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Pigment Cell Res ; 13(2): 116-9, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10841033

ABSTRACT

To investigate the possible photoprotective role of chromatophores in fish, the absorbances of four types of intact chromatophores in adult and larval Japanese medaka were analyzed using microspectrophotometric techniques. The absorbance spectrum of each chromatophore class was obtained from 300 to 550 nm. The absorbance spectra of intact leucophores, melanophores and xanthophores were very similar to the published absorbance spectra of the isolated pure pigments contained in each chromatophore type, pteridines, melanin and carotenoids or pteridines, respectively. Based on these absorbance spectra, leucophores and melanophores should provide the most ultraviolet (UV) photoprotection to fish since the compounds they contain, pteridines and melanin, correspondingly, have strong absorbances in the UV region of the spectrum. Xanthophores containing carotenoids are not likely to provide much protection to fish from UV-induced damage since carotenoids have low absorbances in the UV range. Xanthophores containing colored pteridines, however, may provide somewhat greater UV protection to fish, since pteridines absorb more light than carotenoids in the UV portion of the spectrum. The relative frequency, coverage and thickness of these two types of xanthophores should determine how much protection xanthophores as a chromatophore type would provide against UV-induced damage.


Subject(s)
Chromatophores/chemistry , Pigments, Biological/analysis , Age Factors , Animals , Carotenoids/analysis , Carotenoids/chemistry , Larva/cytology , Melanins/analysis , Melanins/chemistry , Oryzias , Photochemistry , Pigments, Biological/chemistry , Pteridines/analysis , Pteridines/chemistry , Skin/chemistry , Skin/cytology , Skin/radiation effects , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet
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