Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5901651 General and Comparative Endocrinology 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Pepsinogen is the precursor form of the gastric-specific digestive enzyme, pepsin. Ghrelin is a representative gastric hormone with multiple functions in vertebrates, including the regulation of growth hormone release, stimulation of food intake and gastrointestinal motility function. We investigated chronological changes in the distribution of pepsinogen-expressing cells by in situ hybridization and ghrelin-immunoreactive cells by immunohistochemistry in the Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica) during metamorphosis from the leptocephalus sage to the elver stage. The ghrelin-producing cells first appeared in the gastric cecum and pyloric portion of the stomach in the late phase of metamorphosing leptocephali, whereas the pepsinogen-producing cells were first detected in the early phase of the glass-eel stage. These suggest that endocrine cells differentiated earlier than exocrine cells in the eel stomach. Accompanying eel development, the distribution of ghrelin-producing cells spread to the esophagus and other regions of the stomach, but not to the intestine. These results may be related to the changes in dietary habits during metamorphosis in the Japanese eel.

Graphical abstractDownload full-size imageHighlights► Pepsinogen cDNA was sequenced from Japanese eel. ► Pepsinogen-producing cells were first detected in the early phase of the glass eel. ► Ghrelin-immunoreactive cells first appeared in the late phase of metamorphosing leptocephali. ► Endocrine cell differentiates earlier than an exocrine cell in the Japanese eel stomach.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Endocrinology
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