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1.
The primitive nervous system in planula larvae of Hydractinia echinata (Cnidaria) has sensory neurons containing LWamide or RFamide neuropeptides. LWamides have been shown to induce metamorphosis of planula larvae into adult polyps. We report here that RFamides act antagonistically to LWamides. RFamides inhibit metamorphosis when applied to planula larvae during metamorphosis induction by treatment with LWamides (or other inducing agents such as CsCl ions, diacylglycerol and bacterial inducers). Our results show further that RFamides act downstream of LWamide release, presumably directly on target cells mediating metamorphosis. These observations support a model in which metamorphosis in H. echinata is regulated by sensory neurons secreting LWamides and RFamides in response to environmental cues.Edited by D. Tautz  相似文献   

2.
Peptides are increasingly attracting attention as primary signals in the control of development. Even though a large number of peptides have been characterized in cnidarians, little experimental evidence addresses their endogenous role. The life cycle of Hydractinia echinata includes metamorphosis from planula larva into the adult stage of the polyp. This process of stage conversion includes internal signalling, which controls cell cycle activity, cell differentiation, cell death and proportion-controlled morphogenesis. LWamide peptides are considered to be part of the control system. We implemented methods to silence gene activity by dsRNAi in Hydractinia and show a substantial knock-down of LWamide gene activity. In addition, LWamide function was knocked-out pharmacologically by targeting the biosynthesis of amidated peptides and thus preventing functional LWamides. Here we show that extinction of bioactive LWamides from planulae causes loss of metamorphosis competence, a deficiency which can be rescued by synthetic LWamide peptides. Thus, it is shown that LWamides are indispensable and act by conveying outer metamorphosis stimuli to target cells within the animal. Considering non-availability of genetic analysis and the so-far limited success in expressing transgenes in hydroids, gene functions are difficult to analyse in hydroids. The approach as outlined here is suitable for functional analysis of genes encoding amidated peptides in hydroids.  相似文献   

3.
Metamorphosin A is a neuropeptide   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
A novel biologically active peptide (metamorphosin A, MMA, pEQPGLW.NH2) has recently been described. It was isolated from Anthopleura elegantissima and triggers metamorphosis in Hydractinia echinata. Antibodies directed against the C-terminal part of the molecule immunohistochemically stain neurosensory cells and processes in the anterior part of larvae of H. echinata. We assume that in metamorphosis MMA (or a closely related LW-amide) is an internal signal transmitted from the anterior to the posterior body parts. Immunoreactivity is also found in ectodermal nerve processes — but not cell bodies — in the tentacles and in the basal disk of the foot of Hydra magnipapillata. This is, to our knowledge, the first report of LW-amide(s) as (a) neuropeptide(s).  相似文献   

4.
Apoptosis is a highly conserved mechanism of cell deletion that destroys redundant, dysfunctional, damaged, and diseased cells. Furthermore, apoptotic cell death is essential during the development of multicellular organisms. However, there are only a few examples where the occurrence of apoptosis has been shown to be a direct prerequisite for developmental processes. As described previously by our group, the degradation of larval tissue during the first half of the metamorphosis of Hydractinia echinata involves extensive cell death. A large number of cells are removed, and we observed several cellular features of apoptotic cell death in the dying tissue, e.g., nucleosomal DNA fragmentation and nuclear condensation. Furthermore, we showed that metamorphosis in the basal cnidarian H. echinata depends on the activity of caspases, the central enzymes of apoptosis. In the present study, we build on these previous investigations of apoptosis in H. echinata by characterising a caspase-3 sequence in this species and placing it in an evolutionary context by performing phylogenetic analyses. Furthermore, we report the successful knockdown of a caspase by RNAi and show that apoptosis plays a role as an instructive mechanism in the metamorphosis of H. echinata.  相似文献   

5.
Coral larvae appear to sense appropriate environments for settlement and start metamorphosis by converting external cues into internal signals, although little is known about these molecular mechanisms. A family of neuropeptides, GLWamides, are thought to be such internal signals, acting hormonally to induce metamorphosis in some hydrozoan species. Here we report that one member of the GLWamide peptide family, Hym-248, can induce metamorphosis of planula larvae in the genus Acropora. The Acropora planulae responded to the peptide in a concentration-dependent manner. The GLWamide peptide would mimic endogenous molecules to start metamorphosis in Acropora as in case of hydrozoans. In addition, the peptide could be applied to produce "coral seedlings" with the aim of reef restoration.  相似文献   

6.
Hydractinia echinata and Aurelia aurita produce motile larvae which undergo metamorphosis to sessile polyps when induced by external cues. The polyps are found at restricted sites, A. aurita predominantly on rocks close to the shore, H. echinata on shells inhabited by hermit crabs. It has been argued that the differential distribution of the polyps in their natural environment largely reflects the distribution of the natural metamorphosis-inducing cues. In the case of H. echinata, bacteria of the genus Alteromonas were argued to meet these conditions. We found that almost all substrates collected in the littoral to induce metamorphosis in H. echinata, and several bacterial strains isolated from the sea, including the common E. coli, induce metamorphosis efficiently. In A. aurita metamorphosis may be induced by the water–air interface, whereby metamorphosis precedes (final) settlement. Received: 7 December 1998 / Accepted: 8 July 1999  相似文献   

7.
The planulae of almost all investigated cnidarian species possess neuron‐like cells. The distribution of these cells is usually uneven throughout the long axis of the planula. The majority of these cells are located in the anterior half of the planula body. Scyphozoan planulae, as well as anthozoan planulae, have a sensory structure at the anterior pole called an apical organ, which is believed to take part in metamorphosis induction. Hydrozoan planulae also possess sensory cells. It has been previously shown in several cnidarian larvae that their neuronal cells contain the neurotransmitter, serotonin. The present study describes the peculiarities of serotonin‐like immunoreactive cells in Aurelia aurita (Scyphozoa) and Gonothyraea loveni (Hydrozoa) planulae. We show that several cells in the presumptive apical organ of A. aurita are immunoreactive to antibodies against serotonin, while G. loveni planulae have an accumulation of serotonin‐positive cells near the anterior pole. Additional serotonin‐like immunoreactive cells are found in the lateral ectoderm of both planulae. Treatment of A. aurita and G. loveni planulae with serotonin or its blockers show that serotonin is likely involved in the initiation of planula settlement.  相似文献   

8.
Plickert  Günter  Schneider  Birgit 《Hydrobiologia》2004,515(1-3):49-57
Peptides of the RFamide family occur in neurosecretory cells of all nervous systems of Cnidaria so far studied. Photoreceptive organs – if evolved in a cnidarian species – are always associated with neural cells showing RFamide immunoreactivity. Experimental evidence for the function of RFamides and other neuropeptides in nervous systems and photoreceptive organs is, however, scarce or lacking. RFamide and LWamide immunoreactivity were surveyed in photoreceptive organs of the hydromedusa Cladonema radiatum, in rhopalia of the scyphozoan Aurelia aurita, and in rhopalia of the cubomedusa Tripedalia cystophora. A possible function of neuropeptides in transmission of photic stimuli was assayed by analysing photic behavior in Tripedalia, which has highly developed eyes, and in the simply constructed planula of the hydroid Hydractinia echinata, in which the mode of light perception is unknown. In both species, light orientation was effectively prevented by RFamides administered to the animals in micromolar concentration. In contrast, among four other neuropeptides occurring in the larva of Hydractinia, only one interfered with phototaxis and then only at 10× higher concentrations. Planulae depleted of bioactive peptideamides also lost phototaxis while still locomotorily active. The results support the hypothesis that one possible function of RFamides in Cnidaria is to transmit photic stimuli to epitheliomuscular targets.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated the development of Aurelia (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa) during embryogenesis and metamorphosis into a polyp, using antibody markers combined with confocal and transmission electron microscopy. Early embryos form actively proliferating coeloblastulae. Invagination is observed during gastrulation. In the planula, (1) the ectoderm is pseudostratified with densely packed nuclei arranged in a superficial and a deep stratum, (2) the aboral pole consists of elongated ectodermal cells with basally located nuclei forming an apical organ, which is previously only known from anthozoan planulae, (3) endodermal cells are large and highly vacuolated, and (4) FMRFamide-immunoreactive nerve cells are found exclusively in the ectoderm of the aboral region. During metamorphosis into a polyp, cells in the planula endoderm, but not in the ectoderm, become strongly caspase 3 immunoreactive, suggesting that the planula endoderm, in part or in its entirety, undergoes apoptosis during metamorphosis. The polyp endoderm seems to be derived from the planula ectoderm in Aurelia, implicating the occurrence of “secondary” gastrulation during early metamorphosis.  相似文献   

10.
Many marine invertebrates reproduce through a larval stage. The settlement and metamorphosis of most of the species are synchronised and induced by environmental organisms, mainly bacteria. The hydrozoan Hydractinia echinata has become a model organism for metamorphosis of marine invertebrates. In this species, bacteria, e.g. Pseudoalteromonas espejiana, are the natural inducers of metamorphosis. Like in other species of marine invertebrates, metamorphosis can be induced artificially by monovalent cations, e.g. Cs+. In this study, we present systematic data that metamorphosis—with both inducing compounds, the natural one from bacteria and the artificial one Cs+—are indeed similar with respect to (a) the morphological progression, (b) the localisation of the primary induction signal in the larva, (c) the pattern of apoptotic cells occurring during the initial 10 h of metamorphosis and (d) the disappearance of RFamide-dependent immunocytochemical signals in sensory neurons during this process. However, a difference occurs during the development of the anterior end, insofar as apoptotic cells and settlement appear earlier in planulae induced with bacteria. Thus, basically, Cs+ may be used as an artificial inducer, mimicking the natural process. However, differences in the appearance of apoptotic cells and in settlement raise the question of how enormous developmental plasticity in hydrozoans actually can be, and how this is related to the absence of malignant devolution in hydrozoans.  相似文献   

11.
Metamorphosis of the planula larvae into polyps does not occur spontaneously but depends on the reception of external trigger stimuli. Artificially, metamorphosis can be initiated by a pulse-type application of Cs+ or tumor-promoting phorbol esters (W. A. Müller (1985) Differentiation 29, 216–222). In the present study we examined the putative involvement of the phosphatidylinositol system in signal transduction. Planulae of Hydractinia echinata were preincubated with [3H]-inositol. Upon exposure of the larvae to Cs+ the label in inositol trisphosphate (InsP3) increased twofold as early as 15 sec after addition of Cs+. Within the first 60 sec the levels of inositol monophosphate (InsP1) and inositol bisphosphate (InsP2) were also elevated compared to the values in nonstimulated larvae. After 1 and 3 hr, respectively, of incubation with Cs+, only the label in InsP2 was increased. When applied to saponin-permeabilized larvae, InsP3 did not induce metamorphosis. But 1,2-dioctanoyl-rac-glycerol (diC8) was effective in inducing metamorphosis with a half-maximal effective concentration of 9 μM. The percentage of metamorphosed animals after the application of 5 μM diC8 (30 mM Cs+) was increased by the simultaneous application of 1 μM (0.1 μM) of the diacylglycerol kinase inhibitor R 59022. The results are interpreted as evidence for the involvement of the PI-signaling/diacylglycerol transduction system in the initiation of metamorphosis of planula larvae of H. echinata.  相似文献   

12.
Hydrozoan larvae normally metamorphose in response to an obligate external environmental cue. Application of certain artificial chemical stimuli will also induce metamorphosis. These chemicals and their inhibitors have been used to define and order some of the signal transduction events involved in this process. Results from this study show that exogenous application of serotonin (5-HT) will induce metamorphosis and that 5-HT immunoreactive cells are present in larvae when they are competent to metamorphose. The 5-HT inhibitors ketanserin, clozapine, and 5,7-DHT prevent metamorphosis from occurring as a response to a natural inducing stimulus. Additionally, 5-HT signaling occurs prior to both an influx of external Ca2+from seawater and activation of protein kinase C, two other steps in the metamorphic signal transduction pathway. The neuropeptide LWamide, previously shown to induce metamorphosis in a related hydrozoan,Hydractinia echinata,also induced metamorphosis inPhialidium.When larvae were cotreated with LWamide and the 5-HT antagonist ketanserin, settlement occurred but was not followed by polyp morphogenesis. These results are used to present a model for the action of 5-HT during metamorphosis inPhialidium gregarium.  相似文献   

13.
Eggs of medusae develop into lecithotrophic planulae that undergo metamorphosis at different ages to form polyps. As planulae age they decrease in size as their yolk stores are utilized. The planulae of most Phialidium medusae develop into polyps where there is a decrease in the size of the holdfast region and a relative increase in the size of the hydranth region as they age. These changes occur independently of the decrease in planula size. In planulae with a decrease in the size of the holdfast region and an increase in the size of the hydranth-forming region there was a 50% decline in polyps that successfully stayed attached to the substrate after metamorphosis. These aged planulae produced an initial hydranth with the same number of tentacles as polyps from full-sized young planulae while young half-sized planulae produced hydranths where the tentacle number was smaller. The first phase of polyp colony growth with a small initial hydranth was slower than growth of a colony with a larger initial hydranth. Predation during this period led to more death in colonies with a small initial hydranth. The decline in successful attachment in aged planulae was not offset by the higher rate of growth and a smaller window of time where predation leads to death, suggesting that this age-related developmental change in planulae was not adaptive.  相似文献   

14.
Complex environmental cues dictate the settlement of coral planulae in situ; however, simple artificial cues may be all that is required to induce settlement of ex situ larval cultures for reef re-seeding and restoration projects. Neuropeptides that transmit settlement signals and initiate the metamorphic cascade have been isolated from hydrozoan taxa and shown to induce metamorphosis of reef-building Acropora spp. in the Indo-Pacific, providing a reliable and efficient settlement cue. Here, the metamorphic activity of six GLW-amide cnidarian neuropeptides was tested on larvae of the Caribbean corals Acropora palmata, Montastraea faveolata and Favia fragum. A. palmata planulae were induced to settle by the exogenous application of the neuropeptide Hym-248 (concentrations ≥1 × 10−6 M), achieving 40–80% attachment and 100% metamorphosis of competent planulae (≥6 days post-fertilization) during two spawning seasons; the remaining neuropeptides exhibited no activity. Hym-248 exposure rapidly altered larval swimming behavior (<1 h) and resulted in >96% metamorphosis after 6 h. In contrast, M. faveolata and F. fragum planulae did not respond to any GLW-amides tested, suggesting a high specificity of neuropeptide activators on lower taxonomic scales in corals. Subsequent experiments for A. palmata revealed that (1) the presence of a biofilm did not enhance attachment efficiency when coupled with Hym-248 treatment, (2) neuropeptide-induced settlement had no negative effects on early life-history developmental processes: zooxanthellae acquisition and skeletal secretion occurred within 12 days, colonial growth occurred within 36 days, and (3) Hym-248 solutions maintained metamorphic activity following storage at room temperature (10 days), indicating its utility in remote field settings. These results corroborate previous studies on Indo-Pacific Acropora spp. and extend the known metamorphic activity of Hym-248 to Caribbean acroporids. Hym-248 allows for directed and reliable settlement of larval cultures and has broad applications to the study and rehabilitation of threatened Acropora populations in the Caribbean.  相似文献   

15.
16.
In planula larvae of the invertebrate Hydractinia echinata (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa), peptides of the GLWamide and the RFamide families are expressed in distinct subpopulations of neurons, distributed in a typical spatial pattern through the larval body. However, in the adult polyp GLWamide or RFamide-expressing cells are located at body parts that do not correspond to the prior larval regions. Since we had shown previously that during metamorphosis a large number of cells are removed by programmed cell death (PCD), we aimed to analyze whether cells of the neuropeptide-expressing larval nerve net are among those sacrificed. By immunohistochemical staining and in situ hybridization, we labeled GLWamide- and RFamide-expressing cells. Double staining of neuropeptides and degraded DNA (TUNEL analysis) identified some neurosensory cells as being apoptotic. Derangement of the cytoplasm and rapid destruction of neuropeptide precursor RNA indicated complete death of these particular sensory cells in the course of metamorphosis. Additionally, a small group of RFamide-positive sensory cells in the developing mouth region of the primary polyp could be shown to emerge by proliferation. Our results support the idea that during metamorphosis, specific parts of the larval neuronal network are subject to neurodegeneration and therefore not used for construction of the adult nerve net. Most neuronal cells of the primary polyp arise by de novo differentiation of stem cells commited to neural differentiation in embryogenesis. At least some nerve cells derive from proliferation of progenitor cells. Clarification of how the nerve net of these basal eumetazoans degenerates may add information to the understanding of neurodegeneration by apoptosis as a whole in the animal kingdom.  相似文献   

17.
Plickert  G. 《Hydrobiologia》1991,216(1):83-89
Treatment of metamorphosing planulae of Hydractinia echinata with proportion altering factor (PAF) causes oversizing in the hypostome of developing primary polyps. With increasing concentrations more specimens fail to acquire the appearance of a primary polyp but remain as cones lacking tentacles. Yet, such specimens are true primary polyps as they contain neurons of RF-amide-like immunoreactivity that are typical of the polyp stage. Numbers of RF-amide-positive cells are increased up to 2.5 times compared with the normal value. In intact Hydra vulgaris, PAF increases the number of neurons that differentiate from cycling precursor cells, or even from stem cells. The effect is dose dependent.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Planula larvae of the marine hydroids Halocordyle disticha and Hydractinia echinata were treated with the catecholamines epinephrine, norepinephrine and dopamine, as well as with certain of their precursors and agonists. Norepinephrine, l-dopa, dopamine and the dopamine agonist ADTN at concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 0.001 mM induced metamorphosis within 24 h in Halocordyle disticha, with no observable morphogenetic abnormalities. Epinephrine, the adrenergic agonists phenylephrine, isoproterenol and methoxyamine, and the catecholamine precursors phenylalanine and tyrosine were found not to induce metamorphosis at the concentrations employed. None of the compounds was effective in inducing metamorphosis in Hydractinia echinata. A model is presented for neural control of metamorphosis in Halocordyle disticha  相似文献   

19.
Summary

The embryonic origin of the nervous system in Phialidium gregarium was investigated. Entoderm-free planulae, surgically produced by bisection at mid-gastrulation, and normal planulae were examined by light and electron microscopy to determine their cellular composition. The cell types that occur in the epidermis of the normal planula were described. The entoderm-free planulae were found to be devoid of interstitial cells and their derivatives, the nematocytes and ganglion cells. Neurosensory cells were present, however, indicating that they are derivatives of the ectodermal epithelium.

The role of nerve elements in the initiation of metamorphosis was also examined. Normal and entoderm-free planulae treated for four hours with 0.4% colchicine at two, three, or four days of development fail to undergo cesium-induced metamorphosis. Since such treatment in other hydrozoans eliminates interstitial cells and their derivatives [1-3], it might be argued that ganglion cells are necessary to initiate metamorphosis. The observation that entoderm-free planulae, devoid of interstitial cell derivatives, are capable of responding to induction by bacteria or cesium, however, indicates that in Phialidium the colchicine effect is on other cell types. The results are compared with findings for other Cnidaria.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Both the natural metamorphic stimulus (an unidentified bacterial product) and an artificial trigger of metamorphosis (Cs+) cause large calcium transients in planula cells of the hydrozoanMitrocomella polydiademata. When these transients are inhibited with calcium channel blockers, metamorphosis is also inhibited. All cells of theMitrocomella planula contain a calcium-specific photoprotein. The cells where the calcium transients occur during natural- and Cs+-induced metamorphosis have been visualized in normal and entoderm free planulae that lack ganglion cells, using a compound microscope coupled to an image intensifier and video camera. During bacteria- and Cs+-induced metamorphosis, groups of contiguous cells, occupying from about 10% to the entire visible surface of the planula, simultaneously exhibit calcium transients. When the cells that initiate a transient comprise only part of the planula surface, the calcium transient frequently propagates and can eventually involve every cell on the visible planula surface. There is no special site on the planula surface where calcium transients are more apt to be initiated. There is no indication that propagation of a flash in one direction is more likely than in another. The velocity of propagation is virtually the same in all directions. The only feature of the spatial distribution of bacteria- and Cs+-induced calcium transients that appears to be necessary for the induction of metamorphosis is that at least one transient must involve all of the surface cells of the planula. The spatial behavior of calcium transients is the same in entoderm free planulae (lacking ganglion cells) as in normal planulae. The propagation of these calcium transients most probably occurs via epithelial conduction. This metamorphic step involving calcium transients is probably the intercellular communication system that informs the cells of the planula that metamorphosis will commence.Metamorphosis inMitrocomella planulae can also be induced with phorbol esters. Calcium transients do not occur during phorbol ester-induced metamorphosis, indicating that they act at a different point in the metamorphic pathway. Calcium channel blockers do not inhibit phorbol ester-induced metamorphosis. Inhibitors of protein kinase-C, inhibit both phorbol ester-induced metamorphosis and Cs+- and bacteria-induced metamorphosis, but have no effect on the calcium transients induced by Cs+. This indicates that the calcium transient mediated step in the metamorphic pathway occurs prior to protein kinase-C activation. Calcium transients probably play a major role in activating protein kinase-C.  相似文献   

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