Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue

Elephant seals undergo an annual catastrophic molting phase during which they shed all of their pelage (skin and fur) within one month. Molting occurs on dry land because blood flow has to be directed towards the surface of the skin for rapid regeneration, whereas it is directed toward internal orga...

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Main Authors: Nimene, Anna-Marie Erica, Roberts, Ashley Hope, Trost, Noellemarie
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarly Commons 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/purcc/2022/events/48
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spelling ftunivpacificmsl:oai:scholarlycommons.pacific.edu:purcc-3075 2023-05-15T16:05:45+02:00 Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue Nimene, Anna-Marie Erica Roberts, Ashley Hope Trost, Noellemarie 2022-04-30T20:00:00Z https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/purcc/2022/events/48 unknown Scholarly Commons https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/purcc/2022/events/48 Pacific Undergraduate Research and Creativity Conference (PURCC) Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology Physiology text 2022 ftunivpacificmsl 2022-04-30T22:28:12Z Elephant seals undergo an annual catastrophic molting phase during which they shed all of their pelage (skin and fur) within one month. Molting occurs on dry land because blood flow has to be directed towards the surface of the skin for rapid regeneration, whereas it is directed toward internal organs in the water. Since seals cannot forage while they are at the rookery, they fast while molting, during which they rely heavily on fats stored within their blubber, a specialized type of fat tissue, for energy. The outer layer of the blubber is used for thermoregulation, while the inner layer serves to store energy. While most studies on seal metabolism have been conducted using inner blubber, the blubber layers are not well-defined morphologically. In this study, we characterized rapid hair follicle regeneration during molting in seals using histology. We found that during the early molting phase, most of the hair follicles were in the telogen phase of the hair cycle, while during the late molt phase, most were in anagen phase. We also distinguished inner and outer blubber layers using proteomics. We identified 1,369 proteins in the seal blubber proteome by mass spectrometry and found six proteins that were differentially abundant between the inner and outer blubber layers. The proteins RPL35 and ADH3 were more abundant in inner blubber, while ASPN, GIMAP4, PRKAR2A, and EVPL were more abundant in outer blubber. Our study allows us to gain a more in-depth understanding of the mechanisms regulating extremely rapid skin regeneration, which furthers our understanding of human skin diseases and disorders and their possible treatments. It also provides us with molecular markers to distinguish visibly similar but functionally distinct blubber layers in seals, as well as understand the evolution of blubber in mammals. Text Elephant Seals University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law: Scholarly Commons
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law: Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftunivpacificmsl
language unknown
topic Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology
Physiology
spellingShingle Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology
Physiology
Nimene, Anna-Marie Erica
Roberts, Ashley Hope
Trost, Noellemarie
Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue
topic_facet Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology
Physiology
description Elephant seals undergo an annual catastrophic molting phase during which they shed all of their pelage (skin and fur) within one month. Molting occurs on dry land because blood flow has to be directed towards the surface of the skin for rapid regeneration, whereas it is directed toward internal organs in the water. Since seals cannot forage while they are at the rookery, they fast while molting, during which they rely heavily on fats stored within their blubber, a specialized type of fat tissue, for energy. The outer layer of the blubber is used for thermoregulation, while the inner layer serves to store energy. While most studies on seal metabolism have been conducted using inner blubber, the blubber layers are not well-defined morphologically. In this study, we characterized rapid hair follicle regeneration during molting in seals using histology. We found that during the early molting phase, most of the hair follicles were in the telogen phase of the hair cycle, while during the late molt phase, most were in anagen phase. We also distinguished inner and outer blubber layers using proteomics. We identified 1,369 proteins in the seal blubber proteome by mass spectrometry and found six proteins that were differentially abundant between the inner and outer blubber layers. The proteins RPL35 and ADH3 were more abundant in inner blubber, while ASPN, GIMAP4, PRKAR2A, and EVPL were more abundant in outer blubber. Our study allows us to gain a more in-depth understanding of the mechanisms regulating extremely rapid skin regeneration, which furthers our understanding of human skin diseases and disorders and their possible treatments. It also provides us with molecular markers to distinguish visibly similar but functionally distinct blubber layers in seals, as well as understand the evolution of blubber in mammals.
format Text
author Nimene, Anna-Marie Erica
Roberts, Ashley Hope
Trost, Noellemarie
author_facet Nimene, Anna-Marie Erica
Roberts, Ashley Hope
Trost, Noellemarie
author_sort Nimene, Anna-Marie Erica
title Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue
title_short Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue
title_full Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue
title_fullStr Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue
title_full_unstemmed Morphological and Protein Composition of the Inner and Outer Layers of Skin and Blubber Tissue
title_sort morphological and protein composition of the inner and outer layers of skin and blubber tissue
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2022
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/purcc/2022/events/48
genre Elephant Seals
genre_facet Elephant Seals
op_source Pacific Undergraduate Research and Creativity Conference (PURCC)
op_relation https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/purcc/2022/events/48
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