Literature DB >> 26124451

Effects of Holothuroid Ichtyotoxic Saponins on the Gills of Free-Living Fishes and Symbiotic Pearlfishes.

Igor Eeckhaut1, Guillaume Caulier2, Lola Brasseur2, Patrick Flammang2, Pascal Gerbaux3, Eric Parmentier4.   

Abstract

Several carapid fishes, known as pearlfishes, are endosymbiotic in holothuroids and asteroids. These echinoderms contain a strong concentration of saponins that are efficient membranolytic repellents to predators. We compared the effects of exposure to saponins from the sea cucumber body wall and from the Cuvierian tubules on the behavior and gill ultrastructure of pearlfishes and free-living fishes. Saponins were extracted from the body wall of two holothuroids, the Mediterranean Holothuria forskali and the tropical Bohadschia atra, and from the water surrounding the Cuvierian tubules of B. atra. Five species of carapids that live in symbiosis with holothuroids and seven species of free-living fishes were exposed to these extracts. The free-living fishes exhibited a stress response and died about 45 times faster than pearlfishes when exposed to the same quantity of saponins. Cuvierian tubules and saponins extracted from the body wall were lethal to the free-living fishes, whereas the carapids were much less sensitive. The carapids did not exhibit a stress response. The high toxicity shown by Cuvierian tubules was not explained by the nature of the saponins that were identified by mass spectrometry, but it is likely due to the higher concentration of saponins in the tubules. Histology and scanning and transmission electron microscopy of the gills of the free-living fishes and pearlfishes showed that saponins act at the level of the secondary lamellae where they induce the detachment of the epithelia, create edema at the level of the epithelia, and induce pores in the epithelial cells that lead to their destruction and the invasion of inner cells (pillar cells and red blood cells). This sequence of events happens 5 min after saponin exposure in free-living fishes and after 1 h in carapids.
© 2015 Marine Biological Laboratory.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26124451     DOI: 10.1086/BBLv228n3p253

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Bull        ISSN: 0006-3185            Impact factor:   1.818


  3 in total

1.  From commensalism to parasitism in Carapidae (Ophidiiformes): heterochronic modes of development?

Authors:  Eric Parmentier; Déborah Lanterbecq; Igor Eeckhaut
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2016-03-10       Impact factor: 2.984

2.  How different sterols contribute to saponin tolerant plasma membranes in sea cucumbers.

Authors:  Emily J S Claereboudt; Igor Eeckhaut; Laurence Lins; Magali Deleu
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-07-18       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Echinometra mathaei and its ectocommensal shrimps: the role of sea urchin spinochrome pigments in the symbiotic association.

Authors:  Lola Brasseur; Guillaume Caulier; Gilles Lepoint; Pascal Gerbaux; Igor Eeckhaut
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-12-03       Impact factor: 4.379

  3 in total

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