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  lüll Osmoreception: perspectives on signal transduction and environmental modulation Seale AP; Watanabe S; Grau EGGen Comp Endocrinol  2012[May]; 176 (3): 354-60Osmoregulation is essential to life in vertebrates and osmoreception is a  fundamental element in osmoregulation. Progress in characterizing the mechanisms  that mediate osmoreception has been made possible by using a uniquely accessible  cell model, the prolactin (PRL) cell of the euryhaline tilapia, Oreochromis  mossambicus. In addition to a brief historical overview, we offer a summary of  our recent progress on signal transduction and osmosensitivity in the tilapia PRL  cell model. Prolactin is a central regulator of hydromineral balance in teleosts  in freshwater (FW). Consistent with its essential role in FW osmoregulation, PRL  release in tilapia is inversely related to extracellular osmolality, both in vivo  and in vitro. Osmotically-driven changes in PRL cell volume control PRL release.  A decrease in extracellular osmolality increases cell volume, leading to a rapid  influx of Ca(2+) through stretch-activated channels followed by a sharp rise in  PRL release. Our recent studies also suggest that cAMP is involved in the osmotic  signal transduction, and that acclimation salinity can modulate PRL cell  osmosensitivity. Prolactin cells from FW tilapia show a larger rise in PRL  release after a reduction in medium osmolality than those from SW fish.  Paradoxically, hyposmotically-induced increase in PRL mRNA was observed only in  cells from SW fish. Our studies have revealed differences in the abundance of the  water channel, aquaporin 3 (AQP3), and the stretch activated Ca(2+) channel,  transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) in PRL cells of FW and SW fish  that may explain their differing osmosensitivity and osmoreceptive output in  differing acclimation salinities.|Animals[MESH]|Aquaporin 3/physiology[MESH]|Fresh Water[MESH]|Pituitary Gland/*physiology[MESH]|Prolactin/*physiology[MESH]|Salinity[MESH]|Signal Transduction/*physiology[MESH]|TRPV Cation Channels/physiology[MESH]|Tilapia/*physiology[MESH]|Water-Electrolyte Balance/*physiology[MESH] |