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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Effects of oestradiol-17 beta and testosterone on the histology of pituitary, liver, ovary and skin of previtellogenic Epinephelus akaara (Teleostei, Serranidae).

The pituitary gland of the red grouper, Epinephelus akaara, was studied by histochemical techniques, and the prolactin cells, corticotrops, somatotrops, gonadotrops, thyrotrops, pars intermedia cells and neurohypophyseal cells, were identified. Oestradiol-17 beta treatment caused PAS-positive cells in the proximal pars distalis, presumably a mixture of gonadotrops and thyrotrops, to undergo hypertrophy, vacuolation and degranulation of cytoplasmic glycoprotein granules. Disappearance of cytoplasmic granules was also evident in the PAS-positive pars intermedia cells. Oestrogen-treated fish also showed an increase in the hepatosomatic index, and hepatocytes enlarged in size, their nuclear diameter increased and large vacuoles were formed in the cytoplasm. These changes in the liver were paralleled by a secretion of vitellogenin into the serum and an increased production of mucus by the thickened skin epithelium. Testosterone injections did not affect such changes, neither in the pituitary nor liver cells, but a proliferation of skin epithelial cells was noted. Neither oestradiol-17 beta nor testosterone stimulated ovarian incorporation of vitellogenin, but treatment with high doses (5 mg/kg) of oestradiol-17 beta or testosterone brought about a slight increase in the gonadosomatic index and atresia of some of the primary oocytes. The oogonial population size decreased in response to treatment with high doses of oestradiol-17 beta.[1]

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