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First published online June 29, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 2734-2738 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02279
Effects of moderate and substantial hypoxia on erythropoietin levels in rainbow trout kidney and spleen
1 Department of Biology and Chemistry, City University of Hong Kong, Tat
Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong, SAR, China
2 Department of Biotechnology, Senshu University of Ishinomaki, 1 Shinmito,
Minamisak, Ishinomaki, Miyagi 986-8580, Japan
3 Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC,
Canada
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: bhrand{at}cityu.edu.hk)
Accepted 18 April 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: erythropoietin, erythropoiesis, hypoxia, rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, red blood cells, spleen somatic index
| Introduction |
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In most fish, the kidney is the site for erythropoiesis
(Fänge, 1986
), which has
been found to be enhanced by human urinary EPO
(Pradhan et al., 1989
). An
EPO gene was recently identified in the blowfish Takifugu
rubripes (Chou et al.,
2004
), encoding a protein probably similar in function to
mammalian EPO. Furthermore, a protein that demonstrates competitive binding
with antibodies raised against human EPO has been identified in kidney,
spleen, plasma and serum from rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss
(Wickramasinghe, 1993
),
indicating that an EPO or EPO-like protein may be present. However, to date,
no information exists regarding the effects of hypoxia on fish EPO levels. In
this study, we use an ELISA kit against human EPO and western blot analysis
targeting an EPO conserved region, to examine the effects of hypoxia on tissue
EPO levels in rainbow trout.
| Materials and methods |
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Hypoxia experimental protocol
At the start of the experimental period, the holding aquaria were covered
and fish were starved for the entire exposure period. Oxygen levels in the
inflowing water were reduced by passing water against a set flow of
N2 gas (Smale and Rabeni,
1995
). Fish were exposed to two hypoxic treatments: 30% saturation
(substantial hypoxia) and 55% saturation (moderate hypoxia). Fish were sampled
after 24 h exposure or at 4, 8, 12, 24, 48, 72 and 144 h exposure to mild
hypoxia and after 24, 72, 144 and 216 h exposure to substantial hypoxia. A
blow to the head was used to stun fish, at which time blood was collected
quickly from the heart using an EDTA-treated syringe. Spleen and kidney were
removed and immediately frozen in liquid N2 for future analysis.
The formula (g spleen mass/g fish mass)x104 was used to
calculate spleen somatic index (SSI). Hb concentrations were measured by the
cyanmethaemoglobin method (Matsubara,
1972
). Plasma cortisol was measured using a competitive binding
ELISA assay (Neogen, Lexington, Kentucky, USA). To obtain plasma samples,
blood was immediately centrifuged at 3000 g for 10 min at
4°C, and plasma was removed and stored at -80°C for later
analysis.
EPO protein assay
Tissue samples were homogenized in extraction buffer (a cold
phosphate-buffered saline, with proteinase inhibitor) and then centrifuged at
10 000 g for 20 min at 4°C. Total protein in the
supernatant was measured with a protein assay kit (Bio-Rad, Hong Kong SAR),
using bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a standard. An aliquot of each plasma
sample was concentrated 5 times using a micropore filter to separate
substances smaller than molecular mass of 5000, and then the plasma sample was
assayed for EPO using an ELISA kit (Quantikine IVD; R&D systems,
Minneapolis, MN, USA). To verify that the ELISA was specifically detecting
EPO, protein sequences from various fish and mammalian species, including a
partial sequence from trout (GenBank DQ288854) (J. C. C. Lai, unpublished),
were aligned to find a conserved region. A synthetic peptide of the conserved
region (KEAWDAEAAMR) was injected into rabbit to obtain a custom made
polyclonal antibody against the EPO conserved region, and it was used as the
primary antibody in western blot analysis.
Western blot analysis
Protein supernatant was combined with an equal volume of 2x sample
buffer (62.5 mmol l-1 Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 25% glycerol, 2% SDS, 0.01%
Bromophenol Blue, and 5% ß-mercaptoethanol) and heated to 100°C for 5
min. Samples (30 µg total protein) were resolved by SDS-PAGE and
transferred to Hybond-P PDVF membrane (Amersham Biosciences, Hong Kong SAR).
The membrane was blocked with 1% BSA in 0.1% Tween-20 in phosphate buffered
saline (TPBS) overnight at 4°C. The primary antibody was used in western
blot analysis with 1:500 dilutions in TPBS and 1% BSA. After hybridizing the
membrane with the primary antibody for 1 h at room temperature, membranes were
washed with TPBS three times and then incubated with horseradish peroxidase
(HRP)-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Zymed Laboratories, Hong Kong
SAR) (1:10 000 dilution with 1% BSA in TPBS) for 1 h at room temperature.
Following incubation, membranes were washed again three times before a
chemiluminescent HRP substrate (ECL Plus Western Blotting Detection System,
Amersham Biosciences) was added. Membranes were exposed to ECL film for
various lengths of time to optimize signal intensities, and the film was
ultimately scanned so band intensities could be quantified.
Statistical analyses
All data in this study are presented as mean ± s.d. Statistical
differences between means of dependent variables were determined by Duncan's
post-hoc analysis. Differences were accepted as significant at the
95% level of confidence (P<0.05).
| Results |
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An EPO signal at
25kDa was detected in rainbow trout kidney
(Fig. 3) using western blot
analysis. Kidney EPO levels increased significantly in rainbow trout after
exposure to substantial hypoxia for 24 h
(Fig. 3). We were unable to
detect spleen EPO levels using this western blot protocol.
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Effects of hypoxia on plasma cortisol concentration
Plasma cortisol levels increased when fish were exposed to hypoxia.
Measured cortisol levels doubled (from 20.05 ng ml-1 to 41.53 ng
ml-1) after 2 h exposure to moderate hypoxia but increased tenfold
(from 14.73 ng ml-1 to 169.5 ng ml-1) after 2 h exposure
to substantial hypoxia. Plasma cortisol returned to control levels after a day
in fish exposed to either moderate or substantial hypoxia (not shown).
| Discussion |
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We were able to detect EPO in blood, but not in plasma, indicating that EPO
may bind to red blood cells, preventing us from detecting it in plasma
samples. Wickramasinghe was able to detect EPO in plasma
(Wickramasinghe, 1993
). Our
inability to detect plasma EPO may be due to methodological limitations such
as antibody specificity, the extent of nonspecific reactions, and/or blood
collection techniques, and particularly the use of heparin as an
anti-coagulant by Wickramasinghe versus EDTA used by us.
Rainbow trout is generally considered to be a hypoxiasensitive species that
requires at least 60-70% O2 saturation for normal growth and
reproduction but can survive acute exposure to substantial hypoxia (30%
saturation). Various physiological responses, such as enhancement of oxygen
delivery, suppression of aerobic metabolism, and activation of anaerobic
metabolism, are rapidly activated in trout exposed to substantial hypoxia
(Boutilier et al., 1988
).
Hypoxia was observed to cause a rapid increase in HIF-1 in cultured
hepatocytes (Soitamo et al.,
2001
). In our study of the wholeorganism, we did not observe an
increase in EPO after 4 h exposure but did record an increase after 8 h
exposure to substantial hypoxia. Our first measurements at 24 h of exposure to
moderate hypoxia also showed an increase in kidney EPO. The difference in time
course between increases in HIF-1 and EPO is to be expected, since production
of EPO requires first transcription and consequent translation (in the heart,
see below) after HIF-1 activation, and then transport to the kidney. Studies
of Fugu Epo promoter constructs, however, failed to find a hypoxia
responsive region in the Epo promoter and the 3' flanking
region, but higher levels of spliced transcripts were found in cells subjected
to hypoxic and anaerobic conditions (Chou
et al., 2004
). These observations suggest that, although hypoxia
induces EPO production in both fish and mammals, mechanism behind it may not
be exactly the same.
We were able to measure EPO in the kidney and spleen during normoxia, with much higher levels being observed in the kidney. The kidney to spleen EPO ratio (approximately 7) observed under normoxic conditions in trout was much higher than the value (approximately 2.5) reported by Wickramasinghe earlier (Wickramasinhge, 1993). This difference may be due to seasonal variations in baseline renal and spleen EPO levels (I. Kakuta et al., unpublished data).
The initial increase in kidney EPO associated with exposure to either moderate or substantial hypoxia returned to control levels after 2 or 3 days hypoxia exposure. There was a second increase in EPO recorded after 6 days exposure to both moderate and substantial hypoxia. Thus the pattern of EPO increase is similar during both moderate and substantial hypoxia, showing an initial increase during the first day, returning to control levels during the second and third days and then showing a second increase after 6 days. This increase persisted until at least 9 days in the group exposed to moderate hypoxia. It is also possible that the release of red blood cells from the spleen at the onset of hypoxia enhances oxygen delivery to the tissues and this reduces EPO production on the second or third days.
There is no data on renal blood flow and kidney oxygen levels in the fish
exposed to hypoxic conditions (Kakuta et
al., 1992
). In mammals, EPO production by the kidney is inversely
related to the oxygen-delivering capacity of the blood perfusing it
(Spivak, 1989
). Although it is
clear that hypoxia results in an increase in EPO levels in fish, we know
nothing of renal blood flow and oxygen levels in the fish kidney and how this
is related to tissue EPO levels.
|
EPO levels in the spleen fell during exposure to both moderate and
substantial hypoxia and this was associated with a decrease in the
spleen-somatic index (SSI). As SSI decreased, Hb concentrations increased
(Fig. 6A), presumably due to
splenic contraction and subsequent RBC release into the circulation
(Yamamoto, 1987
;
Randall and Perry, 1992
).
Increases in Hb within the first day exposure are probably too rapid to result
from erythropoisis and therefore are likely a result of the release of stored
RBCs from the spleen. Subsequent increases in Hb (after days rather than
hours), however, could represent EPO-mediated erythropoiesis, since Hb
concentration increases are no longer correlated to changes in SSI
(Fig. 6B). The time course for
erythropoiesis in mammals, as indicated by changes in blood Hb concentrations,
is not well established, but it is thought that, following increases in EPO,
erythropoiesis occurs within a few days as appears to be the case for
fish.
Although EPO protein levels were high, EPO mRNA expression was not detected in trout kidney (J. C. C. Lai, unpublished observations). EPO mRNA levels were high in the heart, and also were detected in the liver and spleen. EPO mRNA expression increased during hypoxia, particularly in the heart. The above findings indicate that EPO in fish is produced mainly in the heart and is then transported in the blood to the kidney, the primary erythropoietic organ in fish.
To investigate the stress to rainbow trout caused by moderate and substantial hypoxic condition exposure, cortisol levels were recorded. From our findings, 30% oxygen saturation is a very stressful condition, causing a tenfold increase in cortisol level, while 55% oxygen saturation created a much lower stressful condition, causing only a twofold induction to cortisol level.
Our results show that there are high levels of erythropoietin in the kidney and spleen of rainbow trout, with much higher levels in the kidney than the spleen. Hypoxia is associated with an increase in kidney EPO, but a decrease in spleen EPO related to a decrease in spleen-somatic index caused by splenic contraction, indicating that EPO is bound to red blood cells. The initial increases in hemoglobin levels in the blood during hypoxia reflect the release of red blood cells from the spleen, whereas subsequent increases in hemoglobin concentration are probably related to EPO induced erythropoiesis.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| References |
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and Nikinmaa, M. (2001). Characterization of a
hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1
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Spivak, J. L. (1989). Erythropoietin. Blood Rev. 3,130 -135.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wickramasinghe, S. N. (1993). Erythropoietin and human kidney: evidence for an evolutionary link from studies of Salmo gairdneri. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 104A,63 -65.[CrossRef]
Yamamoto, K. (1987). Contraction of spleen in exercised cyprinid. Comp. Biochem. Physiol. 87A,1083 -1087.[Medline]
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