white perch
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Ransey ◽  
Kirill Chesnov ◽  
Elias Wisdom ◽  
Ryan Bowman ◽  
Tatiana Rodriguez ◽  
...  

The coordination of activity between brain cells is a key determinant of neural circuit function; nevertheless, approaches that selectively regulate communication between two distinct cellular components of a circuit, while leaving the activity of the presynaptic brain cell undisturbed remain sparce. To address this gap, we developed a novel class of electrical synapses by selectively engineering two connexin proteins found in Morone americana (white perch fish): connexin34.7 (Cx34.7) and connexin35 (Cx35). By iteratively exploiting protein mutagenesis, a novel in vitro assay of connexin docking, and computational modeling of connexin hemichannel interactions, we uncovered the pattern of structural motifs that broadly determine connexin hemichannel docking. We then utilized this knowledge to design Cx34.7 and Cx35 hemichannels that dock with each other, but not with themselves nor other major connexins expressed in the human central nervous system. We validated these hemichannels in vivo, demonstrating that they facilitate communication between two neurons in Caenorhabditis elegans and recode a learned behavioral preference. This system can be applied to edit circuits composed by pairs of genetically defined brain cell types across multiple species. Thus, we establish a potentially translational approach, Long-term integration of Circuits using connexins (LinCx), for context-precise circuit-editing with unprecedented spatiotemporal specificity.


Author(s):  
Davíð Gíslason ◽  
Robert L. McLaughlin ◽  
Beren W Robinson

Decreases in size at maturation in harvested fish populations can reduce productivity and resilience. Delineating the causes for these changes in maturation is challenging. We assessed harvest and large-scale ecosystem variability as causes for changes in maturation in four Lake Erie fishes. Regulated harvests of Yellow Perch (Perca flavescens) and Walleye (Sander vitreus) are greater than unregulated harvests of White Perch (Morone americana) and White Bass (Morone chrysops). Our assessment considered cohort data from 1991-2012 for each species. We used a conceptual model of harvest-induced plasticity to show that changes in female length at 50% maturity (L50) were unrelated to harvest intensity in all species. We then demonstrated that changes in female L50 among cohorts were synchronous across species. Post-hoc analysis of variables capturing year-to-year variation in climatic and lake conditions suggested L50 was larger when water levels were near the norm for the study period and smaller at low and high levels. We conclude that changes in L50 were most strongly related to ecosystem changes unrelated to harvest intensity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 141 ◽  
pp. 195-224
Author(s):  
MA Matsche ◽  
VS Blazer ◽  
EL Pulster ◽  
PM Mazik

Recent surveys of white perch Morone americana from Chesapeake Bay, USA, revealed a high prevalence of hepatic and biliary lesions, including neoplasia, and bile duct parasites. Here, we describe lesions in the liver and gallbladder and evaluate for statistical associations among lesions, parasites, and biomarkers of chemical exposure in fish from 2 tributaries of Chesapeake Bay. Fish were collected from an estuarine site in the Choptank River (n = 122, ages 3-11), a tributary with extensive agriculture within the watershed, and the Severn River (n = 131, ages 2-16), a tributary with extensive urban development. Passive integrative samplers were deployed at the fish collection site and an upstream, non-tidal site in each river for 30 d. Intrahepatic biliary lesions observed in fish from both rivers included neoplasia (23.3%), dysplasia (16.2%), hyperplasia (46.6%), cholangitis (24.9%), and dilated ducts containing plasmodia of Myxidium sp. (24.9%). Hepatocellular lesions included foci of hepatocellular alteration (FHA, 15.8%) and neoplasia in 4 Severn River fish (2.3%). Age of fish and Myxidium sp. infections were significant risk factors for proliferative and neoplastic biliary lesions, age alone was a risk factor for FHA, and Goussia bayae infections were associated with cholangitis and cholecystitis. Lesion prevalence was higher in fish from the Severn River, which contained higher concentrations of PAHs, organochlorine pesticides, and brominated diphenyl ethers. Metabolite biomarkers indicated higher PAH exposures in Severn River fish. This study suggests Myxidium sp. as a promoter of bile duct tumors, but more data are needed to evaluate the biological effects of environmental contaminants in this species.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 379-390
Author(s):  
Matthew A. Perrion ◽  
Jeffrey J. Jackson ◽  
Aaron J. Blank ◽  
Jordan D. Katt ◽  
Benjamin J. Schall

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