4.4 Article

Melatonin and cortisol as components of the cutaneous stress response system in fish: Response to oxidative stress

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2022.111207

关键词

Oxidative stress; Fish; Skin; Melatonin; Cortisol; Pigment dispersion; Cutaneous stress response system

资金

  1. National Science Centre (Poland) [UMO-2017/27/B/NZ4/01259]

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Recent studies have shown that fish also have a local stress response system in the skin, similar to mammals, where melatonin and cortisol play important roles in coping with oxidative stress. The dispersion of pigment in the skin can serve as a valuable marker of oxidative stress and be useful in assessing fish welfare.
The skin being a passive biological barrier that defends the organism against harmful external factors is also a site of action of the system responding to stress. It appears that melatonin (Mel) and its biologically active metabolite AFMK (N1-acetyl-N2-formyl-5-methoxykynuramine), both known as effective antioxidants, together with cortisol, set up a local (cutaneous) stress response system (CSRS) of fish, similar to that of mammals. Herein we comment on recent studies on CSRS in fish and show the response of three-spined stickleback skin to oxidative stress induced by potassium dichromate. Our study indicates that exposure of the three-spined stickleback to K2Cr2O7 affects Mel and cortisol levels and pigment dispersion in melanophores in the skin. In our opinion, an increased concentration of Mel and cortisol in the skin may be the strategy to cope with oxidative stress, where both components act locally to prevent damage caused by active oxygen molecules. Furthermore, the pigment dispersion may be a valuable, easy-to-observe mark of oxidative stress, useful in the evaluation of fish welfare.

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