학술논문

Membrane Transport Proteins Expressed in the Renal Tubular Epithelial Cells of Seawater and Freshwater Teleost Fishes
Document Type
article
Source
Frontiers in Physiology, Vol 13 (2022)
Subject
fish physiology
seawater acclimation
freshwater acclimation
renal tubule
membrane transport protein
osmoregulation
Physiology
QP1-981
Language
English
ISSN
1664-042X
Abstract
The kidney is an important organ that maintains body fluid homeostasis in seawater and freshwater teleost fishes. Seawater teleosts excrete sulfate and magnesium in small amounts of isotonic urine, and freshwater teleosts excrete water in large amounts of hypo-osmotic urine. The volume, osmolality, and ionic compositions of the urine are regulated mainly by membrane transport proteins expressed in the renal tubular epithelial cells. Gene expression, immunohistochemical, and functional analyses of the fish kidney identified membrane transport proteins involved in the secretion of sulfate and magnesium ions by the proximal tubules and reduction of urine volume by the collecting ducts in seawater teleosts, and excretion of water as hypotonic urine by the distal tubules and collecting ducts in freshwater teleosts. These studies promote an understanding of how the kidney contributes to the seawater and freshwater acclimation of teleosts at the molecular level.