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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Scale removal in fish triggers a damage-repair program to re-establish the lost epidermis and scale and an associated local immune response. In mammals, chronic stress is known to delay wound healing and to modulate the cutaneous stress axis, but this is unstudied in teleost fish the most successful extant vertebrates. The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that chronic stress impairs cutaneous repair in teleost fish as a consequence of suppression of the immune response. The hypothesis was tested by removing the scales and damaging the skin on one side of the body of fish previously exposed for 4 weeks to a chronic crowding stress and then evaluating cutaneous repair for 1 week. Scale removal caused the loss of the epidermis although at 3 days it was re-established. At this stage the basement membrane was significantly thicker (p = 0.038) and the hypodermis was significantly thinner (p = 0.016) in the regenerating skin of stressed fish relative to the control fish. At 3 days, stressed fish also had a significantly lower plasma osmolality (p = 0.015) than control fish indicative of reduced barrier function. Chronic stress caused a significant down-regulation of the glucocorticoid receptor (gr) in skin before damage (time 0, p = 0.005) and of star at 3 and 7 days (p < 0.05) after regeneration relative to control fish. In regenerating skin key transcripts of cutaneous repair, pcna, colival and nunp9, and the inflammatory response, tgf beta 1, mpo and crtac2, were down-regulated (p < 0.05) by chronic stress. Irrespective of chronic stress and in contrast to intact skin many hyper pigmented masses, putative melanomacrophages, infiltrated the epidermis of regenerating skin. This study reveals that chronic stress suppresses the local immune response to scale removal and impairs the expression of key transcripts of wound healing. Elements of the stress axis were identified and modulated by chronic stress during cutaneous repair in gilthead seabream skin.
Description
Keywords
Messenger-Rna Cellular responses Scale regeneration Growth factors Teleost fish Differential expression Glucocorticoid-receptor Dicentrarchus-Labrax Basement membrane Skin regeneration Barrier function Cutaneous wound healing Immune response Melanomacrophage centers Peripheral stress axis
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier