Exploring the versatility of the perfused crustacean gill as a model for transbranchial transport processes

Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol. 2021 Jun-Jul:254:110572. doi: 10.1016/j.cbpb.2021.110572. Epub 2021 Feb 5.

Abstract

The study of transbranchial ion and gas transport of water-breathing animals has long been a useful means of modeling transport processes of higher vertebrate organs through comparative physiology. The molecular era of biological research has brought forward valuable information detailing shifts in gene expression related to environmental stress and the sub-cellular localization of transporters; however, purely molecular studies can cause hypothetical transport mechanisms and hypotheses to be accepted without any direct physiological proof. Isolated perfused gill experiments are useful for testing most of these hypotheses and can sometimes be used outright to develop a well-supported working model for transport processes relating to an animal's osmoregulation, acid-base balance, nitrogen excretion, and respiratory gas exchange as well as their sensitivity to pollutants and environmental stress. The technique allows full control of internal hemolymph-like saline as well as the ambient environmental fluid compositions and can measure the electrophysiological properties of the gill as well as the transport rates of ions and gases as they traverse the gill epithelium. Additives such as pharmaceuticals or peptides as well as the exclusion of ions from the media are commonly used to identify the importance of specific transporters to transport mechanisms. The technique can also be used to identify the penetrance, retention, and localization of pollutants within the gill epithelium or to explore the uptake and metabolism of nutrients directly from the ambient environment. While this technique can be applied to virtually any isolatable organ, the anatomy and rigidity of the decapod crustacean gill make it an ideal candidate for most experimental designs.

Keywords: Ammonia transport; Environmental challenge, Acid-base balance, Osmoregulation; Hormones; Molting; Nutrient uptake; Pharmaceuticals; Transepithelial potential difference (PD(TE)).

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biological Transport
  • Crustacea / anatomy & histology
  • Crustacea / physiology*
  • Gills / anatomy & histology
  • Gills / physiology*
  • Hemolymph / physiology*
  • Models, Biological*
  • Osmoregulation / physiology*