Abstract Fish epithelial surfaces are covered by a mucus layer. The highly glycosylated proteins called mucins are a main component of the mucus, which also contains a range of antibacterial enzymes, proteins, and peptides of importance for its protective properties. Here, we compared the practicality and yield of mucus harvesting from barramundi and Atlantic salmon epithelial sites using glass slide, swab, Super·SAL™ and whole tissue extract. We also compared the feasibility of using the orcinol assay, a glycan-on-membrane assay, and absorbance at 230 nm in combination with standard curves of pig gastric mucin to estimate the mucin concentration. Glycomics demonstrated that non-amine hexose content differed more between fish and tissues than terminal monosaccharides with cis-hydroxy groups, and that non-mucin molecules had a major impact on the A230-based results, making the glycan-on-membrane assay the most versatile method for estimating mucin concentration. We conclude that the most versatile tool for mucus harvesting was swabs, allowing for sufficient amounts of sample to be harvested with relative ease and low levels of contamination from the oral cavity, gill, skin, and intestine. Furthermore, the glycan-on-membrane assay was useful for measuring mucus concentration, and it was beneficial to estimate both sample concentration and purity by comparing samples at relatively similar concentrations.
Lee et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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