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Fish Structure and Function

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Title: Fish Structure and Function


1
Fish Structure and Function
  • WL 714

2
SKIN
Theme of the lecture -fish skin is a compound
organ, compound in its structure, origin, and in
function.
The epidermis has mucus, and functions in wound
healing and covering (osmotic barrier), the
dermis has scales, pigments, and holds the cover,
and the hypodermis has fat and holds the dermis
to muscle.
  • Germ layers- from 2 layers (epidermal and
    mesodermal)
  • Structure - 3 layers
  • Epidermis - cuticle and epithelial cells
  • Dermis -2 layers of CT
  • Hypodermis - 1 layer, contains fat, holds skin to
    muscle
  • Components and functions - several
  • Nerves, glands, light organs (reading)
  • Scales - dermal armor, formation, use
  • Mucus -the cell, distribution, uses
  • Pigments
  • Club Cells Schreckstoff

3
Skin - Compound Organ
  • Like the wrapping of a parcel, it is the
    integument which is first encountered in
    examination. But the skin is more that just a
    wrapping, it is an ORGAN, which has its own
    structure and important derivatives such as
    scales (light organs, poison glands).
  • The skin is a compound organ
  • morphologically - 3-layered, epidermis, dermis,
    hypodermis
  • embryologically - two germ layers mesodermal
    becomes the dermis epidermal becomes the
    epidermis
  • functionally - variety of functions, primarily
    protection and osmotic barrier external tendon
    (Moyle and Cech)
  • The skin is not elastic (as frog and bird)
  • fits snugly to reduce friction (link to swimming)
  • microvilli hold skin to the underlying muscles

4
Variable Thickness
  • with age - one cell think in larvae (for
    respiration) ? top figure
  • gills not formed, JFRBC 341554 in perch, gill
    filaments develop at 18 mm long ? bottom figure
  • on body - head skin thick (no scales there)
  • by sex - greater epidermal thickness and more
    mucous cells in the sex that builds the nest
  • female thick skin in salmon, suckers, minnows
    (Copeia 1970332, and 5079)
  • male thick and mucus in stickleback (Copeia
    1979533)
  • by species - (epidermis only) in adult guppy 2
    cells think in eel 12 cells
  • by season - skin thicker in cold (the cell
    hyperplasia or coldwater disease of plaice (cited
    on p 718, JFB 33)
  • through stress - thicker in carp in fertilized
    water and in parasitized fish (JFB 33)

5
Skin Cross-Sections
6
Epidermis
  • Cuticle (Whitear, 1970, recent EM work)
  • an external surface coat called the glycocalyx
    (JFB27395) is a product of the epithelial cells,
    usually lost in histological preparations, one
    millimicron thick, attached to surface by
    microvilli (micro-ridges) of epithelial cells,
    make up unknown formerly thought that fish were
    covered with living cells, no dead cell layer
    like human skin, impedes establishment of
    bacterial colonies on skin
  • Epithelial cells (filament containing cells of
    Henrickson and Matoltsy 1968), epithelial cells
    are columnar at basement membrane and horizontal
    at surface. Columnar cells very active
    mitotically, especially in wound healing and in
    cold water. They contain tiny filaments of with
    an unknown make up, maybe source of cuticle
  • This layer of epithelial cells is also called the
    stratum germinativum
  • EM work has shown epithelial cells to have
    micro-ridges that look like a thumb print and
    which may be species specific??
  • I have a EM picture of this on gills, show p 19
    in salmon histology book.
  • Basement membrane, single band of CT with light
    microscope, but with EM
    much convoluted
  • Functions of epidermis (mucus cells, wound
    healing, cover)

7
Dermis (Roberts et. al. 1970) and Hypodermis
  • DERMIS
  • Connective tissue can be two layers (trout) or
    one layer (catfish book)
  • UPPER LAYER is STRATUM SPONGIOSUM or PAPILLARY
    LAYER
  • Stratum spongiosum - because this layer of
    connective tissue (CT) is loosely and irregularly
    arranged fine CT (collagen) in salmon it forms a
    matrix for melanocytes.
  • LOWER LAYER is STRATUM COMPACTUM
  • Stratum compactum - dense CT, collagen, only cell
    found is fibroblast (few melanocytes, lymphatics,
    nerves, etc). A blast cell produces other cells,
    a precursor - to scales and lepidotricha, has a
    plywood nature, CT cells at right angles are
    called orthogonally arranged (p18 salmon
    histology book)
  • Function (produce scales, holding cover,
    pigment), close wounds - contraction, pigment
  • Hypodermis
  • A third "layer" is the Hypodermis (subcutis) -
    area of loose connective tissue between dermis
    and muscle (hypo under), varies in thickness on
    body, thicker in parts of the head (gives form?)
    and fins, if adipose tissue is present, it is
    found in the hypodermis (from catfish book)
  • Function (holding dermis, fat layers)

8
OTHER COMPONENTS OF THE SKIN
  • NERVES (Whitear 1889)
  • Nerve bundles with myelin sheath course through
    the dermis
  • Loose sheath and break-up when they enter
    epidermis
  • End among epidermal cells as free nerve endings
  • Tactile, temperature sensors, possibly pain
  • POISON GLANDS AND LIGHT ORGANS
  • Over 200 species are armed or lighted in some way
    but they are the marine forms - the stingrays,
    marine catfish, weever fish, and stargazers.
  • Of importance to freshwater biologists are only
    the weak poisons of the catfishes. Little work
    done but the epithelium and spine of channel
    catfish are toxic to mammals, no effect on
    Gambusia, black bullhead great effect
  • (see Comparative toxicology of stings, Comp.
    Biochem. Physiol. 22101-111, injected into
    Gambusia and measured amount of fish darkened,
    tissue sloughed, or death)
  • Madtoms (Schilbeodes sp) have the worst
    reputation. They have a gland at the base of the
    pectoral spine(catfish also) but there is no duct
    up the spine and the nature of the gland contents
    is unknown. Other spines are as toxic as the
    pectoral in catfish. When spine is stuck in your
    finger, the skin tears liberating toxic
    substances that get in the wound rather than
    being "injected", (picture of axillary gland on p
    42 of catfish book)

9
Club Cells or Fright Substance Cells
  • Schreckstoff Cells
  • Alarm Substances - substances which communicate
    the presence of danger and will illicit an odor
    dependent escape response in another fish.
  • 91 species in 44 families have these pheromones.
  • Little known about chemistry of alarm substances.
  • Odor can be both intra- and interspecific
  • One species can react to the alarm substances of
    another

Question What type of reactions might prey fish
make when sensing the fright substance pheromone?
Answer types of reactions vary - Phoxinus minnow
motionless, Tinca tench swim to bottom and stir
up mud Esomus jump at surface.
10
Scales
  • Dermal armor -discuss, emphasizing bony ridge
  • Scale type
  • placoid.
  • ex._________
  • ganoid..
  • ex._________
  • cycloid.
  • ex._________
  • ctenoid.
  • ex._________
  • scutes..
  • ex._________

11
Scale Compositions
  • Bone is fibrous CT arranged in plates, salts 20
    with live bone cells (osteocytes) within lamellae
  • Dentine - fibrous CT matrix, harder than bone
    with cells outside with processes entering a
    dentinal tubule
  • Enamel - no CT, salts 90, no cells, salts
    arranged in lamellar like prisms, hardest
  • Bony ridge scales - Formation -In dermis, certain
    CT cells "round up" and begin manufacturing the
    basal plate below and the calcarious deposits
    above (Are these cells osteoblasts?)

12
Scale Growth
  • Growth - scales grow by fibroblast cells that are
    numerous at the scale edge. They enlarge the
    scale by adding collagen rings called circuli.
    When growth is slow, circuli are close together.
  • cold decreases appetite and metabolism
  • fasting during spawning
  • need for calcium, decalcification (reabsorption)
    in females developing eggs.

13
Juvenile Scales
Question Scale pressing -Have you pressed scale
impressions into acetate and found only the
outline of the scale??
Answer You got it upside down, a trick played on
you by a few dermal cells.
  • Location in juveniles
  • (transparency series showing that in general
    scales are first formed at caudal peduncle
    (walleye, pike, drum, crappie) sometimes on belly
    or anterior lateral line (carp)

14
Back Calculation
  • body - scale relationship
  • relates to back calculation of length from scale
    data. Line comes to 30 -40 mm on y axis -total
    length axis.

15
Mucus
  • mucus -the clear, viscous secretion, a noun
  • mucous - relating to mucus, an adjective
  • mucous cell - a one cell gland
  • unicellular, not found in other vertebrates
  • progress from germinativum to surface where they
    release mucus by dehiscence (a
    bursting open)
  • within cell are vesicles which rupture (not
    necessarily, but may be found in mucous layer of
    fish

Question Why only a one-celled gland??
Answer More organized glans are difficult to
accommodate in the scaly surface.
16
Mucus
  • Cell distribution -more cells on anterior portion
    more on body than fins (fungus first)?
  • (transparency of salmon head and tail skin)
  • The mucus
  • synthesized by golgi apparatus (prominent in
    cells with secretory activity)
  • glycoprotein - (glycogen amino), and sialic
    acid a polysaccharide, same family as starch,
    glycogen, mucilage, cellulose, etc.
  • synthesis under endocrine control

QUESTION By now you are probably wondering , how
can I get some mucus??
ANSWER Check PFC 4l18 for the answer. (suction
through Erlenmeyer like sperm suction apparatus,
authors cover disadvantages of other methods if
fish is to remain healthy)
17
Mucus Microscopy
18
Mucus Functions
Thought question Form a working hypothesis on
the mechanism that explains each function of the
skin before going further in the lecture.
  • FUNCTION
  • wound healing
  • combat disease by physical and antibodies
  • precipitate, reduce, and remove heavy
    metals/sediment
  • lubrication
  • communication and smells
  • osmoregulation -may act as a barrier
  • stress indicator -hemastix
  • MECHANISM
  • ______________________
  • ______________________
  • ______________________
  • ______________________
  • ______________________
  • ______________________
  • ______________________

19
Wound Healing (resulting from-)
  • Wound healing - consequences of wounding from ?
  • parasites 50 anchorworms 5.3 of body of 12
    inch trout
  • scales removed from 25 of body
  • none lethal but do allow bacteria in (see Berry
    et al, JWD 27206, Utah Acad??)

20
Wound Healing (process)
  • 2 steps in wound healing (JFB36421, JWD 27206
    TAF 119145)
  • 1)quick
  • mucus forms a plug, profuse mucus secretion,
    mucous cells in area reduced
  • epidermal cells moved toward cavity without
    becoming disconnected from each other,
    re-epithelialization
  • alkaline phosphatase a lysosomal enzyme produced
    by mucous and epithelial cells
  • large holes - CT contracts wound margin (TAF 119)
  • razor blade cut closed in carp in 6 hr at 20C
  • transmitter hole in catfish heals in 93 D at
    22-25C
  • 2) slow
  • dermal capillaries moved into epidermis
  • fibroblasts secret much collagen
  • white blood cells abundant
  • melanocytes darken area (melanin may be
    bactericidal)

21
Wound Healing (Summary)
  • First Intention Healing or epithelialization
    occurs when wound is small and edges close,
    healing takes about 5 d.
  • Second Intention Healing occurs when wound edges
    are far apart, healing by granulation tissue plug
    that contracts wound margins, then covered by
    skin at 43 d, histologically normal at 93 d.

22
Protection Against Disease
QUESTION If fish defend themselves with mucus,
where on the body are they most vulnerable?
ANSWER Zoologica, fish which demonstrated
immunity towards a monogenetic trematode had
greatest infection in the EYE
  • Physical
  • thickened whorls of mucous/epidermal cells seen
    in anchorworm infections
  • mucus replacement prevents colonization by
    bacteria, parasites, fungi (leucocytes invade
    epidermis to help out)
  • Antibodies
  • Furunculosis - Aeromonas salmonicida. Rainbow
    trout recognized for years as being resistant,
    partially because of serum protein (antibodies)
    that neutralize the toxicity of the bacterial
    products.
  • An example was Reed's Creek, W. VA where 25
    brown trout, 6 brook trout, and 0 rainbow trout
    died while each species had similar antibody
    titers in the blood
  • So why the graded differences in mortality?
    ?Next Slide

23
Differential Immunities (results)
  • The resistant fish produced a mucus precipitin
    activity when reacted with cell-free bacterial
    extracts in immunodiffusion assays ?
  • Results -the mucous precipitin activity against
    A. Salmonicida correlated with resistance of
    species
  • breeding studies with brown trout showed that
    fish selected for high level of mucus precipitin
    produced progeny that were more resistant
  • the mucus also combated Vibrio anguillarum and A.
    hydrophila.(TAF 11583).

QUESTION If immunity is genetic, can the fish
culturist breed a strain of disease resistant
fish?
ANSWER Breeding studies with brown trout showed
that fish selected for a higher level of mucous
precipitin produced progeny that were more
resistant
24
Contaminants and Sediment
  • sediment trapped and sloughed, thick mucous coat
    visible on fish, mucous cells disappear in 3 d in
    carp in ponds with manure (aquaculture in Israel)
    (JFB33711)
  • chromium reduced from hexavalent forms by
    protein-bound sulfhydryl groups and decrease Cr
    penetration rate (Chemosphere 20397-402)

25
Communication and Smells
  • fish odor is in the mucus? (may be an old wives
    tale)
  • bullheads that use mucous smell to identify
    individuals (The Chemical Language of Fishes
    (Sci. Amer. 224(5)98-108)
  • Alarm substances -substances which communicate
    the presence of danger and will illicit an odor
    dependent escape response in another fish.
  • Types of reactions
  • Phoxinus minnow motionless
  • Tinca tench swim to bottom and stir mud
  • Esomus jump at surface
  • hatchet fish form dense school
  • cavefish has no predators but has the cell, when
    sensing it, begins to look for food
  • cypriniformes order -minnows, carps, suckers
  • tadpoles have it but fish do not react to tadpole
    injury
  • 91 species in 44 families
  • little known about chemistry of alarm substance,
    etc. odor is interspecific, one species will
    react to alarm substance of another

26
PIGMENT CELLS(Sci. Amer. reading covers
structural color)good coverage in Bond and
Lagler et al.
  • Iridocytes - mirror cells or schematochromes,
    also called leucophores - reflect light from
    intracellular pigment organelles which contain
    guanine
  • Purines -mostly guanine are crystalline
    substances but are colorless and
    non-motile in chromatophores
  • They are reflective producing the silvery sheen
    common in most fish and can be
    called either an iridocyte or iridophore
  • stratum argenteum in pelagic fish is a sheet of
    guanine cells (iridophores)
  • Examples are many
  • the silver in a seine haul
  • kokanee immature - lake fish
  • kokanee in spawning (pair and group)

27
Pigment Cells (continued)
Thayer's principle and Obliterative Shading
  • Chromatophores -pigment cells that have true
    color pigments called biochromes
  • irregular in shape
  • branching permits fish to change color by moving
    pigment granules to the center pale spread
    out color
  • under nervous and hormonal control, but some
    references claim stress hormones cause both
    pallor and darkening
  • adrenalin causes aggregation pallor
  • pigment cells found in dermis primarily but also
    in epidermis and hypodermis, in peritoneum,
    eyes, etc.

28
Color in Fish
QUESTION How do taxonomists use peritoneum color
to distinguish between Notropis ortenburgeri and
N. telescopus?
ANSWER The peritoneum or lining of the body
cavity is silvery in ortenburgeri and brownish or
heavily covered with melanophores in telescopus
(Eddy, p 97)
  • Melanin -dark red, brown, black, may be
    bacteriocidal. Cells containing these colors are
    called melanophores.
  • Examples
  • Black bullhead I. Melas
  • black spots on channel catfish
  • light and dark paddlefish, dark just caught
  • bars on northern pike
  • small mouth bass/largemouth bass
  • bluegill with pumpkinseed (note carotenoids)

29
Colors in Fish
  • Carotenoids -reds and yellows. Cells containing
    these colors are called xanthophores. Yellow over
    a structural blue ???? Green
  • Examples
  • most reds in coldwater fish
  • most famous is the rainbow of the RBT, but
    rainbow missing from lake fish
  • the cut - throat of the cutthroat
  • cutthroats in breeding color
  • spawning males of mountain sucker, female at same
    time
  • finescale dace
  • red is attractive (attracts predators) but is the
    first color filtered out in water, a good
    compromise color for spawning fish since visible
    up close but not over distances
  • Unusual colors
  • albino and albinism reported in many fish
    -flatfish TAF 96400, madtoms
    101566, catfish Copeia 1944124
  • blue trout
  • golden (black eyed albino) and blue
  • California golden - most beautiful fish

30
Color Patterns
  • RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MELANOPHORES AND IRIDOPHORES
    Iridophores are clustered in the dermis in
    groups of 2 - 10 cells, The melanophores lie
    beneath but have their dendritic processes
    projecting upward and enclosing the reflecting
    cells. Melanophores act like blinds (see
    enhanced skin handout and transparency from
    Salmonid anatomy atlas)
  • Color pattern (from Schreck and Moyle, editors,
    Methods in Fish Biology)
  • Primary pattern
  • aligned with scale rows, longitudinal,
    transverse, diagonal
  • not aligned with scale rows blotches,
    reticulations
  • Secondary patterns
  • Ocelli -spottail bowfin
  • concentric and radial patterns
  • combinations

31
Significance of Coloration to the fish
  • Resemblance - fish to background
  • Obliterative shading -Thayers principle
  • Smolts change from using resemblance to
    obliterative shading when the migrate to the sea
  • Disruptive coloration - reef fish
  • Advertisement - reef fish
  • Communication in Tilapia mossambica
  • Quantification of patterns (Schreck and Moyle)
  • for taxonomic purposes, remember, color is the
    most variable characteristic of a species, and
    may change with time of day, age, and environment

32
Management Implications
QUESTION How do fish managers use fish color?
ANSWER For taxonomic purposes (see Eddy) or
identification of reproductive condition, stress,
disease (blackspot, whirling, etc.), and stocks.
  • 1) Using scales to distinguish wild vs hatchery
    species (TAF 117) and genera (Lagler)

33
Management Implications
  • 2) Taking Scales

34
Management Implications
  • 3) Marking
  • subcutaneous tags
  • fluorescent pigment

35
Management Implications
  • 3) Marking
  • branding

36
Management Implications
  • 4) Stress/Starvation Indicator
  • dying fish often are schymotic (blotched) because
    Hb from destroyed RBCs is released into tissues.
    Free Hb infiltrates the skin into the mucous and
    is discharged by mucous cells at surface of fish.
    Hemastix impregnated with chemicals which give a
    colorometric change in the presence of Hb gave a
    positive result if fish held in net in air for 2
    min. JFB 9537
  • The authors later tested for ketones which
    accumulate as a result of cellular starvation, a
    catabolic state, the data were very messy, even
    control group showed mild reaction on stix,
    nevertheless the authors concluded that they had
    demonstrated its value in detecting starvation.
    jfb 12105 (Good example of biologists trying to
    find rapid evaluation technique)
  • 5) non-lethal health inspection - sampling fish
    mucus rather than kidney for A. Salmonicida
    detection, mucus was better than kidney for fish
    in an epizootic, subclinically infected, and
    asymptomatic carriers (See RIB 199249)
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