Mochizuki Emiko, Fukuta Katsuhiro, Tada Tatsuya, Harada Tomohiro, Watanabe Naoki, Matsuo Seiichi, Hashimoto Hisashi, Ozato Kenjiro, Wakamatsu Yuko
Laboratory of Freshwater Fish Stocks, Bioscience and Biotechnology Center, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan.
Kidney Int. 2005 Jul;68(1):23-34. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1755.2005.00378.x.
Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is a common hereditary disease. A number of murine and zebrafish mutants have been generated and used for the study of PKD as metanephric and pronephric models, respectively. Here, we report a medaka (Oryzias latipes) mutant that develops numerous cysts in the kidney in adulthood fish in an autosomal-recessive manner as a mesonephric model of PKD.
The phenotypes of the medaka pc mutant were described in terms of morphologic, histologic, and ultrastructural features. The pc see-through stock was produced by crossing a pc mutant and a fish from the see-through stock and used for observing the kidney through the transparent body wall of a live fish.
The mutant developed bilateral massive enlargement of the kidney in adulthood. They sexually matured normally within 2 months of age and died within 6 months of age. The affected kidney was occupied by numerous, fluid-filled cysts, which were lined by attenuated squamous epithelial cells. Developmentally, cystic formation began in the pronephros in 10-day-old fry and in the mesonephros in 20-day-old fry at the microscopic level. The pc see-through stock was useful in observing disease progression in live fish.
The kidney disorder that develops in the medaka pc mutant is a mesonephric counterpart of PKD, particularly an autosomal-dominant PKD, based on its morphologic, histologic, and ultrastructural features, and slow progression.