2025 article

Histochemical indications for a chemically complex signal produced by the cervical gill slit gland of the pygmy sperm whale (<i>Kogia breviceps</i>)

Keenan, T. F., Mclellan, W. A., Rommel, S. A., Costidis, A. M., Harms, C. A., Thewissen, J. G. M., … Pabst, D. A. (2025, January 9). ANATOMICAL RECORD-ADVANCES IN INTEGRATIVE ANATOMY AND EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY.

By: T. Keenan*, W. Mclellan*, S. Rommel*, A. Costidis*, C. Harms n, J. Thewissen*, S. Rehorek*, D. Rotstein* ...

author keywords: Cetacean; chemical communication; chemical signaling; chemosensory; exocrine gland; integumentary specializations; secretion; semiochemical
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Source: Web Of Science
Added: January 13, 2025

Abstract The pygmy sperm whale ( Kogia breviceps ) possesses an exocrine gland associated with its false gill slit pigmentation pattern. The cervical gill slit gland is a compound tubuloalveolar gland that produces a holocrine secretion and displays maturational changes in size and secretory histology. While the morphology of the cervical gill slit gland has been described in detail, to date, the chemical composition of its secretion remains uncharacterized. This study used histochemical staining techniques and quantitative lipid analysis to identify and characterize the constituents expressed in the secretory cells and secretion of the cervical gill slit gland. Results demonstrate that the secretion, like those of terrestrial artiodactyls that function in chemical communication, includes a complex mixture of carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids. Differences in staining intensity across germinal and secretory epithelial layers demonstrate differential expression, or maturation, of mucins and proteins. Additionally, a highly unusual and primary constituent of the secretion is uric acid. Uric acid was identified within the secretion using histochemical stains and polarized light imaging, and chemically verified using scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectrometry. While uric acid is not a common constituent of mammalian exocrine glands, urate‐based compounds are abundant in the secretions of marine organisms used in chemical communication. Thus, uric acid may contribute to the chemical message produced by K. breviceps in its marine environment. We hypothesize that the chemical signals produced by the gill slit gland may be shared at close‐range by conspecifics, and that the mode of sensory reception is likely gustation.