion loss
Ammonia & bicarbonate ion exchange mechanisms
advantages and disadvantages?
Freshwater teleosts:

don’t
drink

active
passive

H2O
Na+, Cl-

Na+, Cl-

water
Ion exchange
pumps; beta chloride cells kidneys
Ion Exchange Mechanisms
freshwater

interior
active

Na+
ATP

pump
NH4+ or H+

active
pump

gill membrane

ClATP
HCO3-
Freezing Resistance:


What fishes might face freezing?
hagfishes?
isotonic
marine elasmobranchs?
isotonic
freshwater teleosts?
hypertonic
marine teleosts?
hypotonic
Solution for Antarctic fish


Macromolecular

{

compounds

peptides (protein)
glycopeptides
(carbohydrate/protein)
rich in alanine



molecules adsorb (attach) to ice crystal surface



interfere with ice crystal growth (disrupt matrix)



Why is this important???
ice ruptures cells; hinders osmoregulation


What about rapid ion flux?
Euryhaline
 Short-term fluctuations in osmotic state of
environment, e.g. in intertidal zone or in
estuaries where salinity can range from 10
to 34 ppt with the daily tidal cycle:


these fish have both kinds of chloride cells
when salinity is low, operate more like FW fishes
 when salinity is high, operate like marine fishes
 kidneys function only under low salinity conditions

Euryhaline




Diadromous fishes (spend part of life in salt
water, part in freshwater – catadromous
(migrate seaward) or anadromous (migrate
up river)
hormone-mediated changes associated
with metamorphosis - convert from FW
adaptations to SW or vice versa, depending
on direction of migration
What about stress??


Stressors (handling, sustained exercise such as
escape from predator pursuit) cause release of
adrenaline (epinephrine) - for mediating escape, etc.



Adrenaline causes diffusivity of gill epithelium to
increase, i.e. “leaky cell membranes” water & ions)



This accentuates the normal osmoregulatory
challenge for FW or marine fishes
How to reduce stress in stressed fishes?


Minimize the osmotic challenge by placing
fish in conditions that are isosmotic




add salt to freshwater, e.g. in transporting fish
or when exposing them to some other shortterm challenge
dilute saltwater for same situation with marine
species
Thermoregulation in Fishes
Temperature effects on fish






Temperature exhibits the greatest influence on
fish’s lives!
Affects metabolism
Affects digestion
Signals reproductive maturation and behavior
Fish are conformers (well, sort of...)


Body temperature is that of the environment
(poikilothermic ectothermy)



Each species has particular range of
temperatures that they can tolerate and that
are optimal



Big difference!
Behavioral Thermoregulation in Fishes


Although fish are ectotherms, they can
alter their body temperature by moving to
habitats with optimal temperature
Hot Fishes


Some fish can maintain body temperature greater than
ambient - tunas, billfishes, relatives (nearly endothermic)



Tuna use retia (similar to rete mirable) in muscles to
conserve heat & exchange O2.




Also, red muscle is medial rather than distal

Billfishes have warm brains - heat organ from muscles
around eye
Practical application


You’re management decisions and
actions must account for fish responses to
temperature gradients and limitations
Endocrine Systems of Fishes
Pituitary Gland - Master Gland





Linked with hypothalamus of brain
Produces hormones that affect other
endocrine tissues - indirect influence
Produces hormones that affect nonendocrine tissues directly
Pituitary Gland


Indirect influence


ACTH - adrenocorticotrophic
hormone




TH - thyrotrophic hormone




stimulates interrenal tissue production
of cortisol, stress response
stimulate thyroid production of thyroxin
(growth, metamorphosis-i.e. flounder)

GTH- gonadotrophic hormone


stimulates gonads to produce
androgens/estrogens
Pituitary Gland


Effects non-endocrine tissues directly






pigmentation - melanophore stimulating hormone (MSH)
 affects long-term control of color
osmoregulation - prolactin, vasotocin
 controls fresh/saltwater systems
growth – somatotrophic hormone
 stimulates > length, cell multiplication
Thyroid Gland






isolated follicles distributed in connective tissue
along ventral aorta
controls metabolic rate
affects metamorphosis, maturation
facilitates switch between fresh & salt water
Gonads






gamete and sex hormone production
controls gametes maturation
cause formation of secondary sex
characteristics: color, shape, behavior
in fish, several sex hormones also serve
as pheromones - e.g. goldfish males
respond to hormones released with
ovulation
Other endocrine tissues in fishes


chromaffin tissues-located near kidneys & heart
 produce adrenaline/noradrenaline – “fight or flight”
 increases blood flow through gills, ventilation rate



interrenal (inside kidney) tissues
 produce cortisol, cortisone - stress response
hormones (reduce inflamation)
Other endocrine tissues in fishes


pancreatic islets
 produce insulin - controls glucose, glycogen
metabolism (glucagon production)



corpuscles of Stannius
 produce stanniocalcin - controls Ca2+ uptake at gills
Immune System
Introduction


Obviously, the immune system is important in
homeostatic processes.



Immune systems of fish have two components:
non-specific and specific.



As we will see, both are involved in protecting
fish from visible as well as invisible disease
causing agents.
Non-specific immunity


Skin & Scales—specific solid layers of protection
from pathological and chemical stressors.



Mucus secretion—traps microorganisms;
preventing entry into body cavity or circulation



Macrophages (phagcytes) and cytotoxic cells—
part of the inflamatory response which destroy
pathogens within the body before they can do
harm.
Specific Immune Response


More of an active response
where an “invader” is detected
and destroyed.



Primary organs: kidney,
thymus, spleen, intestine.



Antigens—invading
compounds which provoke an
immune response.

Source: Cancer Research Institute (2002) www.cancerresearch.org/immhow.html
Specific immune response: What if something does get in??


White blood cells called B lymphocyte cells (B cells) and
T lymphocyte cells (T cells)—bind to foreign cells and
begin replication and attachement to antigens (sort of
markers for things to come...).



Occasionally, invader actually goes trough a
macrophage first...then B cell responds...



Once B cells replicate, antibodies are produced which
bind specifically to pathogens and tag them for
destruction (eating) by macrophages!
“Looks like meat’s
back on the menu
boys!!!”
Questions???

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1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
 

Ch. 7 (homeostasis osmoregulation, endocrine, temperature)

  • 3. Part 1: Osmoregulatory Systems in Fishes Maintaining homeostasis with respect to solute concentrations and water content
  • 4. Introduction  Maintaining steady-state equilibrium in the internal environment of aquatic and marine organisms is challenging.  Much is done involuntarily (hormones, enzymes, osmoregulation, etc.) so little physical action is required, however…  “Pick-up-and-move” still an option! (Poor environment.)
  • 5. Definitions    Homeostasis = maintaining steady state equilibrium in the internal environment of an organisms Solute homeostasis = maintaining equilibrium with respect to solute (ionic and neutral solutes) concentrations (i.e. salts) Water homeostasis = maintaining equilibrium with respect to the amount of water retained in the body fluids and tissues
  • 6. Definitions, continued Osmotic concentration - Total concentration of all solutes in an aqueous solution. Units osmolals = 1 mole of solute/liter of water milliosmolals = 1/1000th of one osmolal 
  • 7. Osmoregulation in different environments  Challenge to homeostasis depends on   Solute concentration of body fluids and tissues… …concentration of environmental solutes marine: ~34 ppt salinity = 1000 mosm/l  freshwater: < 3 ppt salinity = 1 - 10 mosm/l 
  • 8. Osmoregulation in different environments  Each species has a range of environmental osmotic conditions in which it can function:  stenohaline - tolerate a narrow range of salinities in external environment  euryhaline - tolerate a wide range of salinities in external environment  short term changes: estuarine - 10 - 32 ppt, intertidal - 25 - 40  long term changes: diadromous fishes (salmon)
  • 9. Four osmoregulatory strategies in fishes 1. Isosmotic (nearly isoionic, osmoconformers) 2. Isosmotic with regulation of specific ions 3. Hyperosmotic (fresh H20 fish) 4. Hyposmotic (salt H2O fish)
  • 10. Osmoregulation Strategies Osmoconforming (no strategy) Hagfish internal salt concentration = seawater. However, since they live IN the ocean....no regulation required!
  • 11. Osmoregulation Strategies Elasmobranchs (sharks, skates, rays, chimeras)  Maintain internal salt concentration ~ 1/3 seawater, make up the rest of internal salts by retaining high concentrations of urea & trimethylamine oxide (TMAO).  Bottom line…total internal osmotic concentration equal to seawater!  How is urea retained?  Gill membrane has low permeability to urea so it is retained within the fish. Because internal inorganic and organic salt concentrations mimic that of their environment, passive water influx or efflux is minimized.
  • 12. Osmotic regulation by marine teleosts...     ionic conc. approx 1/3 of seawater drink copiously to gain water Chloride cells eliminate Na+ and Clkidneys eliminate Mg++ and SO4= advantages and disadvantages?
  • 13. active tran. Saltwater teleosts: passive diff. H2O drink Na+, Cl- Na , Cl Na+, Cl- Mg++, SO4= Mg++, SO4= chloride cells kidneys + -
  • 14. active passive Chloride Cell fig 6.2: sea water PC pavement cell Cl- + carrier internal PC Na+ Na+ Cl- Na+, Cl- gut accessory cell Na+ Cl- Na+ Cl- K + chloride cell pump Na+ Na+ K+ ATPase mitochondria tubular system
  • 15. Osmotic regulation by FW teleosts      Ionic conc. Approx 1/3 of seawater Don’t drink Chloride cells fewer, work in reverse Kidneys eliminate excess water; ion loss Ammonia & bicarbonate ion exchange mechanisms advantages and disadvantages?
  • 16. Freshwater teleosts: don’t drink active passive H2O Na+, Cl- Na+, Cl- water Ion exchange pumps; beta chloride cells kidneys
  • 17. Ion Exchange Mechanisms freshwater interior active Na+ ATP pump NH4+ or H+ active pump gill membrane ClATP HCO3-
  • 18. Freezing Resistance:  What fishes might face freezing? hagfishes? isotonic marine elasmobranchs? isotonic freshwater teleosts? hypertonic marine teleosts? hypotonic
  • 19. Solution for Antarctic fish  Macromolecular { compounds peptides (protein) glycopeptides (carbohydrate/protein) rich in alanine  molecules adsorb (attach) to ice crystal surface  interfere with ice crystal growth (disrupt matrix)  Why is this important??? ice ruptures cells; hinders osmoregulation 
  • 20. What about rapid ion flux? Euryhaline  Short-term fluctuations in osmotic state of environment, e.g. in intertidal zone or in estuaries where salinity can range from 10 to 34 ppt with the daily tidal cycle:  these fish have both kinds of chloride cells when salinity is low, operate more like FW fishes  when salinity is high, operate like marine fishes  kidneys function only under low salinity conditions 
  • 21. Euryhaline   Diadromous fishes (spend part of life in salt water, part in freshwater – catadromous (migrate seaward) or anadromous (migrate up river) hormone-mediated changes associated with metamorphosis - convert from FW adaptations to SW or vice versa, depending on direction of migration
  • 22. What about stress??  Stressors (handling, sustained exercise such as escape from predator pursuit) cause release of adrenaline (epinephrine) - for mediating escape, etc.  Adrenaline causes diffusivity of gill epithelium to increase, i.e. “leaky cell membranes” water & ions)  This accentuates the normal osmoregulatory challenge for FW or marine fishes
  • 23. How to reduce stress in stressed fishes?  Minimize the osmotic challenge by placing fish in conditions that are isosmotic   add salt to freshwater, e.g. in transporting fish or when exposing them to some other shortterm challenge dilute saltwater for same situation with marine species
  • 25. Temperature effects on fish     Temperature exhibits the greatest influence on fish’s lives! Affects metabolism Affects digestion Signals reproductive maturation and behavior
  • 26. Fish are conformers (well, sort of...)  Body temperature is that of the environment (poikilothermic ectothermy)  Each species has particular range of temperatures that they can tolerate and that are optimal  Big difference!
  • 27. Behavioral Thermoregulation in Fishes  Although fish are ectotherms, they can alter their body temperature by moving to habitats with optimal temperature
  • 28. Hot Fishes  Some fish can maintain body temperature greater than ambient - tunas, billfishes, relatives (nearly endothermic)  Tuna use retia (similar to rete mirable) in muscles to conserve heat & exchange O2.   Also, red muscle is medial rather than distal Billfishes have warm brains - heat organ from muscles around eye
  • 29. Practical application  You’re management decisions and actions must account for fish responses to temperature gradients and limitations
  • 31. Pituitary Gland - Master Gland    Linked with hypothalamus of brain Produces hormones that affect other endocrine tissues - indirect influence Produces hormones that affect nonendocrine tissues directly
  • 32. Pituitary Gland  Indirect influence  ACTH - adrenocorticotrophic hormone   TH - thyrotrophic hormone   stimulates interrenal tissue production of cortisol, stress response stimulate thyroid production of thyroxin (growth, metamorphosis-i.e. flounder) GTH- gonadotrophic hormone  stimulates gonads to produce androgens/estrogens
  • 33. Pituitary Gland  Effects non-endocrine tissues directly    pigmentation - melanophore stimulating hormone (MSH)  affects long-term control of color osmoregulation - prolactin, vasotocin  controls fresh/saltwater systems growth – somatotrophic hormone  stimulates > length, cell multiplication
  • 34. Thyroid Gland     isolated follicles distributed in connective tissue along ventral aorta controls metabolic rate affects metamorphosis, maturation facilitates switch between fresh & salt water
  • 35. Gonads     gamete and sex hormone production controls gametes maturation cause formation of secondary sex characteristics: color, shape, behavior in fish, several sex hormones also serve as pheromones - e.g. goldfish males respond to hormones released with ovulation
  • 36. Other endocrine tissues in fishes  chromaffin tissues-located near kidneys & heart  produce adrenaline/noradrenaline – “fight or flight”  increases blood flow through gills, ventilation rate  interrenal (inside kidney) tissues  produce cortisol, cortisone - stress response hormones (reduce inflamation)
  • 37. Other endocrine tissues in fishes  pancreatic islets  produce insulin - controls glucose, glycogen metabolism (glucagon production)  corpuscles of Stannius  produce stanniocalcin - controls Ca2+ uptake at gills
  • 39. Introduction  Obviously, the immune system is important in homeostatic processes.  Immune systems of fish have two components: non-specific and specific.  As we will see, both are involved in protecting fish from visible as well as invisible disease causing agents.
  • 40. Non-specific immunity  Skin & Scales—specific solid layers of protection from pathological and chemical stressors.  Mucus secretion—traps microorganisms; preventing entry into body cavity or circulation  Macrophages (phagcytes) and cytotoxic cells— part of the inflamatory response which destroy pathogens within the body before they can do harm.
  • 41. Specific Immune Response  More of an active response where an “invader” is detected and destroyed.  Primary organs: kidney, thymus, spleen, intestine.  Antigens—invading compounds which provoke an immune response. Source: Cancer Research Institute (2002) www.cancerresearch.org/immhow.html
  • 42. Specific immune response: What if something does get in??  White blood cells called B lymphocyte cells (B cells) and T lymphocyte cells (T cells)—bind to foreign cells and begin replication and attachement to antigens (sort of markers for things to come...).  Occasionally, invader actually goes trough a macrophage first...then B cell responds...  Once B cells replicate, antibodies are produced which bind specifically to pathogens and tag them for destruction (eating) by macrophages!
  • 43.
  • 44. “Looks like meat’s back on the menu boys!!!”