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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 292: R679-R696, 2007. First published October 5, 2006; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00480.2006
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INVITED REVIEW

The parathyroid hormone family of peptides: structure, tissue distribution, regulation, and potential functional roles in calcium and phosphate balance in fish

Pedro M. Guerreiro,1,2 J. Larry Renfro,2 Deborah M. Power,1 and Adelino V. M. Canario1

1Centre of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Faro, Portugal; and 2Department of Physiology and Neurobiology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
Parathyroid hormone (PTH) and PTH-related protein (PTHrP) are two factors that share amino acid sequence homology and act via a common receptor. In tetrapods, PTH is the main endocrine factor acting in bone and kidney to regulate calcium and phosphate. PTHrP is an essential paracrine developmental factor present in many tissues and is involved in the regulation of ossification, mammary gland development, muscle relaxation, and other functions. Fish apparently lack an equivalent of the parathyroid gland and were long thought to be devoid of PTH. Only in recent years has the existence of PTH-like peptides and their receptors in fish been firmly established. Two forms of PTH, two of PTHrP, and a protein with intermediate characteristics designated PTH-L are encoded by separate genes in teleost fish. Three receptors encoded by separate genes in fish mediate PTH/PTHrP actions, whereas only two receptors have so far been found in terrestrial vertebrates. PTHrP has been more intensively studied than PTH, from lampreys to advanced teleosts. It is expressed in many tissues and is present in high concentration in fish blood. Administration of this peptide alters calcium metabolism and has marked effects on associated gene expression and enzyme activity in vivo and in vitro. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the physiological roles, distribution, and molecular relationships of the piscine PTH-like peptides.

parathyroid hormone-related protein; calcium regulation; phosphate regulation; molecular evolution


FISH, WHETHER LIVING in seawater or freshwater, are surrounded by a readily available source of ionic calcium (Ca2+), and, intuitively, the existence of a hypercalcemic factor that promotes Ca2+ mobilization or renal Ca2+ retention seems unnecessary. This view appeared to be consistent with the specific role of stanniocalcin as an endocrine factor with antihypercalcemic action (137). Nevertheless, several studies performed using heterologous antisera have indicated the presence of parathyroid hormone (PTH)-like immunoreactivity in fish pituitary glands, brain, and plasma (37, 54, 66, 96, 99). Since the discovery of PTH-related peptide (PTHrP) and its hypercalcemic effect in mammals (84), immunoreactivity for this protein also has been found in plasma and tissues of agnatha, elasmobranchs, and teleosts (3, 19, 22, 23, 63, 131). Definitive confirmation of the existence of PTH-like proteins in fish came from the isolation of cDNAs for functional PTH receptors in zebrafish, Danio rerio (118, 119), and the cloning and characterization of the cDNA and gene for piscine PTHrP in the marine sea bream, Sparus auratus, and pufferfish, Takifugu rubripes (33, 108). More recently, the cloning of the corresponding cDNAs has established that two PTH and two PTHrP genes are expressed in zebrafish and in the pufferfishes T. rubripes and Tetraodon fluviatilis (13, 20, 42) and that a fifth gene encodes a PTH-like peptide (13). This review integrates the information available on PTH-like peptides in teleosts and elasmobranchs, focusing mainly on their structural characteristics, tissue distribution, physiological functions, mode of action, and potential regulatory mechanisms.


    PTH AND PTHrP
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
Calcium and phosphate are present in the circulation in both bound and ionized forms, with the latter being the most physiologically relevant and therefore strictly controlled. In tetrapods, the endocrine factors controlling Ca2+ and ionic phosphate (Pi) are well characterized and include PTH, calcitonin, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D. PTH is perhaps the most important endocrine regulator of Ca2+ and Pi concentration in extracellular fluid. It is synthesized as a preprohormone, processed, and secreted as a linear peptide of 84 amino acids by cells of the parathyroid glands (85, 86). If the concentration of Ca2+ in blood drops below normal levels, PTH is secreted to restore normocalcemia, and its effect is counteracted by calcitonin. PTH accomplishes its task by 1) inducing the differentiation and activation of osteoclasts that mobilize Ca2+ and Pi from bone, 2) stimulating the production of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D or calciferol, which enhances the absorption of Ca2+ from the small intestine, and 3) stimulating tubular reabsorption of Ca2+ in the kidney, reducing Ca2+ loss in urine. In parallel, PTH acts in the renal tubule to decrease its Pi reabsorptive capacity. Thus, whereas Pi absorption from the intestine is efficient and minimally regulated, the concentration of Pi in the blood is reduced due to a PTH-stimulated loss in urine (85, 87).

PTHrP was discovered in association with certain types of cancer that caused elevated blood Ca2+ levels (a syndrome called humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy, or HHM) in affected patients. The hypercalcemia, caused by the uncontrolled secretion of PTHrP, is induced via an endocrine-like pathway and is a consequence of increased Ca2+ resorption from bone and suppression of urinary Ca2+ loss, similar to what is seen with hyperparathyroidism (105, 110). PTHrP and PTH share some sequence and conformational homologies between their 1–34 NH2 termini, which explains their ability to bind with equal affinity to a single common PTH/PTHrP receptor, PTH receptor type 1 (PTH1R; Ref. 40).

PTHrP is a multifunctional protein, produced in a range of different tissues, with broad physiological actions in mammals mediated via intracellular, paracrine, and endocrine pathways. Mammalian PTHrP is encoded by a single gene, but several variants are generated by alternative splicing of the primary transcript and through the use of alternative posttranslational cleavage sites. Posttranslational processing of mammalian PTHrP gives rise to at least three mature fragments: NH2-terminal (1–36)PTHrP, structurally related to PTH; a midregion (38–94)PTHrP; and a COOH-terminal (107–139)PTHrP (62, 105). The processing pathways and activities of the various peptides arising from PTHrP still are not fully characterized in mammals and remain the subject of considerable study. Recent comprehensive descriptions of known and emerging actions of PTHrP are given by Clemens et al. (18) and Gensure et al. (41). The critical role of PTHrP for normal life is emphasized by the PTHrP or PTH1R knockout mice, which die at birth or in utero (67, 75).


    PTH AND PTHrP GENE AND PROTEIN STRUCTURE
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
The mammalian and avian PTH gene comprises two introns that divide the gene into three exons encoding, respectively, 1) the 5' untranslated region (UTR), 2) the signal peptide, and 3) the mature peptide plus the 3' UTR. The homology among species is high in the region that codes for the prepro-PTH, and substantial homology also is retained in the gene flanking regions, introns, and mRNA UTRs (60). The structure of the recently identified pufferfish (20) and zebrafish (42) PTH genes is similar to that described for tetrapods, with three exons separated by two introns (42). In both zebrafish (z)PTH1 and zPTH2 genes, the first exon contains the 5' UTR. The second exon is almost identical in size in both genes and comprises the remainder of the 5' UTR and part of the preprosequences. The third exon initiates with the remainder of the prosequence and continues with the mature peptide of just over 200 nt and the 3' UTR. In zPTH1 and in its pufferfish homolog, (p)PTHA, the last exon is much larger than in zPTH2 and the corresponding pPTHB homolog due to the existence of a 3' UTR that is three times longer (13, 42).

In general, the gene structure of PTHrP across the vertebrates is much more variable than that of PTH (60). Whereas the human gene has eight exons and seven introns and may produce several mature splice variants with combinations from three exons, the avian form has only four exons that translate sequentially into the mature peptide. However, there is high similarity of organization between the pufferfish PTHrP and the PTH genes in the zebrafish and other vertebrates. The pufferfish PTHrPA gene also has three exons separated by two introns, spanning 2.25 kb (108). The organization of exon II has been conserved in all species and encodes the end of the 5' UTR and the prepro-PTHrPA sequence. Exon III of the pPTHrPA gene encodes a prohormone cleavage site (Arg-Arg), the mature protein (1–126), and the complete 3' UTR. The cloning and sequencing of the sea bream PTHrP cDNA (33) confirmed there is a high level of nucleotide sequence conservation between the 5' and 3' UTRs in both fish (77.5 and 74.8%, respectively). A second PTHrP gene, pPTHrPB, identified in the pufferfish genome (13), shares 67% homology with pPTHrPA, and a further gene has been identified, designated pPTH-L, that is structurally more related to the PTH genes, particularly with regard to size, but encodes a mature protein containing motifs (e.g., MHD) that are more characteristic of the PTHrP genes (Fig. 1). In phylogenetic analysis, this novel gene fails to group with either the PTHrP or PTH clade (Fig. 2).


Figure 1
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Fig. 1. Multisequence alignment of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and PTH-related protein (PTHrP) genes indicating the conservation of the physicochemical characteristics of the amino acid structure. Arrows indicate the beginning of each mature peptide, and the horizontal bar above each sequence shows the length of the 1–34-amino acid NH2 terminus. In both PTH and PTHrP, higher conservation occurs in the NH2 terminus, but only PTHrP shows considerable conservation among species throughout the several regions of the molecule. Note high conservation between PTH and PTHrP within the 1–34-amino acid NH2 terminus, namely, in residues 6–8, 24, 25, 28, and 31 and the conservation of the MHD motif (residues 8–10) in PTHrPs and PTH-L.

 

Figure 2
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Fig. 2. Phylogenetic tree showing divergence of the PTH-L, PTH, and PTHrP proteins. Maximum parsimony tree with 100 bootstrap replicates. Bootstrap values are shown. Light gray-shaded peptides belong to terrestrial vertebrates, and unshaded peptides are of piscine origin. Insertion of the PTH-L in between PTHs and PTHrPs, due to its intermediate amino acid sequence, suggests it may be the ancestral form that gave rise to PTH and PTHrP. Hsa, Homo sapiens; Mfa, Macaca fasciata; Bta, Bos taurus; Cfa, Canis familiaris; Ssc, Sus scrofa; Fsi, Felis silvestris; Ocu, Oryctolagus cuniculus; Mmu, Mus musculus; Rno, Rattus norvegicus; Gga, Gallus gallus; Dre, Danio rerio; Tru, Takifugu rubripes; Sau, Sparus auratus; Pfl, Platichthys flesus. [Adapted from Canario et al. (13).]

 
The teleost PTH and PTHrP amino acid sequences contain a hydrophobic presequence and a putative prosequence, indicating that these are secreted peptides. The predicted mature zPTH1 and zPTH2 are 68 and 67 amino acids long, respectively (42), whereas the corresponding pufferfish pPTHA and pPTHB mature peptides are 80 and 62 amino acids, respectively (13, 20). Pufferfish PTHA and pPTHB share ~40% sequence conservation and 53% with the corresponding zebrafish PTHs (Table 1). Among the fish, human, or chicken mature PTHs, the amino acid identity is roughly 20–25%, although the sequence similarity is close to 40%. However, there is high sequence conservation of the first 34 NH2-terminal amino acid residues, and 10 residues are either identical or have undergone conservative substitutions across all PTHs (13). Among the conserved residues in the fish PTHs, several are critical for receptor binding and signal transduction (13, 20, 42).


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Table 1. Percentage homology of PTH-like peptides among representative vertebrate species

 
The pufferfish, sea bream, and European flounder (Platichthys flesus) mature PTHrPAs are 126, 125, and 129 amino acids long, respectively, and share ~90% sequence similarity (Table 1, Fig. 1). In common with what occurs with PTHs, the first 34 amino acids are highly conserved with an average identity of 94 and 97% and similarity of 100% due to two conservative amino acid substitutions. Overall, the total amino acid identity between the piscine and mammalian PTHrP is low at ~36% but is higher (~60%) in the NH2 terminus (see PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS) and reaches 50 and 85%, respectively, if only the physicochemical nature of amino acids are considered (Table 1, Fig. 1).

The recently found mature pPTHrPB is 161 amino acids long and shares 63% similarity with pPTHrPA, 67% similarity with zPTHrPB, and 58% similarity or less with tetrapod PTHrPs (13). However, there are regions of high conservation across all the vertebrates, including 22 of the first 34 amino acids, which suggests they interact with the common PTH/PTHrP receptors. Other regions of high conservation are 11 of the 18 amino acids of the Arg-rich RNA binding region (1) and 7 of the 15 amino acids of the nuclear localization sequence (55). Comparison of the COOH-terminal region of PTHrPs reveals it is much shorter in fish than in tetrapods and that PTHrPA is the shortest (13). Finally, only the fish PTHrPs have an insertion of several amino acids starting after residue 37 (usually a conserved Arg; Fig. 1). Such insertion shows less conservation, and its size is longer in pPTHrPBs than in pPTHrPAs (13).

All mammalian PTHrPs have regions that are potential sites of posttranslational processing by enzymatic cleavage, amidation, and glycosylation (94), generating several domains with distinct physiological functions. The fish proteins also have such properties in conserved regions [even if some sites are displaced due to the inserted sequence on position 37 (60)], but very little is known about the possible functional roles of the peptides that can arise from the processing of the full-length protein.


    PTH AND PTHrP mRNA AND PROTEIN DISTRIBUTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
The initial studies of PTH-like protein localization in fish tissues used either bovine or human antisera to PTH (Table 2). These studies were generally confined to the central neuroendocrine systems: immunoreactivity was demonstrated in plasma and brain and in pituitary extracts of trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss), goldfish (Carassius auratus), salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), hake (Urophycis tenuis), and platyfish (Xiphophorus maculatus) (37, 54) and in sections of the hagfish (Eptatretus stouti) and goldfish brain and neurohypophysis (66, 96). Similarly, the majority of studies of PTHrP have used human antisera and heterologous gene probes in a wide variety of fish, ranging from the ancient lamprey (Geotria australis) (22, 130, 131) to the more recently evolved teleosts such as the gilthead sea bream (19, 23) and the European flounder (21, 22) and covering several elasmobranch species (3, 22, 63, 131133). In general, PTHrP protein and (or) mRNA expression are principally associated with the pituitary gland, nerve tissue, and tissues having important roles in ion exchange. In the lamprey, differences in PTHrP localization were noted among individuals at different stages of the life cycle, suggesting that the distributions of PTHrP, and possibly its roles, may change with the stage of development or the environmental conditions (130). In sharks and rays, PTHrP-like immunoreactivity and mRNA were present in several tissues (see Table 2), including the chondrocytes at the edge of the calcified cartilage and within the uncalcified cartilage in the vertebrae, a pattern resembling the PTHrP distribution in early endochondral bone formation in mammals (22, 131133).


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Table 2. Distribution of gene and protein expression of PTH-like peptides in tissues of several piscine species

 
Availability of the sequence for the fish PTHrPA gene (31, 108) allowed the production of homologous antisera and fish-specific riboprobes, which confirmed the wide pattern of PTHrP expression in larval and adult teleosts. To date, there are no studies using homologous tools in elasmobranchs and ancient bony fishes. In the sea bream, RT-PCR has been used to detect transcripts in muscle, brain, intestine, skin, kidney, gill filaments, pituitary gland, and operculum, although the overall expression was low (33). Quantitative PCR indicates that expression levels in muscle are roughly 20-fold higher than in skin, brain, kidney, gill, or duodenum, and about eight-, four-, and two-fold higher than in pituitary, heart, and hindgut, respectively (53). In situ hybridization shows signal in epithelial cells of the hindgut, some renal tubule cells, and branchial mitochondria-rich cells. In the pituitary, gene expression is present in the pars intermedia cells of the posterior pituitary surrounding the neurohypophysis, and signal also is visible in some of the epithelial cells of the saccus vasculosus (33).

A similar distribution is seen in pufferfish with the exceptions that the nonepithelial supporting cells of smooth and striated muscle, matrix cells of the epidermis, and basement membrane cells of the gill filaments also exhibit abundant gene expression with none detectable in the epithelial cells (108). It has been suggested that this may be related to a possible involvement of PTHrP in the process of expansion and relaxation of the organs of the body cavity, including the three swim bladders, and eversion of spines of the skin (10) used by this animal for defense. A similar pattern of expression occurs in mammalian smooth muscle cells, and PTHrP is specifically upregulated during urinary bladder distension in the rat (144) in agreement with the muscle relaxant role for PTHrP (18). In the spotted green pufferfish, T. fluviatilis, RT-PCR revealed PTHrPA expression in liver, pituitary, brain, kidney, ultimobranchial gland, and spinal chord, whereas PTHrPB mRNA was not seen in liver and kidney (13).

In mammals, PTHrP assumes greater importance in early development, determining the rate of chondrogenesis and structure mineralization (18, 67, 74). In developing sea bream, elevated PTHrP signal was found in hyperplastic chondrocytes of dystrophic fish but not in those with normal cartilage development (70). Unfortunately, these studies have not been continued, and the possible roles of PTHrP in fish skeletal development remain unclear. In larval sea bream, PTHrP transcripts occur in skin chloride cells, gut epithelium, central nervous system (CNS) neurons, and red muscle cells (32, 107). The peptide localized by immunohistochemistry in these larvae has been detected in the hindgut epithelium, slow red axial muscle, skin and chloride cells, some kidney tubules, pituitary pars intermedia cells, choroid plexus, cells of the hypothalamus, saccus vasculosus coronet cells, and leucocytes (60).

The distribution of the fish PTHs is still very poorly characterized. The genes were isolated from pufferfish genomic DNA and total zebrafish RNA, and therefore there is no indication of specific tissue source. RT-PCR in pufferfish T. fluviatilis tissues demonstrated the existence of pPTHB mRNA in pituitary, brain, kidney, ultimobranchial gland, and spinal chord but failed to amplify the signal for pPTHA or PTH-L (13). Recently, the differential distribution of the two PTH genes and respective peptides in the developing zebrafish embryo using whole mount in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry were described (57). In zebrafish embryos, at 24 h postfertilization (hpf), zPTH1 mRNA was dispersed in cells along the lateral line in the posterior of the animal and was subsequently present in a discrete zone of cells immediately dorsal to the notochord, and at 4 days postfertilization (dpf), it was observed in the midline of the neural tube. Gene expression of zPTH2 also was detected in two populations of cells running bilaterally on either side of the midline of the animal but not in central nervous tissue. Signal for the zPTH peptides was detected at 3 and 4 dpf in lateral line neuromasts and anterior neuromasts and in small cells dispersed in the anterior of the animal and the developing jaw, where it was located in the first region of the jaw cartilage to become calcified.

The distribution of zPTHs is coincident in part to that previously observed for PTHrP in sea bream larvae and suggests an involvement of the zebrafish PTH-like peptides in the neural system and in early cartilage and bone development. The widespread distribution of PTHrP immunoreactivity and mRNA presence in ionoregulatory, secretory, and support tissues in different groups of fishes, including the ancient lamprey and elasmobranchs, and the changing pattern during ontogeny and(or) life cycle phases concur with the multifunctional role of this peptide that also may exert its effects in a paracrine manner. These questions can only be answered by functional studies that include targeting the receptors involved in mediating such roles.


    PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
PTH receptors are G protein-coupled members of the secretin receptor family that interact with the NH2-terminal 34 amino acids of both PTH and PTHrP (PTH1R) or PTH only (PTH2R). The fact that the COOH-terminal regions of PTH and PTHrP have distinct functions from those mediated by the known PTH receptors suggests that other receptors may exist for these fragments (42).

PTH and PTHrP bind mammalian PTH1R with indistinguishable affinity, and both ligands stimulate adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) accumulation with equivalent efficacy (65). PTH1R is expressed at high levels in bone and kidney, where it mediates the classical effects of PTH and PTHrP on Ca2+ and Pi homeostasis. It also is expressed at lower levels in a number of tissues in which it mediates a large array of paracrine and autocrine actions in response to locally produced PTHrP (18, 41). In contrast, PTH2R is activated not by PTHrP but by PTH and tuberoinfundibular peptide 39 (TIP39). PTH2R is expressed mostly in the hypothalamus, but little is known about the possible functions of the PTH-PTH2R or the TIP39-PTH2R systems. Involvement with regulation of growth hormone secretion, release of hypothalamic hormones, and cardiovascular and renal hemodynamics has been suggested (98). Zebrafish and other teleosts possess, in addition to PTH1R and PTH2R, a third receptor, PTH3R, which probably arose from the duplication of PTH1R (118, 119).

Because piscine PTH1R and PTH3R were initially isolated from genomic DNA or from whole zebrafish RNA, little information is available about their expression profiles. In an early report, using a rabbit polyclonal antibody against human PTH1R, Akino et al. (3) identified immunoreactivity in sections and extracts of the choroid plexus and saccus vasculosus of the red stingray. The signal was located in the epithelial cells of both organs, and it was proposed that the ligand/receptor system may participate in regulation of the composition of cerebrospinal fluid. However, to date, there have been no follow-up studies, and nothing else is known about the receptors in elasmobranchs. In sea bream larvae, mRNA expression for the receptor is abundant in the chloride cells of the integument, in the axial muscle cells, and, to a lesser extent, in the eye (107). The highest expression of PTH1R, as determined by quantitative RT-PCR, has been found in the sea bream liver and gonad, followed by skin, brain, and pituitary (53). PTH1R also is present in scales (111, 116), whereas PTH3R has been detected in enterocytes (115), and both receptors are expressed in the interrenal glands (114). The PTH2R was initially isolated from catfish Ictalurus punctatus liver and kidney and from the zebrafish kidney (118). Whole mount in situ hybridization of zebrafish embryos showed intense transcript expression in the developing CNS at 48 and 72 hpf as well as low level expression in the vascular tissue, similar to its occurrence in mammals (see Ref. 98).

Binding and transactivation studies of zebrafish receptors transiently expressed in COS-7 cells revealed similarities between the fish and mammalian receptors (118, 119). Zebrafish PTH1R binds human (h)PTH and hPTHrP with higher affinity than pPTHrPA, but overall, the three ligands showed similar capability in displacing radiolabeled rat (r)PTH or hPTHrP. zPTH1R is activated (induction of cAMP production) with similar potency by hPTH, hPTHrP, pPTHrPA, and zPTH1, but with lower (~40-fold) potency by zPTH2 (41, 118). Interestingly, both zPTH1 and zPTH2 elicit an identical response at the hPTH1R receptor, similar in potency to the hPTH and hPTHrP (41), which may result from evolutionary divergence of this receptor type in the marine and terrestrial environments, also suggesting that the two piscine PTHs may have distinct functions in fish. In sea bream scales, pPTHrPA stimulates PTH1R signaling through both the adenylyl cyclase-protein kinase A (AC-PKA) and phospholipase C-protein kinase C (PLC-PKC) signaling cascades. Although the NH2-terminal truncated forms (2–34, 3–34, and 7–34) had no effect on cAMP release, they stimulated PLC-PKC with equal potency to the intact peptide (116). This may indicate that the first few NH2-terminal amino acids are not necessary for receptor binding but are important for transactivation of at least the AC-PKA signaling cascade, which seems to be the main pathway in scales (see INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES IN FISH Ca2+ and Pi BALANCE AND TRANSPORT). The structure/activity relationship of piscine PTH1R is very similar to that of the human receptor (41, 65). Interestingly, hPTH and bovine (b) PTH, but not hPTHrP, also induce a mild increase in cAMP production in scales, whereas pPTHA, pPTHB, and pPTHrPB are without effect. The pPTH-L, however, strongly stimulates cAMP production with a potency equal to that of pPTHrPA (13). Sea bream recombinant (1–125)sPTHrPA increases the cAMP production to levels similar to those caused by (1–34)pPTHrPA, confirming that the NH2 terminus is the region responsible for the actions mediated by PTH1R (4).

The zPTH3R binds pPTHrPA with considerably higher affinity than hPTHrP (5-fold) and especially hPTH (50-fold). In transfected COS-7 cells, hPTHrP, pPTHrPA, and zPTH1 are equipotent in stimulating cAMP accumulation and more potent than zPTH2 (3-fold) and hPTH (10-fold). Whether zPTH1 and zPTH2 show differential affinity for zPTH1R or zPTH3R has not been determined. Enterocytes appear to express only PTH3R, which has an apparent of Kd of 2.59 nM for pufferfish [125I]-labeled PTHrP(1–35Tyr35) (115). This is the same order of magnitude as for zPTH1R and zPTH3R when pufferfish [125I]-labeled PTHrP(1–36Tyr36) was used to displace human [125I]-labeled PTHrP(1–36Tyr36) (119). As observed for PTH1R, specific binding was identical among the intact and NH2-terminal truncated forms. The sea bream midregion fragments (79–93)PTHrP and (100–125)PTHrP were ineffective. Only the (1–34)pPTHrP fragment, but none of the other forms, stimulated cAMP accumulation in isolated enterocytes, an effect blocked by the AC inhibitor SQ-22536. The absence of stimulation of the PLC-PKC pathway by binding of NH2-terminal peptides to PTH3R is an important difference from PTH1R and may result in diverse and specific physiological functions (119).

The sea bream interrenal tissue expresses both PTH1R and PTH3R, and (1–34)pPTHrP stimulates a dose-dependent increase in cortisol release by isolated interrenal cells (114). (1–34)pPTHrP also stimulates the production of cAMP and IP3. Accordingly, upon PTHrP stimulation, AC and PLC inhibitors separately do not cause a significant reduction in cortisol release. However, in conjunction, cortisol release is maintained at unstimulated control levels. This indicates that, in this tissue, the physiological action of (1–34)pPTHrP may be mediated by both the AC-PKA and the PLC-PKC pathways, through PTH1R or both PTH1R and PTH3R (114), whereas (7–34)pPTHrP elicits only one-half the IP3 accumulation and has no effect over cAMP. In addition, the NH2-terminal truncated forms (2–34, 3–34, and 7–34) have no effect on cortisol release and, when used in conjunction with (1–34)pPTHrP, significantly reduce its effects, confirming the importance of the initial amino acids for induction of the intracellular response but not for interaction with the receptor(s) binding site.

In common with observations in mammals, PTH2R in fish does not seem to be involved in the better known PTH functions. PTH2R was the first piscine PTH receptor to be identified, and in the initial cAMP accumulation studies in transfected COS-7 cells, the receptor did not respond to either human or piscine PTHrP but only to hPTH, and with much lower efficacy than PTH1R or PTH3R. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the zebrafish TIP39 induces cAMP accumulation in cells transfected with either the zPTH2R or the hPTH2R and that its potency is about one-half to one-third lower than that of the human TIP39 at the same receptors (98). The EC50 of hTIP39 in stimulating the rPTH2R and the zPTH2R is similar to that of hPTH, but the absolute maximal response to hPTH is only 30–40% of that induced by hTIP39 (56). It would be of interest to compare the efficacies of zPTH1 and zPTH2 at the zPTH2R and how they compare to hPTH and to human and fish TIP39.

The importance of specific amino acid sequences in PTH/PTHrP ligands for receptor binding and activation have not been systematically determined in fish. However, based on sequence analysis and the few functional studies that exist, there is strong evidence for conservation of ligand binding and activation sites throughout the vertebrates (13). As with the human peptides, the fish (7–34)PTHrP is a strong antagonist of (1–34)PTHrP in binding and transactivation studies. Furthermore, for maximum activity, the terminal serine needs to be present, and all activity is lost in the 2–34 and 3–34 truncated peptides (114–116). In the studies reported above, the receptors’ affinity and response to the NH2-terminal or full-length peptides were indistinguishable. It remains to be seen whether fish, like mammals (24), possess receptors that interact with the mid- and carboxyl regions of these peptides.


    CONTROL OF PTH AND PTHrP SECRETION AND THE CaSR
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
Little is known about the mechanisms that regulate the PTH-like peptides in fish. In mammals and birds, the circulating levels of PTH are greatly altered by minute changes in blood Ca2+ concentration: in humans, the plasma levels of PTH can fall from 75 to 15 ng/l if the free Ca2+ concentration increases from 1.1 to 1.3 mM. A change from 1 to 1.5 mM can reduce PTH release from 100% to nearly 0% (11, 85). It is now well established that PTH secretion is modulated by the action of the Ca2+-sensing receptor (CaSR) located in parathyroid gland cells. This is a G protein-coupled receptor characterized by seven transmembrane domains, a very large extracellular domain, and a cytoplasmic domain (11, 12). Ca2+ interacts with the extracellular domain and transactivates a series of intracellular signals that in turn alter the production and release of PTH by the cell. In hypercalcemic conditions, the CaSR inhibits PTH secretion. In hypocalcemic conditions, the receptor is unoccupied by extracellular Ca2+, resulting in a stimulation of PTH secretion (11, 16). The secretion and eventual release of PTHrP seems to be more complex because of its many paracrine functions, production sites, and target tissues. The stimulus for PTHrP mRNA production is of diverse origin. In contrast to PTH, PTHrP secretion also is stimulated by increasing Ca2+ concentrations in a number of normal and cancerous cell types via the modulation of the CaSR (17, 120122). This receptor also is important in the modulation of PTHrP secretion for the maintenance of the placental-fetal Ca2+ transport (73). In smooth muscle cells of the stomach, uterus, and blood vessels, the mechanical stretch itself induces the production of the peptide, but other factors may be involved (9, 91, 127, 144). In the renal glomerulus, the increased activity of renin-angiotensin induces release of PTHrP (77, 95, 106). Treatment of cultured amniotic fluid cells with human prolactin, human placental lactogen, or human growth hormone increased PTHrP secretion after 24 h by 43, 109, and 90%, respectively. Insulin-like growth factors I and II, insulin, and epidermal growth factor also increased PTHrP secretion by 53, 46, 68, and 118%, respectively (25). In addition, a number of other growth factors, cytokines, and steroids have been shown to regulate PTHrP production. Dexamethasone, vitamin D, cortisol, estrogens, and androgens have been shown in vitro to inhibit PTHrP production (39, 44, 68, 79, 90, 100, 123, 136).

Of all the fish PTH-like peptides, only PTHrPA has been identified and quantified in plasma. In sharks, the information concerning PTHrP levels was obtained using heterologous RIAs. In the European dogfish (Scyliorhinus canicula) and the gummy shark (Mustelus antarcitiers), the circulating values were ~9 pM (63, 132), whereas in the red stingray, an average concentration of 2.8 pM was detected (3), equivalent to those usually present in humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy in humans. These numbers should be viewed with caution, since the sensitivity of the heterologous RIA may be limited due to lack of homology of the endogenous protein. The identity between the amino acid sequence of teleost and human NH2-terminal peptide is only 57%, and although the gene and protein structure of elasmobranch PTHrP are not known, it is likely that sequence similarity with humans is low as well. It also is not yet known whether any of the other identified piscine PTH-like peptides occur in elasmobranchs and, if they do, whether there are any possible cross-reactions.

Blood plasma circulating levels of PTHrPA determined by homologous RIA (117) in sea bream, European flounder, and winter flounder (Pleuronectes americanus) average 1–5 ng/ml (0.4–1.2 nM), ~200–600 times higher than in healthy mammals (<2 pM), ~5–15 times more than in human patients with HHM (up to 80 pM; Ref. 110), and 2–3 orders of magnitude higher than those determined by heterologous RIA in the same species (19, 21). The reasons for this discrepancy are not clear, although two factors could contribute. One is the presence of an important PTHrP binding component in fish blood plasma. The reported levels are for denatured plasma, and effective free PTHrP concentrations could be much lower. The second is some cross-reactivity of the fish assay with PTHrPB (unpublished observations). In any event, it appears that levels of PTHrP are at least one order of magnitude higher than in mammals. It also is interesting that in seawater, both winter flounder and sea bream, only partially adaptable to brackish water, have similar circulating levels, whereas the European flounder, a completely euryhaline species, has approximately twice as much PTHrP in plasma.

The high levels of PTHrPA measured in fish suggest a classic endocrine role for this peptide, but to date no producing gland has been unambiguously identified in fish. A likely candidate, however, is the pituitary gland, since RIA analysis of tissue extracts revealed that it contains significant levels of the peptide (117). PTHrP also is released constitutively from pituitary primary cultures over a 24-h period (143). These observations are consistent with the early physiological and immunological studies by Parsons et al. (99) and others, which determined the presence of a hypercalcemic factor in the pituitary gland. Other tissue extracts with significant levels of PTHrP are the esophagus and surrounding tissue, the trunk kidney, and the head kidney, although PTHrP levels in these tissues are ~30–40 times lower than those in pituitary extracts. In elasmobranchs, as in teleosts and mammals, PTHrP mRNA and protein expression occur in structural tissues and transport epithelia (131, 133), but it seems that the pituitary may be an important source of circulating PTHrP with notable hybridization signals observed in the pars distalis and pars intermedia (63, 133).

Circulating levels of PTHrP in fish are influenced by environmental, ionic, and hormonal factors. Juvenile sea bream fed a Ca2+-deficient diet for 6 wk had significantly increased levels of PTHrP (2). Similarly, fish fed a normal diet but exposed to lower salinity (a change from 10.5 to 0.7 mM Ca2+) for identical periods also showed elevated PTHrP levels that were 1.5-fold higher than salinity and diet controls. Interestingly, fish deprived of Ca2+ sources, in comparison, maintained normal levels of PTHrP but showed reduced ionic Ca2+ in plasma and lower Ca2+ and Pi accumulation, and they experienced growth arrest. Perhaps the maintenance of growth, thus the need for constant Ca2+ uptake, may in part explain the rise in PTHrP levels in hypocalcemic conditions (2).

Ca2+ deprivation also elevates PTHrP in the European flounder, a euryhaline teleost that moves between full seawater and salt water in estuaries. Chronically acclimated seawater and freshwater animals have similar plasma levels of PTHrPA and Ca2+ (142), but when held in deionized water for 14 days, the levels of PTHrP increased significantly. Furthermore, injection of a calcium chelator, EGTA, lowered plasma Ca2+ and significantly elevated plasma PTHrP 6–8 h later (142). Flounder transferred from seawater to freshwater showed elevated PTHrPA levels (compared with fish transferred from seawater to seawater) within 24 h, whereas the change from freshwater to seawater slightly decreased PTHrPA at both 4 and 8 h after transfer (142). Changes in PTHrP immunohistochemical staining intensity also were observed in flounder kidney, gill, and pituitary from animals acclimated to freshwater compared with those in seawater (21). In elasmobranchs, environmental salinity did not seem to alter either circulating PTHrP or signal intensity in tissues (132). However, these measurements were performed after a 7-day adaptation period, and rapid, transient changes may have passed unnoticed. Altogether, the data suggest that Ca2+ availability, in either the diet or the environment, is an important factor regulating PTHrP secretion in fish and that the hormone may be used for rapid compensations in changing environments but also is necessary in long-term hypocalcemic situations.

Elasmobranchs and teleosts express the extracellular CaSR (29–31, 78, 89, 109) and apparently may use it not only to sense their internal milieu Ca2+ but also as a proxy for salinity conditions of their surrounding environment (58, 59, 89). There is, on average, little difference in blood Ca2+ levels between freshwater and seawater fish. However, immediately after transfer from one environment to the other, there may be significant changes in Ca2+ levels that are rapidly restored (71). Whether the integration of information from the environment leads to changes in hormone production and plasma Ca2+ levels per se is not known. The corpuscles of Stannius of the rainbow trout express the mRNA for the CaSR, and the use of calcimimetics, which increase the sensitivity of the CaSR to Ca2+, stimulates the release of stanniocalcin and inhibits the whole body Ca2+ influx in these fish (109). It is likely that a similar mechanism involving the CaSR may modulate the secretion of PTHrP and possibly that of the other PTH-like peptides in an as yet unidentified gland.

There also is strong evidence for the regulation of PTHrP in fish by estradiol. Vitellogenesis is the process through which the calcium/phosphate-rich protein vitellogenin is synthesized in the liver and incorporated into the oocyte. It has long been observed that during vitellogenesis, plasma calcium concentration rises severalfold such that vitellogenesis can be effectively monitored by the change in plasma Ca2+ level (43, 88). Estradiol administration induces vitellogenesis together with a large rise in the protein-bound fraction of circulating calcium, mobilization of Ca2+ from mineralized tissues (103), and increased Ca2+ influx (46), but a direct action of this steroid on the transporting mechanisms has not been demonstrated. PTHrPA levels also rise in response to estradiol and precede the rise in plasma Ca2+, suggesting it could mediate the calciotropic response to estradiol (52). Furthermore, this estradiol-induced hypercalcemia can be blocked by coimplantation of the (7–34)PTHrP antagonist (18, 41), a fact that strongly supports the hypercalcemic actions of PTHrP and its regulation by estradiol. Interestingly, in turn, recombinant (1–125)sPTHrP potentiates the estradiol stimulation of vitellogenin production by sea bream hepatocytes in estradiol-primed fish but not in untreated fish (6), thus indicating an involvement of PTHrP in the process of fish vitellogenesis and a close relationship with this steroid.

PTHrP also seems to modulate the hypothalamus-pituitary-interrenal axis and possibly the stress response in fish. (1–34)pPTHrPA stimulates the release of cortisol (5-fold over basal levels) by interrenal cells in vitro via PTH1R and PTH3R through activation of both the AC-cAMP and PLC-IP3 signaling pathways (114). A similar action has been shown previously in mammalian adrenal tissue (83, 92), but the physiological relevance is still unclear. In addition, in the sea bream, circulating levels of PTHrP and cortisol are inversely correlated, which may indicate an endocrine action (51). In stressed fish, the PTHrP levels are significantly lower than those of undisturbed fish (Fig. 3). Furthermore, cortisol administration lowers the levels of PTHrP and vice versa, although it is not clear what mechanisms may be involved. Downregulation of PTHrP mRNA production and protein secretion by glucocorticoids has been shown in many mammalian cell types in vitro (44, 123, 134, 136), but to date, no glucocorticoid-response element has been found in the promoter of the PTHrP gene. The cross-regulation of these hormones occurs within minutes to a few hours, which could indicate that this action of cortisol is nongenomic.


Figure 3
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Fig. 3. Plasma PTHrP ({square}) and cortisol (bullet) relationship during confinement (*P < 0.05; #P < 0.05, significant differences from unstressed animals). During stressful events such as crowding and confinement, cortisol levels significantly rise, whereas PTHrP concentration decreases. Cortisol injection significantly reduces the amount of circulating PTHrP (13), suggesting the existence of a regulation of PTHrP secretion by this glucocorticoid.

 
Finally, a relationship between PTHrP and the urophysis has been highlighted from in vivo and in vitro studies in European flounder. Urophysectomy resulted in a significant drop in circulating PTHrPA 48 h after surgery, whereas in vitro incubation of the urophysis showed no spontaneous release of PTHrP. This could indicate that a constitutive release of PTHrP from the pituitary into the circulation is modulated by urophysial factors (143). PTHrP expression together with CaSR have been found in the Dahlgren cells and associated tissues of the caudal neurosecretory system of the European flounder by immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization (61). This system is the site of production of urotensin I and II, which have actions on cardiovascular function and osmoregulation (81) and possibly on Ca2+ handling. The close connection of this organ with the renal system and the drainage of the urophysial veins into the kidney could potentiate a renal action of PTHrP.


    INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES IN FISH Ca2+ AND Pi BALANCE AND TRANSPORT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
Ca2+ and Pi Balance in Fish

Circulating Ca2+ is maintained under strict control, since slight changes may disturb a wide range of physiological mechanisms including neural, muscular, and cardiovascular functions, leading to tetany, lethargy, and, ultimately, death (35, 137). In vertebrates, total calcium is usually between 2 and 3 mM and Ca2+ is ~1.25 mM.

In fish, the branchial epithelium and the intestine are the major sites for Ca2+ uptake, which enters passively into epithelial cells down a concentration gradient and is then extruded into the blood by means of an active, energy-consuming, and rate-limiting step. Transport across the branchial or intestinal cell basolateral membrane is mediated via a Ca2+-ATPase and(or) a Na+/Ca2+ exchanger. In the intestine of seawater fish or during the digestion of calcium-rich food, a passive entry also may be relevant. Excretion of Ca2+ may occur passively in the gills and intestine via paracellular routes driven by the outward electrochemical force acting on Ca2+ in both freshwater and seawater (35, 82, 101, 135). Regulated Ca2+ excretion occurs in the kidney, and it is mediated by the differential activity of Ca2+ pumps in the renal tissue (7). The kidney in freshwater fish produces dilute urine to counteract the osmotic inflow of water, and Ca2+ losses are minimized by means of active tubular reabsorption of ultrafiltered Ca2+ (8, 124). In seawater bony fish, the kidney has principally a Ca2+ excretory function, and tubular reabsorption of Ca2+ is reduced (113).

Pi occurs in a variety of inorganic and organic compounds ubiquitously distributed in the tissues as an integral component of nucleic acids, as a substrate for kinase and phosphatase regulation of intracellular signaling, and for energy provision through ATP (5, 87). As in the case of calcium, large reserves of body Pi are deposited in the mineralized tissues. Total and free Pi circulating concentrations are very similar to those of calcium and also are very tightly controlled. Fluctuations in Pi levels are closely associated with alterations in plasma Ca2+ concentrations.

Phosphate levels in both freshwater and seawater are generally very low, and animals must rely on dietary Pi intake and renal excretion to remain in Pi balance. Entry of Pi across the fish intestine occurs mostly via a sodium-phosphate cotransporter (NaPi type II) located in the intestinal brush border, although some marginal diffusive uptake can occur. Circulating free phosphate is filtered at the glomerulus, and teleost kidney tubules, in contrast to mammalian tubules, may either reabsorb filtered Pi or secrete excess blood Pi into the urine (112). The underlying mechanisms for this are still unclear, but studies have indicated that in fish, the same or different forms of the NaPi-II cotransporter may be located in either the luminal and (or) the basolateral membranes, controlling reabsorption or secretion (72, 140).

PTH-Like Peptides and Ca2+ and Pi Transport

The initial physiological studies indicating the possible action of a PTH-like substance in fish were first described in 1978 by Parsons et al. (99), when a factor in pituitary extracts from cod (Gadus morhua) and eel (Anguilla anguilla), which cross-reacted with mammalian PTH antisera, was able to induce hypercalcemia in rainbow trout. Earlier studies had shown that hypophysectomy reduced plasma Ca2+ concentrations (36) and that a carp (Cyprinus carpio) pituitary extract would reestablish plasma Ca2+ in hypophysectomized killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus (97).

Since then, only a few studies addressing the physiological actions of PTH-like peptides in fish have been published. Injections of sea bream with high doses of (1–34)hPTHrP caused a reduction in whole body Ca2+ uptake (50), an effect similar to that observed in freshwater-adapted tilapia injected with (1–34)bPTH (138). However, the specificity and the biological significance of such observations is unclear, because the identity of the first 34 residues between the piscine PTHrPA and human PTHrP is only 57% (33, 108). Pufferfish (1–34)PTHrPA, which differs by only two amino acid residues from the sea bream peptide, applied in bathing water caused a significant and dose-dependent increase in whole body Ca2+ uptake in sea bream larvae (49). This effect was achieved by both enhanced Ca2+ influx [1.6-fold increase at 10 nM (1–34)pPTHrPA] and a reduction in Ca2+ efflux (1.7-fold reduction at 0.1 nM and 2.5-fold at 1 and 10 nM) over a period of 4 h (Fig. 4A). Identical results were obtained with saltwater- but not with freshwater-acclimated tilapia (Oreochromis mossambicus) larvae, indicating a differential regulation possibly due to variations in endogenous levels in the two environments (48). Surprisingly, when the novel PTH-like peptides were tested for calciotropic effects in sea bream larvae, neither of the parathyroid orthologs, pPTHA and pPTHB, nor pPTHrPB had any effect on whole body Ca2+ uptake. However, pPTH-L elicited a dose-dependent increase in whole body Ca2+ influx rates, showing higher potency than pPTHrPA (13). It appears then that in both fish and tetrapods, two peptides of the parathyroid family have hypercalcemic activity: one is PTHrP, but the other is derived from different lineages in fish (PTH-L) and tetrapods (PTH).


Figure 4
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Fig. 4. Actions of PTHrP on Ca2+ and Pi balance. A: whole body Ca2+ fluxes in larval sea bream. PTHrP increases Ca2+ uptake and reduces Ca2+ excretion. [Adapted from Guerreiro et al. (49).] B: Pi transport in renal proximal tubule cells. PTHrP has no effect on reabsorptive flux but greatly increases Pi secretion by the renal cells in vitro. *P < 0.05, significantly different from control. Gray-shaded bars indicate the net flux resulting from the subtraction of influx/secretion and efflux/reabsorption. The results suggest that the PTHrP treatment transiently contributes to the retention of Ca2+ and loss of Pi.

 
Approximately 40–60% of the Ca2+ uptake by sea bream larvae comes from intestinal uptake in sea water (47, 49), and recent Ca2+ transport studies of sea bream intestine using Ussing chambers have demonstrated for the first time in fish that (1–34)pPTHrPA significantly increases Ca2+ absorption 2- to 3-fold while decreasing the electrical resistance of the intestinal epithelium, effects that vary with the region of the intestine (38). Transient increased intestinal Ca2+ uptake had previously been demonstrated in the perfused chick intestine (145).

Interestingly, in addition to an increase in whole body Ca2+ uptake, one other effect of the peptide was to reduce by 30% the drinking rates of sea bream and tilapia larvae in seawater but not in brackish water, where drinking rates were already low. The reduction in drinking implied that less Ca2+ was available for intestinal absorption and suggested an important action of (1–34)pPTHrPA on branchial Ca2+ uptake mechanisms. This was further supported by the results of a study in seawater tilapia in which the release of 45Ca2+ from isolated gill cells was accelerated upon addition of (1–34)pPTHrPA to the culture medium, an effect that occurs within seconds to a few minutes from the initial exposure (48). Addition of ouabain abolished the effects of (1–34)pPTHrPA on 45Ca2+ release, which suggests the increased Ca2+ transport is facilitated by sodium, probably via a Na+/Ca2+ exchanger. A similar effect on Ca2+ release was observed in isolated basolateral membranes of human placenta cells incubated with (1–34)hPTHrP (28). In these cells, Ca2+-ATPase is considered the main mechanism responsible for the placenta-to-fetus Ca2+ transport process, but studies indicate that the midregion peptide of hPTHrP is the main fragment responsible for the modulation of this action (125).

The mechanism of action of PTHrP on Ca2+ transport is largely unknown. To date, only PTH1R has been identified in branchial tissue, by either RT-PCR or in situ hybridization, and it is not certain whether other PTH receptors are expressed. However, the effect of PTHrPA on intestinal Ca2+ transport appears to be mediated by PTH3R (38, 115). Sea bream enterocytes express PTHrPA and a single class of PTH receptors that biochemical and sequence analysis indicate is a PTH3R. The receptor Kd of 2.59 nM (115) is of the same order of magnitude as the measured PTHrP circulating levels, suggesting that upregulation of plasma hormone concentrations in response to a stimulus may have a direct action on this receptor. There also is widespread expression of PTHrP and PTH receptor genes in tetrapod intestinal epithelial cells (76). The described actions of the peptide in the mammalian gastrointestinal tract are mostly related to smooth muscle relaxation (18), but as indicated above, rapid stimulation of intestinal Ca2+ transport in avian duodenum also has been reported (145). Whether PTHrP has any relaxing effects on the muscle layers of the gastrointestinal tract in fish is unknown, but its presence in larval and juvenile intestinal smooth muscle cells (60) may indicate a paracrine action possibly activated by vasoactive intestinal peptide and its receptors (9), which are highly expressed in the pufferfish and sea bream duodenum (14, 15).

The kidney is potentially a prime target for PTHrP, since the excretion of Ca2+ and Pi is controlled at the renal level, and PTHrPA mRNA and protein have been detected in the renal tubules of larval and juvenile sea bream (33, 107). The reduction of Ca2+ efflux induced by pPTHrPA in sea bream larvae suggests that it may induce Ca2+ reabsorption in the kidney tubule as PTHrP and PTH do in the mammalian distal tubule. Furthermore, incubation with piscine PTHrPA enhances the cAMP production by dispersed European flounder renal cells, thus indicating transactivation of one or more types of receptors responsive to PTH-like peptides in this tissue (128, 129). However, although both PTHrPA and PTHR mRNAs are expressed in primary cultures of proximal tubule cells of the winter flounder (45), no secreted protein is measurable in cell culture medium, raising questions about its potential autocrine or paracrine function. Circulating levels in this species are similar to those measured in other fish, consistent with a classic endocrine function.

In Ussing chamber studies, (1–34)pPTHrP induced a slight increase in Ca2+ transport from the luminal side to the peritubular side of primary monolayer cultures of the winter flounder renal proximal tubule epithelium within 60 min after addition of the hormone to the peritubular side (45). In the control situation, unidirectional secretory and reabsorptive fluxes were equivalent, resulting in a net flux close to zero. Winter flounder renal tubules consist for the most part of cells characteristic of proximal type I and type II. In mammalian renal tubules, active Ca2+ reabsorption occurs mainly across the cells of the distal tubule, which is not present in the winter flounder kidney nephron and thus not represented in the primary cell culture. This may explain the weak stimulatory effect of (1–34)pPTHrPA on Ca2+ transport in these preparations. Notably, exposure of the cell preparations to (1–34)pPTHrPA resulted in a significant increase in the net active Pi secretory flux across the cell monolayer (Fig. 4B) that lasted for at least 120 min. Whether this translates into an increase in the amount of Pi excreted in vivo remains to be seen, and the existence of alternative mechanisms involved in Ca2+ and Pi transport downstream of the proximal tubule (such as differentially orientated NaPi-II in the proximal tubule and in the collecting duct) cannot be ruled out. In addition, other renal processes, such as glomerular filtration rate, may change in parallel with proximal tubule ion transport, as previously reported for mammals (27).

The Pi transport mechanisms altered by (1–34)pPTHrPA to bring about its action are not known. In this cell system, the activation of the PKC intracellular signaling cascade stimulates an increase of Pi secretion (80). Treatment with bisindolylmaleimide (a PKC inhibitor) 30 min before the addition of the hormone significantly reduced (1–34)pPTHrPA-induced Pi secretion. The effects observed on Ca2+ and Pi transport are in agreement with what has previously been described for the mammalian PTH and PTHrP, with the original particularity that, in fish, the Pi secretory flux is enhanced in addition to the reduction of reabsorption typical of mammalian systems. This may occur because in addition to the apical membrane NaPi-II transporter responsible for Pi reabsorption, the fish renal tubule expresses a form of the transporter in the basolateral membrane (26, 139). Incubation of isolated renal tubules with pPTHrPA for 3 h resulted in slightly lower expression of the NaPi-II protein in cell membranes, as evaluated by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting using specific mouse antisera (unpublished data). Again, this is consistent with the known actions of PTH on the renal PTH1R, which is thought to induce internalization of the membrane cotransporter via the production of cAMP (87).

Ca2+ Mobilization From Mineralized Structures

Although there is still considerable debate on the cellular or acellular nature of fish bone and whether it functions as a Ca2+ reservoir, it has been demonstrated that in periods of extra demand, such as during vitellogenesis, fish can mobilize Ca2+ and Pi from scales, where scleroclasts and scleroblasts bring about, respectively, the resorption and deposition of Ca2+. The role of hormones in these processes is still largely unknown, but at least E2 and calcitonin (102, 103, 126) are involved, respectively, in the activation and suppression of the tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), an enzyme used as marker for mobilization activity in fish scale tissue and in mammalian bone.

With the use of an in vitro bioassay of fish scales, the actions of (1–34)pPTHrPA in teleost calcified structures were recently demonstrated (111, 116). Incubation of sea bream scales with (1–34)pPTHrPA resulted in reduced mRNA expression of the extracellular matrix protein osteonectin (OSN), a multifunctional metal-binding glycoprotein with low- and high-affinity Ca2+-binding domains, which interacts with the collagen types I, III, V, and IV (111). Expression of OSN in scale tissue incubated for 4 h in 10 or 1,000 nM (1–34)pPTHrPA was reduced more than 20-fold compared with the control tissues. Expression of the genes for collagens I and V also was markedly reduced by exposure to the hormone. OSN expression was used as a marker of the osteoblastic response produced in periods of Ca2+ deposition in ossified structures. Reduction of its expression in scleroblasts indicated that Ca2+ was not being deposited in the extracellular matrix (64), a fact supported by the observation that the TRAP activity was significantly increased by 10 nM (1–34)pPTHrPA (a potency equivalent to 1,000 nM E2). Together, these results on gene expression and enzyme activity strongly suggest a Ca2+-mobilizing action of pPTHrPA in fish scales that is similar to that evoked by mammalian PTH and PTHrP in bone via the PTH1R. Whether PTHrPA acts similarly in fish bone is not yet known. Sea bream bone expresses PTHrPA and PTH1R, which is suggestive of a role in this tissue. The action of PTHrP in scleroclasts is mediated by PTH1R, specifically via the activation of an AC-cAMP signaling cascade, since the PLC-IP3 cascade, also activated by (1–34)pPTHrPA, was equally stimulated by (7–34)pPTHrPA that failed to alter the TRAP activity in sea bream scales (116). Furthermore, the use of SQ-22536 (an AC inhibitor) inhibited the stimulation of TRAP activity by (1–34)pPTHrPA, whereas in a similar experiment using U-73122 (a PLC inhibitor), no reduction of the (1–34)pPTHrPA-induced TRAP activity was observed. The sea bream recombinant (1–125)sPTHrPA is equipotent to pufferfish (1–34)pPTHrPA in stimulating cAMP production (4) and TRAP activity in scales (unpublished observations), indicating that there is no interaction of the mid- or carboxyl region with receptors that use the AC-PKA pathway in this tissue.


    EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND CONCLUDING REMARKS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
 GRANTS
 REFERENCES
 
The existence of PTH-like peptides and their receptors in fish introduces new concepts and changes several of the previously established views on the evolution of the control of Ca2+ balance in vertebrates. It is now clear that the origin of these hypercalcemic factors occurred before the transition to a terrestrial environment and not as an adaptation to a Ca2+-depleted milieu as earlier thought (137). Furthermore, it is clear that PTH-like peptides are involved in many physiological processes not necessarily related to Ca2+ regulation, as suggested by the ligand specificities of the PTH2R receptor, its relationship to TIP39, and the existence of receptors for the mid- or carboxyl region of PTH and PTHrP (24, 41, 56).

The fact that fish are surrounded by unlimited or readily available amounts of Ca2+ and apparently lack parathyroid glands led to the initial arguments for the absence of hypercalcemic hormones, deemed redundant. However, some endocrines, such as cortisol (34) and estradiol (46, 103, 104), have been shown to increase Ca2+ uptake, and therefore it seems that hypercalcemic factors are necessary at least in periods of high Ca2+ demand. Moreover, fish do not effortlessly extract Ca2+ from the environment but depend on energy-driven exchange mechanisms for Ca2+ uptake, which must be regulated by endocrine factors.

Thus far, the experimental evidence (described in INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPETIDES IN FISH Ca2+ AND Pi BALANCE AND TRANSPORT) indicates that PTHrP may be such a factor, acting on branchial, intestinal, and renal mechanisms. However, despite the good correlation between PTHrP and Ca2+ levels in plasma (2) and additional corroborative studies (141, 142), it is still necessary to clearly determine if, and how, low plasma Ca2+ stimulates PTH/PTHrP secretion and if, and how, high levels of these peptides increase circulating Ca2+ in fish.

Nonetheless, the actions of PTH and PTHrP in Ca2+ transport and mobilization have been conserved throughout the vertebrates. The actions of PTHrP on renal cells are in agreement with a hypercalcemic function. If the effects on scale (and possibly bone) resorption are considered, the result would be an increase not only in circulating Ca2+ but also in blood Pi levels, since both ions constitute most of the mineralized fraction of these tissues. Increased levels of plasma Pi in parallel with hypercalcemia also have been observed in response to elevated estradiol and vitellogenesis. Retention of Pi (hyperphosphatemia) generally causes hypocalcemia in mammals due to excessive precipitation of calcium-phosphate in soft tissues, and there is no reason to doubt the possibility of a similar relationship in fish. The excess Pi must therefore be excreted, since attempts to alleviate the hypocalcemia by increasing Ca2+ uptake, from either calcified tissues or the water, via branchial and (or) intestinal routes, will only lead to acceleration of calcium-phosphate deposition in the tissues if enough Pi is available. The observations on renal Pi transport in proximal tubule primary cultures seem to confirm this dual role in fish, indicating that the initial function of such peptides may have been directed to maintain not only Ca2+ balance but also Pi homeostasis. To date, only a few potential phosphate-specific modulators are known (5), and at least one, fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23), is present in the zebrafish and pufferfish genomes (69). The interaction between these phosphatotropic factors and the PTH-like peptides as well as with the other calciotropic factors in fish, such as stanniocalcin and calcitonin, is a field unexplored and deserving attention.

A puzzle awaiting clarification is the apparent nonexistence of a parathyroid gland in aquatic vertebrates. Calciotropic factors such as stanniocalcin and calcitonin have their own sources well identified: the corpuscles of Stannius and the ultimobranchial gland, respectively. The relatively high level of circulating PTHrP found in fish blood suggests that a gland is still to be found. Developmentally, the mammalian parathyroid gland is derived from the pharyngeal pouch endoderm, and studies in mice have shown that its formation is under the control of the Gcm-2 gene. It recently was found that Gcm-2 is expressed not only in tetrapods but also in embryonic stages of the zebrafish and the dogfish within the pharyngeal pouches and internal gill buds that derive from them (93). In these studies, zPTH1 and zPTH2 and CaSR also were found to be expressed in the gills of adult fish, which prompted the authors to suggest that the tetrapod parathyroid gland and the gills of fish could be evolutionarily related structures, and that the parathyroid arose as a result of the transformation of the gills during tetrapod evolution (93). These studies showed no evidence of PTH expression in the developing gill, and in adult zebrafish neither zPTH1 nor zPTH2 were detected in any cells likely to correspond to a pharyngeal-derived parathyroid gland equivalent or in the thymus, indicating that another morphological transition may occur between the embryonic and the adult stages (57). It is not as yet known whether the PTHs and the PTHrPs have the same tissue origin. Some tissues are potential main sources, showing higher levels of gene and protein expression, but generally expression appears to be widespread (33, 107, 108).

The coincidence of PTH and PTHrP in the short arm of two evolutionarily related human chromosomes, 11 and 12, respectively, led to the initial suggestion that PTHrP may have derived from PTH (62, 105). However, these two peptides have rather different gene structures in tetrapods, and the same seems true in teleosts, indicative of an early differentiation that took place before, or in the initial stages of, the radiation of fishes. The discovery of a novel PTH peptide in fish, with intermediate primary structural characteristics between that of PTH and PTHrP, suggests that these two peptides may have evolved from a common ancestor and have undergone a process of gene duplication in teleosts. The same event may have originated the fish PTH1R and PTH3R seen in zebrafish and other teleosts. The appearance of two PTH and PTHrP ligands appears to have occurred after the development of distinct PTH, PTHrP, and TIP39 molecules (41). The physiological relevance of duplicated genes in general is a theme of considerable debate, and the persistence of two distinct PTH molecules, PTH1/A and PTH2/B, which efficiently activate PTH1R and PTH3R, is intriguing. It also is interesting that only pPTHrPA and pPTH-L, the putative ancestral peptide, but not the PTHs, have calciotropic effects in the fish models tested and may indicate functional divergence has favored their persistence in the genome.

To date, only teleost genes and peptides have been characterized. In light of the recent discoveries, it is likely that at least PTH-L should be present in ancient fishes, such as lampreys, and in the cartilaginous fishes, such as sharks. Our knowledge of PTH-like peptides in elasmobranchs and lampreys is limited to in situ hybridization and immunological studies, either histological or serological. The heterology of the probes and antibodies that have been used in such studies does not exclude the hypothesis that several peptides exist but are being identified as a single signal. To clarify this point and extend our understanding of the evolutionary history of the PTH-like peptides, studies into the genome of such ancient fish (as well as invertebrates) are necessary.


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 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
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 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
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We acknowledge support from the Portuguese Ministry of Science and Higher Education "Science, Technology, and Innovation," with funds from the European Commission Social Funds and Operational Programme (POCTI) SFRH/BPD/9464/2002 (to P. M. Guerreiro), POCTI/BIA/13174/2002 and POCI/CVT/61052/2004 (to D. M. Power and A. V. M. Canario), U.S. National Science Foundation Grant IBN 0416954 (to J. L. Renfro), and grants from the Luso-American Foundation and Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (to P. M. Guerreiro).


    FOOTNOTES
 

Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: P. M. Guerreiro, Centre of Marine Sciences, Univ. of Algarve, Campus de Gambelas, 8005-139 Faro, Portugal (e-mail: pmgg{at}ualg.pt)


    REFERENCES
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 ABSTRACT
 PTH AND PTHrP
 PTH AND PTHrP GENE...
 PTH AND PTHrP mRNA...
 PTH AND PTHrP RECEPTORS
 CONTROL OF PTH AND...
 INVOLVEMENT OF PTH-LIKE PEPTIDES...
 EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVES AND...
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