Postnatal ecdysis establishes the permeability barrier in snake skin: new insights into barrier lipid structures
M. C. Tu1,*,
H. B. Lillywhite1,
,
J. G. Menon2 and
G. K. Menon3
1 Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-8525,
USA
2 Department of Biology, William Paterson University of New Jersey, Wayne,
NJ 07470, USA
3 Department of Ornithology and Mammalogy, California Academy of Sciences,
Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA
* Present address: Department of Biology, National Taiwan Normal University,
Taipei, Taiwan 116, Republic of China

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Fig. 1. Diagram of apparatus used in measurements of evaporative water loss from
hatchling king snakes. RH, relative humidity.
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Fig. 2. Changes in mean total body length (±2 S.E.M.) measured in 20
hatchling California king snakes (Lampropeltis getula) during the
course of two postnatal shedding cycles. Each measurement was made at the time
of TEWL measurements (see Fig.
3), indicated as trial number on the abscissa. Arrows indicate
relative timing of the first (E1) and second (E2) ecdysis with respect to
trial number. Repeated-measures ANOVA followed by Bonferroni post hoc
tests indicate that body length increased significantly from birth to second
ecdysis (P<0.0001), while changes in length between the first and
second ecdysis (trials 2 and 3) were not significant (P=0.6715).
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Fig. 3. Rates of transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and skin resistance
(Rs) measured in the same 20 hatchling king snakes
(Lampropeltis getula) as in Fig.
2, during four consecutive trials. Values are means ± 2
S.E.M., and arrows indicate the relative timing of first (E1) and second (E2)
ecdysis with respect to trial number. ANOVA followed by post hoc
tests indicate that mean TEWL measured in trial 1 is significantly greater
than the values obtained in subsequent trials (P<0.0001).
Similarly, there was a significant increase in Rs
following the first trial (P<0.0001) and a second increase
following trial 3 (P=0.0022), whereas measurements of
Rs during trials 2 and 3 were not statistically different
(P=0.1655). The pattern of changes suggests that the mechanism
producing changes in Rs is related to ecdysis.
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Fig. 4. Mean values of skin resistance (± 2 S.E.M.) measured in each clutch
of hatchling king snakes before (b) and after (a) the first postnatal ecdysis,
identified by numbers and letters on the abscissa. ANOVA followed by post
hoc tests indicate there are no differences among clutch means, either
before or after ecdysis (all P>0.07).
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Fig. 5. Skin resistance in hatchling king snakes measured before (circles) and
after (squares) the first postnatal ecdysis. The post-shed measurement is
shown directly above the pre-shed measurement for each individual snake. Note
that the pattern of variation among individuals is generally similar before
and after ecdysis.
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Fig. 6. Temperature differences between skin surfaces of snakes and the chamber
(flow-through) air at the time of TEWL measurements (see
Fig. 2) in 20 hatchling king
snakes. Each value is the mean ± 2 S.E.M.; arrows denote the relative
timing of the first (E1) and second (E2) ecdysis with respect to trial number.
The measured temperature differential decreases significantly following the
second measurement trial (ANOVA followed by post hoc tests,
P=0.0076) and correlates with the assimilation of residual yolk (see
text).
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Fig. 7. (A) Ultrastructure of hatchling skin, sampled on the day of hatching and
before the first ecdysis, showing mesos (m), (a) and ß (b) layers
above the germinative layer (g, granular layer). Inset shows semi-thick
plastic section (0.5-1 µm) of the same. (B) Post-shed skin sampled 2 days
after the first ecdysis shows increased thickness in all three layers at the
same magnification as in A. Note the near doubling of cells in the mesos
layer. The germinative layer appears more compact compared to A. Inset shows
light microscopic features of the post-shed skin in semi-thick plastic section
(0.5-1 µm). The gaps in mesos layers seen in the micrographs are artifacts
in tissue preparation (OsO4 post-fixation). Scale bars, 1.0 µm;
in insets, 0.1 µm.
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Fig. 10. Higher magnification electron micrograph of a portion of the inner
(a) cell in pre-shed skin showing lipid inclusions including a multigranular
lamellar body (mlb), large lamellar (ll) and electron-lucent lipid (l)
inclusions (RuO4 stain) in close association with elements of the
tubulo-reticular membrane system (arrow). This skin was sampled on the day of
hatching, as in Figs 7 and
8. Inset: avian multilamellar
bodies at comparable magnification, to highlight the structural similarity to
the snake organelle. Scale bars, 0.1 µm.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2002