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Journal of Endocrinology (2007) 193, 349-357       DOI: 10.1677/JOE-07-0070
© 2007 Society for Endocrinology
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Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and CRF-binding protein expression in and release from the head kidney of common carp: evolutionary conservation of the adrenal CRF system

Mark O Huising1,2, Lieke M van der Aa2, Juriaan R Metz1, Aurélia de Fátima Mazon2, B M Lidy Verburg-van Kemenade2 and Gert Flik1

1 Department of Animal Physiology, Radboud University Nijmegen, Toernooiveld 1, 6525 ED Nijmegen, The Netherlands
2 Department of Cell Biology and Immunology, Wageningen Institute of Animal Sciences, Wageningen University, 6709 PG Wageningen, The Netherlands

(Requests for offprints should be addressed to G Flik; Email: g.flik{at}science.ru.nl)

(M O Huising is now at The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, Peptide Biology Laboratory, 10010 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, California 92037, USA)

Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) plays a central role in the regulation of the stress axis. In mammals, CRF as well as its receptors and its CRF-binding protein (CRF-BP) are expressed in a variety of organs and tissues outside the central nervous system. One of these extrahypothalamic sites is the adrenal gland, where the paracrine actions of adrenal CRF influence cortical steroidogenesis and adrenal blood flow. Although the central role of CRF signaling in the initiation and regulation of the stress response has now been established throughout vertebrates, information about the possible peripheral presence of CRF in earlier vertebrate lineages is scant. We established the expression of CRF, CRF-BP, and the CRF receptor 1 in a panel of peripheral organs of common carp (Cyprinus carpio). Out of all the peripheral organs tested, CRF and CRF-BP are most abundantly expressed in the carp head kidney, the fish equivalent of the mammalian adrenal gland. This expression localizes to chromaffin cells. Furthermore, detectable quantities of CRF are released from the intact head kidney following in vitro stimulation with 8-bromo-cAMP in a superfusion setup. The presence of CRF and CRF-BP within the chromaffin compartment of the head kidney suggests that a pathway homologous to the mammalian intra-adrenal CRF system is present in the head kidney of fish. It follows that such a system to locally fine-tune the outcome of the centrally initiated stress response has been an integral part of the vertebrate endocrine system since the common ancestor of teleostean fishes and mammals.







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