Contact:
Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
A Giant Among Minnows: Giant Danio Can Keep
Growing
Paired
with Zebrafish, Danio is Important Model for Muscle Growth
Bethesda,
Md (Nov. 27, 2006) – Two fish that share much in common genetically appear
to have markedly different abilities to grow, a finding that could provide a
new way to research such disparate areas as muscle wasting disease and fish
farming, a new study shows.
The study in the November issue of the American
Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology,
finds that the giant danio, unlike its cousin the zebrafish, appears to have
the ability to recruit new muscle throughout its life. Humans have the same
ability before birth, but mostly lose it after birth.
Because the zebrafish and giant danio are closely
related, and the zebrafish’s genome has already been mapped, scientists hope
they can more easily identify the genetic keys to the difference in growth
potential between them. According to co-author Peggy R. Biga, “I don’t think
there will be a major genomic difference between them. I believe it will be
easy to define the difference.”
The study “Zebrafish and giant danio as models for
muscle growth: Determinate versus indeterminate growth as determined by
morphometric analysis,” was carried out by Biga and Frederick W. Goetz, both
of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the Great Lakes Wisconsin
Aquatic Technology and Environmental Research (WATER) Institute, Milwaukee.
The American Physiological Society published the study.
Zebrafish versus Giant
Danio
Zebrafish and giant danios, members of the minnow
family, are easy to raise and are popular inhabitants of home aquariums.
They are native to the warm waters around India and some other areas of
southern Asia. Although both are small, the danio is a giant among minnows,
growing to a maximum of six inches. The zebrafish, in contrast, grows to
about two inches.
The zebrafish has been a staple of genetic research
because it is easy to raise and maintain. But the fish is too tiny for
physiological research. So the researchers were interested in finding a
close zebrafish relative to allow them to do physiological research while
drawing on the knowledge base of the zebrafish genome.
The researchers saw the giant danio as the
physiological model and began a series of experiments on differences in
muscle growth between the fish. In this two-phased experiment, they
discovered that the giant danio can keep growing even into adulthood, but
the zebrafish stops growing. The giant danio can get bigger because it
exhibits a type of muscle growth that is different from the zebrafish.
“One of these species either lost or gained the ability
to continuously grow, but most likely, the zebrafish lost it” Biga
explained. Because genes are the key, the zebrafish’s mapped genome will be
invaluable in finding what is different about the danio’s genetic pathways
that allow it to keep growing.
Study: Phase I - First
four weeks of life
In the first phase of the study, the researchers
tracked the size of the fish from the time they hatched through the first
four weeks of their larval stage. They found that the two species were the
same size at hatch. By the end of week one, the giant danio was
significantly larger and remained so. This result was not surprising, since
the giant danio is so much larger at adulthood, about twice as large. But
the study was the first to report the early larval growth of these species,
the authors said.
The researchers also documented muscle changes over the
first four weeks in the fleshy portion of the fish’s midsection, known as
the myotome. They measured growth in length and width and tracked the number
and size of muscle fibers, and found that the fish employ different methods
of growth.
“Muscle growth in vertebrates is defined as being
either determinate or indeterminate,” the authors wrote. “Animals such as
mammals exhibit determinate growth, in which there is a finite size. In
contrast, many fish species growth is indeterminate, in which there is no
fixed size and some growth may continue throughout the life of the fish.”
Indeterminate growers increase muscle mass both by
recruiting new muscle fibers (hyperplasia) and by increasing the size of the
existing muscle fibers (hypertrophy). Many fish species exhibit
indeterminate (hyperplastic) growth.
In this first phase of the study, the researchers found
that hyperplasia accounts for 67 percent of the giant danio’s muscle growth,
compared to the zebrafish in which hyperplasia accounts for only 47 percent
of the growth.
Study: Phase II - Adult
growth
In the study’s second phase, the researchers applied
growth hormone once every three weeks for 17 weeks to adults of both
species. The adult danio continued to grow during the 17-week trial and
analysis of muscle fibers showed hyperplastic muscle growth.
Adult zebrafish did not exhibit increased growth or
hyperplasia in response to growth hormone, suggesting that zebrafish reach a
growth plateau similar to mammals and hence exhibit determinate growth. The
zebrafish exhibited little hyperplastic growth after the juvenile phase.
Next step
This model can be used to investigate muscle wasting
diseases such as muscular dystrophy. Other studies have already shown that a
condition similar to muscular dystrophy can be experimentally induced in
zebrafish. One of the next steps for the researchers is to induce the
condition in the giant danio.
“We anticipate that the giant danio will be able to
handle the muscular dystrophy better because of their ability to increase
muscle,” Biga said. What makes this intriguing is that human embryos exhibit
hyperplasia, but then lose that ability after birth, with one exception.
When humans injure a muscle, the muscle sends a signal to special cells
attached to the muscle fibers, telling these cells to grow and join to
adjacent muscle fiber to repair the injury.
There is also an application to fish farming. “If we
understood how fish grow, we could figure out strategies for enhancing the
growth of farmed fish such as Atlantic salmon and decrease the time to get
to market size. “The more we understand about growth, the more likely we can
come up with acceptable ways to enhance it,” she said.
Funding
This project was supported
by National Research Initiative competitive grants from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension
Service to Peggy R. Biga and Frederick W. Goetz and by the University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee Great Lakes WATER Institute.
Editor’s note: To schedule an interview with a
member of the research team, please contact Christine Guilfoy, American
Physiological Society, (301) 634-7253 or
cguilfoy@the-aps.org.
* * *
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and publishes 14 peer-reviewed journals containing almost 4,000 articles
annually.
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