26 results on '"Purchase CF"'
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2. Spawning success of cultured and wild male Atlantic cod Gadus morhua does not differ during paired contests
- Author
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Wringe, BF, primary, Fleming, IA, additional, and Purchase, CF, additional
- Published
- 2015
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3. Wild Atlantic cod sperm motility is negatively affected by ovarian fluid of farmed females
- Author
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Beirão, J, primary, Purchase, CF, additional, Wringe, BF, additional, and Fleming, IA, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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4. Sperm plasticity to seawater temperatures in Atlantic cod Gadus morhua is affected more by population origin than individual environmental exposure
- Author
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Beirão, J, primary, Purchase, CF, additional, Wringe, BF, additional, and Fleming, IA, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Using purposeful inbreeding to reduce outbreeding depression caused by escaped farmed Atlantic cod
- Author
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Puckrin, OA, primary, Purchase, CF, additional, and Trippel, EA, additional
- Published
- 2013
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6. Can cryptic female choice prevent invasive hybridization in external fertilizing fish?
- Author
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Lantiegne TH and Purchase CF
- Abstract
Polyandrous mating systems result in females mating with multiple males, generating opportunities for strong pre-mating and post-mating sexual selection. Polyandry also creates the potential for unintended matings and subsequent sperm competition with hybridizing species. Cryptic female choice allows females to bias paternity towards preferred males under sperm competition and may include conspecific sperm preference when under hybridization risk. The potential for hybridization becomes particularly important in context of invasive species that can novelly hybridize with natives, and by definition, have evolved allopatrically. We provide the first examination of conspecific sperm preference in a system of three species with the potential to hybridize: North American native Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ) and brook char ( Salvelinus fontinalis ), and invasive brown trout ( Salmo trutta ) from Europe. Using naturalized populations on the island of Newfoundland, we measured changes in sperm swimming performance, a known predictor of paternity, to determine the degree of modification in sperm swimming to female cues related to conspecific sperm preference. Compared to water alone, female ovarian fluid in general had a pronounced effect and changed sperm motility (by a mean of 53%) and swimming velocity (mean 30%), but not linearity (mean 6%). However, patterns in the degree of modification suggest there is no conspecific sperm preference in the North American populations. Furthermore, female cues from both native species tended to boost the sperm of invasive males more than their own. We conclude that cryptic female choice via ovarian fluid mediated sperm swimming modification is too weak in this system to prevent invasive hybridization and is likely insufficient to promote or maintain reproductive isolation between the native North American species., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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7. Frequency-dependent viscosity of salmon ovarian fluid has biophysical implications for sperm-egg interactions.
- Author
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Graziano M, Palit S, Yethiraj A, Immler S, Gage MJG, and Purchase CF
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Viscosity, Semen, Sperm Motility, Sperm-Ovum Interactions, Salmo salar
- Abstract
Gamete-level sexual selection of externally fertilising species is usually achieved by modifying sperm behaviour with mechanisms that alter the chemical environment in which gametes perform. In fish, this can be accomplished through the ovarian fluid, a substance released with the eggs at spawning. While the biochemical effects of ovarian fluid in relation to sperm energetics have been investigated, the influence of the physical environment in which sperm compete remains poorly explored. Our objective was therefore to gain insights on the physical structure of this fluid and potential impacts on reproduction. Using soft-matter physics approaches of steady-state and oscillatory viscosity measurements, we subjected wild Atlantic salmon ovarian fluids to variable shear stresses and frequencies resembling those exerted by sperm swimming through the fluid near eggs. We show that this fluid, which in its relaxed state is a gel-like substance, displays a non-Newtonian viscoelastic and shear-thinning profile, where the viscosity decreases with increasing shear rates. We concurrently find that this fluid obeys the Cox-Merz rule below 7.6 Hz and infringes it above this level, thus indicating a shear-thickening phase where viscosity increases provided it is probed gently enough. This suggests the presence of a unique frequency-dependent structural network with relevant implications for sperm energetics and fertilisation dynamics. This article has an associated ECR Spotlight interview with Marco Graziano., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors declare no competing or financial interests., (© 2023. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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8. Evidence of hatch-time based growth compensation in the early life history of two salmonid fishes.
- Author
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Penney HD, Keefe DG, Perry RC, and Purchase CF
- Abstract
Initial body size can indicate quality within-species, with large size increasing the likelihood of survival. However, some populations or individuals may have body size disadvantages due to spatial/temporal differences in temperature, photoperiod, or food. Across-populations, animals often have locally adapted physiology to compensate for relatively poor environmental influences on development and growth, while within-population individual behavioral adjustments can increase food intake after periods of deprivation and provide opportunities to catch up (growth compensation). Previous work has shown that growth compensation should include within-population differences related to short growing seasons due to delayed hatch time. We tested the hypothesis that individual fish that hatch later grow faster than those that hatch earlier. The relative magnitude of such a response was compared with growth variation among populations. We sampled young of the year Arctic charr and brook trout from five rivers in northern Labrador. Daily increments from otoliths were used to back-calculate size to a common age and calculate growth rates. Supporting the hypothesis, older fish were not larger at capture than younger fish because animals that hatched later grew faster, which may indicate age-based growth compensation., (© 2022 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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9. A synthesis of senescence predictions for indeterminate growth, and support from multiple tests in wild lake trout.
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Purchase CF, Rooke AC, Gaudry MJ, Treberg JR, Mittell EA, Morrissey MB, and Rennie MD
- Subjects
- Aging, Animals, Fertility, Male, Semen Analysis, Trout
- Abstract
Senescence-the deterioration of functionality with age-varies widely across taxa in pattern and rate. Insights into why and how this variation occurs are hindered by the predominance of laboratory-focused research on short-lived model species with determinate growth. We synthesize evolutionary theories of senescence, highlight key information gaps and clarify predictions for species with low mortality and variable degrees of indeterminate growth. Lake trout are an ideal species to evaluate predictions in the wild. We monitored individual males from two populations (1976-2017) longitudinally for changes in adult mortality (actuarial senescence) and body condition (proxy for energy balance). A cross-sectional approach (2017) compared young (ages 4-10 years) and old (18-37 years) adults for (i) phenotypic performance in body condition, and semen quality-which is related to fertility under sperm competition (reproductive senescence)-and (ii) relative telomere length (potential proxy for cellular senescence). Adult growth in these particular populations is constrained by a simplified foodweb, and our data support predictions of negligible senescence when maximum size is only slightly larger than maturation size. Negative senescence (aka reverse senescence) may occur in other lake trout populations where diet shifts allow maximum sizes to greatly exceed maturation size.
- Published
- 2022
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10. Assessing the potential for post-ejaculatory female choice in a polyandrous beach-spawning fish.
- Author
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Orbach DN, Rooke AC, Evans JP, Pitcher TE, and Purchase CF
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Size, Female, Fertilization, Male, Mating Preference, Animal, Osmeriformes physiology
- Abstract
In species with limited opportunities for pre-ejaculatory sexual selection (behavioural components), post-ejaculatory mechanisms may provide opportunities for mate choice after gametes have been released. Recent evidence from a range of taxa has revealed that cryptic female choice (i.e., female-mediated differential fertilization bias), through chemical cues released with or from eggs, can differentially regulate the swimming characteristics of sperm from various males and ultimately determine male fertilization success under sperm competition. We assessed the potential role that such female-modulated chemical cues play in influencing sperm swimming characteristics in beach-spawning capelin (Mallotus villosus), an externally fertilizing fish that mates as couples (one male and one female) or threesomes (two males and one female) with presumably limited opportunities for pre-ejaculatory sexual selection. We assayed sperm swimming characteristics under varying doses and donor origins of egg cues and also examined the possibility of assortative mating based on body size. We found mating groups were not associated by size, larger males did not produce better quality ejaculates, and egg cues (regardless of dosage or donor identity) did not influence sperm swimming characteristics. Our findings suggest that intersexual pre-ejaculatory sexual selection and cryptic female choice mediated by female chemical cues are poorly developed in capelin, possibly due to unique natural selection constraints on reproduction., (© 2020 European Society For Evolutionary Biology. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2020 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.)
- Published
- 2020
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11. Freezing ovarian fluid does not alter how it affects fish sperm swimming performance: creating a cryptic female choice 'spice rack' for use in split-ejaculate experimentation.
- Author
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Purchase CF and Rooke AC
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Fertilization, Male, Ovary chemistry, Reproduction, Research Design standards, Salmo salar physiology, Trout physiology, Fishes physiology, Freezing, Ovary physiology, Sperm Motility physiology
- Abstract
Cryptic female choice is often mediated chemically in external fertilizers by ovarian fluid (OF), which can change sperm swimming performance and bias paternity under sperm competition. Assessing cryptic female choice is hindered by the necessity of using fresh gametes and the short time window available to obtain diverse samples from wild animals. Using split-ejaculate experimental designs and samples from lake trout, brown trout and Atlantic salmon, we evaluated whether freezing OF alters the way in which it modifies sperm swimming. Sperm had improved swimming performance in the presence of OF over plain water, and the effect did not depend on whether the OF had previously been frozen. Freezing OF does not seem to alter the way it influences sperm. This allows the researcher to create a 'spice rack' of OF samples that can be used in studies on cryptic female choice, and opens up the possibility to compare animals mating under large spatial and temporal variability., (© 2020 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2020
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12. Sexually selected traits are larger and more variable in male than female beach-spawning capelin, Mallotus villosus.
- Author
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Orbach DN, Donovan M, and Purchase CF
- Subjects
- Animal Fins physiology, Animals, Female, Male, Newfoundland and Labrador, Reproduction, Body Size, Osmeriformes physiology, Sex Characteristics
- Abstract
We evaluated whether morphological traits in capelin, Mallotus villosus, that appear to be sexually selected (pectoral fin, pelvic fin, anal fin, lateral ridge) were larger and more variable in males than females compared with naturally selected morphological traits (eyes, dorsal fin). Photographs were obtained of 136 capelin captured at two spawning sites and standardised measurements were taken of six morphological traits. Males had larger traits than females for a given body size and this was most pronounced in the traits thought to be sexually selected. Body size explained much of the variation in female traits but less variation in male traits, suggesting alternative selection pressures are involved. We suggest that larger male body size aids in endurance rivalry and sexually dimorphic traits help males to remain in physical contact with females while spawning on the beach., (© 2019 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2019
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13. Fish sperm competition in hatcheries and between wild and hatchery origin fish in nature.
- Author
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Beirão J, Egeland TB, Purchase CF, and Nordeide JT
- Subjects
- Animals, Aquaculture, Fisheries, Male, Reproduction, Sperm Motility, Fishes physiology, Spermatozoa physiology
- Abstract
Males compete pre- and post-mating to fertilize the maximum number of eggs. In polyandry, sperm competition occurs when sperm from two or more males compete to fertilize eggs from a female. Here we review how sperm competition from hatchery origin fish can cause loss of genetic variability in fish populations kept in captivity and in wild populations. In fish hatchery practices, sperm competition occurs in mass spawners that release gametes in tanks, and in artificial fertilizations when pooled semen is used. In mass spawnings sperm competition is difficult to tease apart from pre-mating competition and other post-mating selective mechanisms, whereas, studies focused on the use of pooled semen in different fish species have shown a clear relationship between sperm motility parameters and precedence in fertilization. In both situations, sperm competition will result in a loss of genetic variability that accumulates over generations, but hatchery protocols can be adjusted to mitigate it. Another source of concern regarding sperm competition for hatchery produced fish is the spatial and temporal overlap in spawning with wild individuals, either via aquaculture escapees or purposeful stocking programs. This may result in sperm competition between hatchery origin and wild males and impact natural populations. Our review suggests that in order to give every adult selected as broodstock an equal opportunity to produce offspring in captivity, mass spawning and the use of pooled semen should be limited., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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14. The impact of a changing winter climate on the hatch phenology of one of North America's largest Atlantic salmon populations.
- Author
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Rooke AC, Palm-Flawd B, and Purchase CF
- Abstract
In northern temperate regions, some of the most dramatic effects of climate change are expected during the winter. Understanding how changing winter climates influence the seasonal timing of key life events is critical for implementing effective conservation strategies, especially for poikilotherms, whose physiology and development are particularly sensitive to changes in thermal environment. Four mathematical models are available to predict the timing of hatch and emergence in Atlantic salmon ( Salmo salar ); however, such models are only useful if the effect of temperature is both repeatable within and among maternal families, and predictable across variable temperature regimes. Using a split-brood experiment, we found the timing of hatch to be repeatable and predictable in Atlantic salmon from the Exploits River, one of the largest remaining wild populations in North America. Three of the available mathematical models under-estimated the timing of hatch by an average of 21-26 accumulated thermal units (ATU); however, we identified one model that provided reasonable estimates of hatch timing (average under-estimate 7 ATU) under the three incubation temperature regimes we tested. We applied this model to daily water temperature profiles from 2006-18 at four sites within the Exploits River watershed. Across all years and sites, the predicted dates at 50% hatch ranged between 8 March and 23 May, while predicted dates of 50% emergence ranged from 11 May to 13 June. By identifying the seasonal timing of these particularly vulnerable early life stages, this model can aid the implementation of conservation efforts for this ecologically and economically important population.
- Published
- 2019
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15. Impact of crude oil and the dispersant Corexit™ EC9500A on capelin (Mallotus villosus) embryo development.
- Author
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Beirão J, Baillon L, Litt MA, Langlois VS, and Purchase CF
- Subjects
- Animals, Embryonic Development, Mallotus Plant drug effects, Mallotus Plant embryology, Mallotus Plant physiology, Petroleum toxicity, Petroleum Pollution, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
Marine food webs are particularly vulnerable to oil spills if keystone species are impacted. To quantify lethal and sublethal toxicity in a key Holarctic forage fish, capelin embryos were exposed to Hibernia crude oil water accommodated fraction (WAF) produced at an oil-to-water ratio of 1:9 (v:v) and chemically-enhanced WAF (CEWAF) produced with the dispersant Corexit™ EC9500A at a dispersant-to-oil ratio of 1:10 (CEWAF H) or 1:50 (CEWAF L). Corexit alone yielded similar embryotoxicity to CEWAF. 10% CEWAF H, with total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons of 99.2 μg/L, decreased embryo survival following 10 h of exposure, while continual exposed to 1% CEWAF L decreased hatching and heart rates. Concentrations down to 0.1% CEWAF L increased in a dose-dependent manner the transcript level of cytochrome P4501a1 (cyp1a1) in hatched larvae. These data indicate that embryo-larval survival of capelin is likely at risk if an oil spill coincides in space and time with spawning., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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16. Chemically-dispersed crude oil and dispersant affects sperm fertilizing ability, but not sperm swimming behaviour in capelin (Mallotus villosus).
- Author
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Beirão J, Litt MA, and Purchase CF
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Water Pollutants, Chemical, Fishes physiology, Hydrocarbons toxicity, Lipids toxicity, Petroleum toxicity, Spermatozoa drug effects, Surface-Active Agents toxicity
- Abstract
The effects of petroleum aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) on the embryonic and larval life stages of teleosts have been extensively examined. However, very little work has been conducted on how spilled oil affects fish sperm and there is no related knowledge concerning oil dispersing agents. The objective of our study was to determine sperm performance of a teleost fish under direct exposure to different concentrations of WAF (water accommodated fraction) and CEWAF (chemically enhanced water accommodated fraction). Capelin sperm motility, swimming behaviour, and sperm fertilization ability were evaluated in a scenario of an oil spill untreated (WAF) and treated (CEWAF) with the dispersant Corexit
® EC9500A. Sperm fertilizing ability was lower when exposed to CEWAF concentrations of 16.1 × 103 μg/L total petroleum hydrocarbons and 47.9 μg/L PAH, and when exposed to the dispersant alone. The mechanism responsible for this reduced fertilizing ability is not clear. However, it is not related to the percentage of motile sperm or sperm swimming behaviour, as these were unaffected. WAF did not alter sperm swimming characteristics nor the fertilizing ability. We suggest the dispersant rather than the dispersed oil is responsible for the decrease in the sperm fertilizing ability and hypothesize that the surfactants present in the dispersant affect sperm membrane functionality., (Copyright © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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17. A novel sperm adaptation to evolutionary constraints on reproduction: Pre-ejaculatory sperm activation in the beach spawning capelin (Osmeridae).
- Author
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Beirão J, Lewis JA, Wringe BF, and Purchase CF
- Abstract
Reproduction of external fertilizing vertebrates is typically constrained to either fresh or salt water, not both. For all studied amphibians and fishes, this constraint includes immotile sperm that are activated after ejaculation only by the specific chemistry of the fertilizing medium in which the species evolved (fresh, brackish, or salt water). No amphibians can reproduce in the sea. Although diadromous fishes may migrate between salt and fresh water, they are shackled to their natal environment for spawning in part because of sperm activation. Here, we report for the first time among all documented external fertilizing vertebrates, that in the absence of any external media, sperm are motile at ejaculation in a marine spawning fish (Osmeridae, capelin, Mallotus villosus ). To illuminate why, we evaluated sperm behavior at different salinities in M. villosus as well as the related freshwater spawning anadromous rainbow smelt ( Osmerus mordax ). Surprisingly, sperm performance was superior in fresh water for both species. M. villosus spend their entire life at sea but our results show that their sperm are deactivated by sea water, suggesting a freshwater ancestry. By circumventing constraining water chemistry, we interpret the unique pre-ejaculatory sperm activation in this species as a novel adaptation that enables fertilization in the marine environment. These findings also contribute to understanding the persistence of anadromy, despite great energetic costs to adult fishes.
- Published
- 2018
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18. Inter-population ovarian fluid variation differentially modulates sperm motility in Atlantic cod Gadus morhua.
- Author
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Beirão J, Purchase CF, Wringe BF, and Fleming IA
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Reproductive Isolation, Body Fluids chemistry, Gadus morhua physiology, Ovary physiology, Sperm Motility
- Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that the effects of Atlantic cod Gadus morhua ovarian fluid on sperm motility variables are population specific. Sperm from a northern G. morhua population were activated in the presence of ovarian fluid from either northern or southern G. morhua at different concentrations. Ovarian fluid acted as a filter, in some cases reducing sperm swimming performance compared with seawater. Fluid from females foreign in population (southern) to the males (northern) had a greater inhibiting effect than those from the native population. Follow-up analysis indicated that the ovarian fluids had lower Ca(2+) concentration in northern than southern G. morhua, which could be the causative mechanism. If widespread, such cryptic female choice could reduce the incidence of intraspecific hybridization among diverged populations and contribute to reproductive isolation., (© 2015 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2015
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19. Stressful environments induce novel phenotypic variation: hierarchical reaction norms for sperm performance of a pervasive invader.
- Author
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Purchase CF and Moreau DT
- Abstract
Genetic variation for phenotypic plasticity is ubiquitous and important. However, the scale of such variation including the relative variability present in reaction norms among different hierarchies of biological organization (e.g., individuals, populations, and closely related species) is unknown. Complicating interpretation is a trade-off in environmental scale. As plasticity can only be inferred over the range of environments tested, experiments focusing on fine tuned responses to normal or benign conditions may miss cryptic phenotypic variation expressed under novel or stressful environments. Here, we sought to discern the presence and shape of plasticity in the performance of brown trout sperm as a function of optimal to extremely stressful river pH, and demarcate if the reaction norm varies among genotypes. Our overarching goal was to determine if deteriorating environmental quality increases expressed variation among individuals. A more applied aim was to ascertain whether maintaining sperm performance over a wide pH range could help explain how brown trout are able to invade diverse river systems when transplanted outside of their native range. Individuals differed in their reaction norms of phenotypic expression of an important trait in response to environmental change. Cryptic variation was revealed under stressful conditions, evidenced through increasing among-individual variability. Importantly, data on population averages masked this variability in plasticity. In addition, canalized reaction norms in sperm swimming velocities of many individuals over a very large range in water chemistry may help explain why brown trout are able to colonize a wide variety of habitats.
- Published
- 2012
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20. Prey life-history and bioenergetic responses across a predation gradient.
- Author
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Rennie MD, Purchase CF, Shuter BJ, Collins NC, Abrams PA, and Morgan GE
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Size, Energy Metabolism, Female, Male, Models, Biological, Perches growth & development, Perches metabolism, Population Dynamics, Food Chain, Perches physiology, Predatory Behavior physiology
- Abstract
To evaluate the importance of non-consumptive effects of predators on prey life histories under natural conditions, an index of predator abundance was developed for naturally occurring populations of a common prey fish, the yellow perch Perca flavescens, and compared to life-history variables and rates of prey energy acquisition and allocation as estimated from mass balance models. The predation index was positively related to maximum size and size at maturity in both male and female P. flavescens, but not with life span or reproductive investment. The predation index was positively related to size-adjusted specific growth rates and growth efficiencies but negatively related to model estimates of size-adjusted specific consumption and activity rates in both vulnerable (small) and invulnerable (large) size classes of P. flavescens. These observations suggest a trade-off between growth and activity rates, mediated by reduced activity in response to increasing predator densities. Lower growth rates and growth efficiencies in populations with fewer predators, despite increased consumption suggests either 1) a reduction in prey resources at lower predator densities or 2) an intrinsic cost of rapid prey growth that makes it unfavourable unless offset by a perceived threat of predation. This study provides evidence of trade-offs between growth and activity rates induced by predation risk in natural prey fish populations and illustrates how behavioural modification induced through predation can shape the life histories of prey fish species., (© 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)
- Published
- 2010
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21. Lazy males? Bioenergetic differences in energy acquisition and metabolism help to explain sexual size dimorphism in percids.
- Author
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Rennie MD, Purchase CF, Lester N, Collins NC, Shuter BJ, and Abrams PA
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Perches anatomy & histology, Perches growth & development, Time Factors, Energy Metabolism, Perches metabolism, Sex Characteristics
- Abstract
1. Differences in energy use between genders is a probable mechanism underlying sexual size dimorphism (SSD), but testing this hypothesis in the field has proven difficult. We evaluated this mechanism as an explanation for SSD in two North American percid species--walleye Sander vitreus and yellow perch Perca flavescens. 2. Data from 47 walleye and 67 yellow perch populations indicated that SSD is associated with the onset of maturation: typically, males of both species matured smaller and earlier and attained a smaller asymptotic size than females. Males also demonstrated equal (perch) or longer (walleye) reproductive life spans compared with females. 3. To examine whether reduced post-maturation growth in males was due to lower energy acquisition or higher reproductive costs we applied a contaminant mass-balance model combined with a bioenergetics model to estimate metabolic costs and food consumption of each sex. Mature males exhibited lower food consumption, metabolic costs and food conversion efficiencies compared with females. 4. We propose that slower growth in males at the onset of maturity is a result of decreased feeding activity to reduce predation risk. Our finding that SSD in percids is associated with the onset of maturity is supported by laboratory-based observations reported elsewhere, showing that changes in growth rate, consumption and food conversion efficiency were elicited by oestrogen (positive effects) or androgen (negative effects) exposure in P. flavescens and P. fluviatilis. 5. Researchers applying bioenergetic models for comparative studies across populations should use caution in applying bioenergetic models in the absence of information on population sex ratio and potential differences between the sexes in energetic parameters.
- Published
- 2008
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22. A rationalization of the acidic pH dependence for stromelysin-1 (Matrix metalloproteinase-3) catalysis and inhibition.
- Author
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Johnson LL, Pavlovsky AG, Johnson AR, Janowicz JA, Man CF, Ortwine DF, Purchase CF 2nd, White AD, and Hupe DJ
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Catalytic Domain, Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Matrix Metalloproteinase 3 chemistry, Matrix Metalloproteinase Inhibitors, Protein Structure, Secondary, Matrix Metalloproteinase 3 metabolism
- Abstract
The pH dependence of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) catalysis is described by a broad bell-shaped curve, indicating the involvement of two unspecified ionizable groups in proteolysis. Stromelysin-1 has a third pK(a) near 6, resulting in a uniquely sharp acidic catalytic optimum, which has recently been attributed to His(224). This suggests the presence of a critical, but unidentified, S1' substructure. Integrating biochemical characterizations of inhibitor-enzyme interactions with active site topography from corresponding crystal structures, we isolated contributions to the pH dependence of catalysis and inhibition of active site residues Glu(202) and His(224). The acidic pK(a) 5.6 is attributed to the Glu(202).zinc.H(2)O complex, consistent with a role for the invariant active site Glu as a general base in MMP catalysis. The His(224)-dependent substructure is identified as a tripeptide (Pro(221)-Leu(222)-Tyr(223)) that forms the substrate cleft lower wall. Substrate binding induces a beta-conformation in this sequence, which extends and anchors the larger beta-sheet of the enzyme. substrate complex and appears to be essential for productive substrate binding. Because the PXY tripeptide is strictly conserved among MMPs, this "beta-anchor" may represent a common motif required for macromolecular substrate hydrolysis. The striking acidic profile of stromelysin-1 defined by the combined ionization of Glu(202) and His(224) allows the design of highly selective inhibitors.
- Published
- 2000
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23. X-ray structure of human stromelysin catalytic domain complexed with nonpeptide inhibitors: implications for inhibitor selectivity.
- Author
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Pavlovsky AG, Williams MG, Ye QZ, Ortwine DF, Purchase CF 2nd, White AD, Dhanaraj V, Roth BD, Johnson LL, Hupe D, Humblet C, and Blundell TL
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Catalytic Domain, Crystallography, X-Ray, Humans, Matrix Metalloproteinase 3 metabolism, Matrix Metalloproteinase Inhibitors, Models, Molecular, Protease Inhibitors metabolism, Protein Binding, Matrix Metalloproteinase 3 chemistry, Protease Inhibitors chemistry
- Abstract
Effective inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), a family of connective tissue-degrading enzymes, could be useful for the treatment of diseases such as cancer, multiple sclerosis, and arthritis. Many of the known MMP inhibitors are derived from peptide substrates, with high potency in vitro but little selectivity among MMPs and poor bioavailability. We have discovered nonpeptidic MMP inhibitors with improved properties, and report here the crystal structures of human stromelysin-1 catalytic domain (SCD) complexed with four of these inhibitors. The structures were determined and refined at resolutions ranging from 1.64 to 2.0 A. Each inhibitor binds in the active site of SCD such that a bulky diphenyl piperidine moiety penetrates a deep, predominantly hydrophobic S'1 pocket. The active site structure of the SCD is similar in all four inhibitor complexes, but differs substantially from the peptide hydroxamate complex, which has a smaller side chain bound in the S'1 pocket. The largest differences occur in the loop forming the "top" of this pocket. The occupation of these nonpeptidic inhibitors in the S'1 pocket provides a structural basis to explain their selectivity among MMPs. An analysis of the unique binding mode predicts structural modifications to design improved MMP inhibitors.
- Published
- 1999
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24. Heterocyclic amides: inhibitors of acyl-CoA:cholesterol O-acyl transferase with hypocholesterolemic activity in several species and antiatherosclerotic activity in the rabbit.
- Author
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White AD, Purchase CF 2nd, Picard JA, Anderson MK, Mueller SB, Bocan TM, Bousley RF, Hamelehle KL, Krause BR, Lee P, Stanfield RL, and Reindel JF
- Subjects
- Acetamides therapeutic use, Acetamides toxicity, Adrenal Gland Diseases chemically induced, Animals, Anticholesteremic Agents therapeutic use, Cholesterol blood, Dogs, Enzyme Inhibitors therapeutic use, Guinea Pigs, Isoxazoles therapeutic use, Isoxazoles toxicity, Liver enzymology, Male, Molecular Structure, Rabbits, Rats, Acetamides chemical synthesis, Anticholesteremic Agents chemical synthesis, Arteriosclerosis drug therapy, Enzyme Inhibitors chemical synthesis, Isoxazoles chemical synthesis, Sterol O-Acyltransferase antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
A series of heterocyclic amides were synthesized and evaluated as inhibitors of acyl-CoA: cholesterol O-acyltransferase (ACAT) in vitro and for cholesterol lowering in cholesterol-fed rats. Compounds were evaluated for cell-based macrophage ACAT inhibition, bioactivity, and adrenal toxicity. Candidates were selected for evaluation in cholesterol-fed dogs and, ultimately, the injured cholesterol-fed rabbit model of atherosclerosis. The heterocyclic amides potently inhibited rabbit liver ACAT (IC50's = 0.014-0.11 microM), and the majority of compounds significantly lowered plasma cholesterol (42-68%) in an acute cholesterol-fed rat model at 3 mg/kg. The most efficacious compounds in the rat were evaluated for bioactivity in vivo and arterial ACAT inhibition in a cell-based macrophage ACAT assay. Two highly bioactive analogs, (+/-)-2-(3-dodecylisoxazol-5-yl)-2-phenyl-N-(2,4,6-trimethoxypheny l) acetamide (13a) and (+/-)-2-(5-dodecylisoxazol-3-yl)-2-phenyl-N-(2,4,6-trimethoxypheny l) acetamide (16a), were selected for further study and were found to be nontoxic in a guinea pig model of adrenal toxicity. Compounds 13a and 16a lowered total cholesterol in the cholesterol-fed rat, rabbit, and dog models of pre-established hypercholesterolemia. Compound 13a in the injured cholesterol-fed rabbit model of atherosclerosis was effective in slowing the development of cholesteryl ester-rich thoracic aortic lesions, reducing lesion coverage by 53% at a dose of 1 mg/kg.
- Published
- 1996
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25. Inhibitors of acyl-CoA:cholesterol O-acyltransferase. synthesis and pharmacological activity of (+/-)-2-dodecyl-alpha-phenyl-N-(2,4,6-trimethoxyphenyl)-2H-tetrazole-5- acetamide and structurally related tetrazole amide derivatives.
- Author
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O'Brien PM, Sliskovic DR, Picard JA, Lee HT, Purchase CF 2nd, Roth BD, White AD, Anderson M, Mueller SB, Bocan T, Bousley R, Hamelehle KL, Homan R, Lee P, Krause BR, Reindel JF, Stanfield RL, and Turluck D
- Subjects
- Animals, Anticholesteremic Agents chemical synthesis, Anticholesteremic Agents chemistry, Arteriosclerosis prevention & control, Cholesterol blood, Cholesterol, Dietary pharmacokinetics, Drug Design, Drug Evaluation, Preclinical, Enzyme Inhibitors chemical synthesis, Enzyme Inhibitors chemistry, Guinea Pigs, Hypercholesterolemia chemically induced, Hypercholesterolemia drug therapy, Macrophages enzymology, Male, Microsomes, Liver enzymology, Molecular Structure, Rabbits, Rats, Structure-Activity Relationship, Tetrazoles chemical synthesis, Tetrazoles chemistry, Anticholesteremic Agents pharmacology, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Sterol O-Acyltransferase antagonists & inhibitors, Tetrazoles pharmacology
- Abstract
A series of tetrazole amide derivatives of (+/-)-2-dodecyl-alpha-phenyl-N-(2,4,6-trimethoxyphenyl)-2H-tetrazole-5- acetamide (1) was prepared and evaluated for their ability to inhibit acyl-CoA: cholesterol O-acyltransferase (ACAT) in vitro and to lower plasma total cholesterol in vivo. For this series of compounds, our objective was to systematically replace substituents appended to the amide and tetrazole moieties of 1 with structurally diverse functionalities and assess the effect that these changes have on biological activity. The ensuing structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies identified aryl (7b) and heteroaryl (7f,g) replacements for 2,4,6-trimethoxyphenyl that potently inhibit liver microsomal and macrophage ACAT in vitro and exhibit good cholesterol lowering activity (56-66% decreases in plasma total cholesterol at 30 mg/kg), relative to 1, when compared in the acute rat model of hypercholesterolemia. Replacement of the alpha-phenyl moiety with electron-withdrawing substituents (13e-h), however, significantly reduced liver microsomal ACAT inhibitory activity (IC50 > 1 microM). This is in contrast to electron-donating substituents (13ij,m-q), which produce IC50 values ranging from 5 to 75 nM in the hepatic microsomal assay. For selected tetrazole amides (1, 7b, 13n,o), reversing the order of substituents appended to the 2- and 5-positions in the tetrazole ring (36a-d), in general, improved macrophage ACAT inhibitory activity and provided excellent cholesterol-lowering activity (ranging from 65% to 77% decreases in plasma total cholesterol at 30 mg/kg) in the acute rat screen. The most potent isomeric pair in this set of unsubstituted methylene derivatives (13n and 36a) caused adrenocortical cell degeneration in guinea pigs treated with these inhibitors. In contrast, adrenal glands taken from guinea pigs treated with the corresponding alpha-phenyl-substituted analogs (7b and 36c) were essentially unchanged compared to untreated controls. Subsequent evaluation of 7b and 36c in a rabbit bioassay showed that both compounds and/or their metabolities were present in plasma after oral dosing. Unlike 7b and 36c, compound 1 and related 2,4,6-trimethoxyanilides (13j, 30c,d) showed poor oral activity in the rabbit bioassay. Nevertheless, in cholesterol-fed rabbits, both systemically available (7b, 36c) and poorly absorbed inhibitors (1, 36d) were more effective in lowering plasma total cholesterol than the fatty acid amide CI-976.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
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26. Bioactivation and irreversible binding of the cognition activator tacrine using human and rat liver microsomal preparations. Species difference.
- Author
-
Woolf TF, Pool WF, Bjorge SM, Chang T, Goel OP, Purchase CF 2nd, Schroeder MC, Kunze KL, and Trager WF
- Subjects
- Animals, Biotransformation, Carbon Radioisotopes, Cognition drug effects, Epoxide Hydrolases pharmacology, Glutathione pharmacology, Humans, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Species Specificity, Tacrine analogs & derivatives, Microsomes, Liver metabolism, Tacrine metabolism, Tacrine pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Tacrine's [1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-9-acridinamine monohydrochloride monohydrate, (THA)] metabolic fate was examined using human and rat liver microsomal preparations. Following 1-hr incubations with human microsomes, [14C]THA (0.4 microM) was extensively metabolized to 1-hydroxyTHA with trace amounts of 2-, 4-, and 7-hydroxyTHA also produced. Poor recovery of radioactivity in the postreaction incubates suggested association of THA-derived radioactivity with precipitated microsomal protein. After exhaustive extraction, 0.034, 0.145, 0.126, and 0.012 nmol eq bound/mg protein/60 min of THA-derived radioactivity was bound to human liver preparations H109, H111, H116, and H118, respectively. Preparations H109 and H118 were lower in P4501A2 content and catalytic activity as compared with preparations H111 and H116. Incubations of equimolar [14C]1-hydroxyTHA with human liver microsomes also resulted in binding to protein, although to a lesser extent than observed with THA. [14C]THA (0.4 microM) was incubated for 1 hr with rat liver microsomes (1 microM P-450) prepared from noninduced (N), phenobarbital (PB), isoniazid (I), and 3-methylcholanthrene (3-MC)-pretreated animals. In all incubations, 1-hydroxyTHA was the major biotransformation product detected. After exhaustive extraction, 0.048, 0.054, 0.049, and 0.153 nmol eq/mg protein/60 min of THA-derived radioactivity was bound to microsomal protein from N, PB, I, and 3-MC pretreated rats. Increased binding with 3-MC induced rat liver preparations suggests the involvement of the P-450 1A subfamily in THA bioactivation. Glutathione (5 mM) coincubation inhibited the irreversible binding of THA-derived radioactivity in both human and 3-MC-induced rat liver preparations, whereas human epoxide hydrase (100 micrograms/incubate) had a relative minor effect. A mechanism is proposed involving a putative quinone methide(s) intermediate in the bioactivation and irreversible binding of THA. A species difference in THA-derived irreversible binding exists between human and noninduced rat liver microsomes, suggesting that the rat is a poor model for studying the underlying mechanism(s) of THA-induced elevations in liver marker enzymes found in clinical investigations.
- Published
- 1993
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