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For adaptation to a high salinity marine environment, cartilaginous fishes have evolved a ureosmotic strategy. They have a highly elaborate “four-loop nephron” in the kidney, which is considered to be important for reabsorption of urea from the glomerular filtrate to maintain a high concentration of urea in the body. However, the function and regulation, generally, of the “four-loop nephron” are still largely unknown due to the complicated configuration of the nephron and its many subdivided segments. Laser microdissection (LMD) followed by RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis is a powerful technique to obtain segment-dependent gene expression profiles. In the present study, using the kidney of cloudy catshark, Scyliorhinus torazame, we tested several formaldehyde-free and formaldehyde-based fixatives to optimize the fixation methods. Fixation by 1% neutral buffered formalin for 15 min resulted in sufficient RNA and structural integrities, which allowed LMD clipping of specific nephron segments and subsequent RNA-seq analysis. RNA-seq from the LMD samples of the second-loop, the fourth-loop, and the five tubular segments in the bundle zone revealed a number of specific membrane transporter genes that can characterize each segment. Among them, we examined expressions of the Na + -coupled cotransporters abundantly expressed in the second loop samples. Although the proximal II segment of the second loop is known for the elimination of excess solutes, the present results imply that the PII segment is also crucial for reabsorption of valuable solutes. Looking ahead to future studies, the segment-dependent gene expression profiling will be a powerful technique for unraveling the renal mechanisms and regulation in euryhaline elasmobranchs.
We are grateful to Ms. Kiriko Ikeba and Dr. Taro Watanabe of AORI for help with keeping the animals, and Ms. Sugako Watanabe and Mr. Koya Shimoyama of AORI for preparing illustrations and figures. We are grateful to Prof. Christopher A. Loretz of the State University of New York at Buffalo for his critical reading of this manuscript. This study was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science to SH (JSPS KAKENHI 17H03868 and 19K22414) and to WT (JSPS KAKENHI 22K15153), and a Grant-in-Aid for JSPS Fellows to NA (21J20882). NA is supported by JSPS Research Fellowships for Young Scientists.
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