首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Different pyrokinin isoforms were identified from major neurohemal organs of the American cockroach. During their isolation they were recognized by bioassay using a hyperneural muscle preparation that is sensitive to pyrokinins. All structures were elucidated by sequence analysis and mass spectrometry. The primary structures of the novel peptides isolated from the retrocerebral complex are LVPFRPRL-NH2 (designated Pea-PK-3) and DHLPHDVYSPRL-NH2 (designated Pea-PK-4). A pyrokinin, labeled Pea-PK-5, was isolated from abdominal perisympathetic organs. Structural analysis of this peptide yielded the sequence GGGGSGETSGMWFGPRL-NH2. The threshold concentrations of the identified pyrokinins for an eliciting effect on contractions of the hyperneural muscle preparations differed dramatically. This indicates that the different distribution of pyrokinin-isoform observed in neurohemal organs may be associated with different functions. This is the first report of a differential distribution of peptide-isoforms in the neurohemal organs of insects.  相似文献   

2.
Identification of substances able to elicit physiological or behavioural processes that are related to reproduction would greatly contribute to the domestication of commercially important crustaceans that do not reproduce easily in captivity. Crustaceans are thought to release urine signals used for chemical communication involved in courtship behaviour. In contrast to insects, very little is known about the endocrinological processes underlying this phenomenon. Therefore, an extract of 3500 central nervous systems of female white shrimp Penaeus vannamei was screened for myotropic activity in order to purify pyrokinin-like peptides that belong to the pyrokinin/PBAN neuropeptide family. Members of this family regulate reproductive processes in insects, including pheromone biosynthesis. Purification of these pyrokinins was achieved by a combination of reversed-phase and normal-phase chromatography. Subsequent characterization by mass spectrometry, Edman degradation and peptide synthesis resulted in the elucidation of two novel peptides. Pev-PK 1 has the primary sequence DFAFSPRL-NH(2) and a second peptide (Pev-PK 2) is characterized as the nonapeptide ADFAFNPRL-NH(2). Pev-PK 1 contains the typical FXPRL-NH(2) (X = G, S, T or V) C-terminal sequence that characterizes members of the versatile pyrokinin/PBAN family. Pev-PK 2 displays an Asn residue at the variable X position of the core pyrokinin sequence. These crustacean pyrokinins are the first to be found in a noninsect. The synthetic peptides display myotropic activity on the Leucophaea maderae as well as on the Astacus leptodactylus hindgut.  相似文献   

3.
In a genomic screen we isolated the Drosophila gene hugin (hug, cytology 87C1-2) by cross-hybridisation to a human glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor cDNA. Upon cDNA sequence analysis and in vitro expression assays, the hugin gene was found to encode a signal peptide containing proprotein that was further processed in Schneider-2 cells into peptides similar to known neuropeptides. Two of the peptides were similar to FXPRL-amides (pyrokinins) and to the ecdysis-triggering hormone, respectively. The former displayed myostimulatory activity in a bioassay on the cockroach hyperneural muscle preparation, as well as in the Drosophila heart muscle assay. Hugin is expressed during the later half of embryogenesis and during larval stages in a subgroup of neurosecretory cells of the suboesophageal ganglion. Ubiquitous ectopic hugin expression resulted in larval death predominantly at or shortly after ecdysis from second to third instar, suggesting that at least one of the posttranslational cleavage products affects molting of the larva by interfering with the regulation of ecdysis.  相似文献   

4.
1. A large number of myotropic factors, presumably of peptidic nature, were separated by means of HPLC (high-performance liquid chromatography) from extracts of foreguts, midguts, hindguts and the Malpighian tubules of Locusta migratoria.2. Some factors occur in the intestine as well as in the brain and are actually brain-gut peptides, similar to those described in vertebrates.3. Some factors occur in the whole alimentary canal, while others only occur in specific parts of the intestinal system.4. Two myotropic fractions were present in the Malpighian tubules and could not be detected in other investigated extracts.5. Some factors influenced the contraction pattern of the visceral muscle of the hindgut of Leucophea maderae as well as the oviduct of Locusta migratoria.6. Other peptidic fractions evoked a positive response on the locust oviduct, while they were inactive on the Leucophea hindgut and vice versa.7. In brief, the use of two different bioassays has enabled us to partially characterize new myotropic factors in insects. It becomes increasingly clear that the number of neuropeptides present not only in the nervous system, but also in the gastrointestinal system, of insects is much larger than has long been assumed.  相似文献   

5.
Three neuropeptides Zopat-MS-2 (pEDVDHVFLRFa), Zopat-SK-1 (pETSDDYGHLRFa) and Zopat-NVPL-4trunc. (GRWGGFA), recently isolated from the neuroendocrine system of the Zophobas atratus beetle, were tested for their myotropic and hyperglycaemic activities in this species. These peptides exerted differentiated dose-dependent and tissue specific physiological effects. Zopat-MS-2 inhibited contractions of the isolated heart, ejaculatory duct, oviduct and hindgut of adult beetles and induced bimodal effects in the heart contractile activity of pupae in vivo. It also increased the haemolymph free sugar level in larvae of this species, apart from myotropic activity. Zopat-SK-1 showed myostimulatory action on the isolated hindgut of the adult beetles, but it decreased contractions of the heart, ejaculatory duct and oviduct. Injections of this peptide at a dose of 2 μg also caused delayed cardioinhibitory effects on the heartbeat of the pupae. Together with the ability to increase free sugar level in the haemolymph of larvae these were new physiological activities of sulfakinins in insects. Zopat-NVPL-4trunc. inhibited the muscle contractions of the two organs: hindgut and ejaculatory duct but it was inactive on the oviduct and the heart of the adult beetles. This peptide also increased free sugar level concentration in the haemolymph of Z. atratus larvae. These physiological actions are the first biological activities discovered for this group of the insect peptides. The present work showed pleiotropic activity of three neuropeptides and indicates that the visceral muscle contractions and the haemolymph sugar homeostasis in Z. atratus are regulated by complex mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
The field of neuropeptide research in insects during the past twenty years can be characterized by the enormous number of peptides that have been identified. In the locusts, Locusta migratoria and Schistocerca gregaria only, structural information is now available for more than 60 peptides. Quite a number of these peptides were isolated on the basis of their effect on visceral muscle contraction in vitro. A very limited number of reports describe the 'in vivo' function of a myotropic neuropeptide. Moreover, for most of the brain neuropeptides, we ignore whether they have a hormonal function. In this paper, we describe the recently discovered in vivo effects of some of the myotropic peptides, identified in locusts in the past decade. Schistocerca-neuropeptide F accelerates egg development; locustasulfakinin inhibits food intake and [His(7)]-corazonin induces body color pigmentation.  相似文献   

7.
1. A blocked decapeptide was isolated from brain corpora cardiaca-corpora allata sub-oesophageal ganglion extracts of the locust, Locusta migratoria. Biological activity was monitored during HPLC purification by observing the myotropic effect of column fractions on the isolated hindgut of Leucophaea maderae.2. The primary structure of this myotropic peptide was established as: pGlu-Ser-Val-Pro-Thr-Phe-Thr-Pro-Arg-Leu-NH2.3. The Chromatographic and biological properties of the synthetic peptide were the same as those of the native peptide, thus confirming structural analysis.4. This decapeptide is the sixth natural analog of a series of locust peptides with a Phe-X-Pro-Arg-Leu-NH2 carboxyterminus. This carboxyl terminal sequence is also found in other peptides identified in other insects and it is the biological active core sequence for diverse biological activities: muscle contraction, pheromone production, pigment synthesis and diapauze.5. Like the locustamyotropins and locustapyrokinin I, locustapyrokinin II stimulates contractions of the oviduct in Locusta.  相似文献   

8.
The database of the Drosophila Genome Project contains the sequences of two genes, CG8784 and CG8795, predicted to code for two structurally related G protein-coupled receptors. We have cloned these genes and expressed their coding parts in Chinese hamster ovary cells. We found that both receptors can be activated by low concentrations of the Drosophila neuropeptide pyrokinin-2 (CG8784, EC(50) for pyrokinin-2, 1x10(-9)M; CG8795, EC(50) for pyrokinin-2, 5 x 10(-10)M). The precise role of Drosophila pyrokinin-2 (SVPFKPRLamide) in Drosophila is unknown, but in other insects, pyrokinins have diverse myotropic actions and are also initiating sex pheromone biosynthesis and embryonic diapause. Gene silencing, using the RNA-mediated interference technique, showed that CG8784 gene silencing caused lethality in embryos, whereas CG8795 gene silencing resulted in strongly reduced viability for both embryos and first instar larvae. In addition to the two Drosophila receptors, we also identified two probable pyrokinin receptors in the genomic database from the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae. The two Drosophila pyrokinin receptors are, to our knowledge, the first invertebrate pyrokinin receptors to be identified.  相似文献   

9.
A myotropic peptide, termed Lom-AG-myotropin, was isolated from extracts of 4400 accessory gland complexes of males of the locust, Locusta migratoria; the following sequence was derived: Gly-Phe-Lys-Asn-Val-Ala-Leu-Ser-Thr-Ala-Arg-Gly-Phe-NH2. This sequence is completely different from all presently known myotropic peptides from Locusta or other insects. The Lom-AG-myotropin is active on the oviduct and hindgut of Locusta migratoria and Leucophaea maderae. The stimulatory activity is, in both insects, 1000 times greater on the oviduct than on the hindgut, suggesting a specificity for the oviduct.  相似文献   

10.
《Insect Biochemistry》1991,21(1):107-112
The isolated hindgut preparation of the cockroach, Leucophaea maderae has provided an effective bioassay tool for the isolation of certain structural types of insect myotropic peptides. Initially, the preparation was used to monitor excitatory and inhibitory activities of numerous HPLC fractions in a study that resulted in the structural characterization of 12 Leucophaea neuropeptides. Subsequently, the preparation was used as the bioassay for the isolation and structural characterization of myotropic neuropeptides of the house cricket, Acheta domesticus, and the locust, Locusta migratoria. Five novel myotropic peptides from the cricket were structurally characterized, and 32 separate myotropic compounds were isolated from nervous tissue of the locust. At present, 8 of the locust peptides have been structurally characterized. Isolation studies using this bioassay have been responsible for the discovery of 25 unique neuropeptides, 4 new peptide families, and the initial demonstration of the natural analog phenomenon in insects.  相似文献   

11.
The search for myotropic peptide molecules in the brain, corpora cardiaca, corpora allata suboesophageal ganglion complex of Locusta migratoria using a heterologous bioassay (the isolated hindgut of the cockroach, Leucophaea maderae) has been very rewarding. It has lead to the discovery of 21 novel biologically active neuropeptides. Six of the identified Locusta peptides show sequence homologies to vertebrate neuropeptides, such as gastrin/cholecystokinin and tachykinins. Some peptides, especially the ones belonging to the FXPRL amide family display pleiotropic effects. Many more myotropic peptides remain to be isolated and sequenced. Locusta migratoria has G-protein coupled receptors, which show homology to known mammalian receptors for amine and peptide neurotransmitters and/or hormones. Myotropic peptides are a diverse and widely distributed group of regulatory molecules in the animal kingdom. They are found in neuroendocrine systems of all animal groups investigated and can be recognized as important neurotransmitters and neuromodulators in the animal nervous system. Insects seem to make use of a large variety of peptides as neurotransmitters/neuromodulators in the central nervous system, in addition to the aminergic neurotransmitters. Furthermore quite a few of the myotropic peptides seem to have a function in peripheral neuromuscular synapses. the era in which insects were considered to be “lower animals” with a simple neuroendocrine system is definitely over. Neural tissues of insects contain a large number of biologically active peptides and these peptides may provide the specificity and complexity of intercellular communications in the nervous system.  相似文献   

12.
We performed the first comprehensive peptidomic analysis of neurohormones from hemipteran insects by analyzing the neuropeptides of two major neurohemal organs, namely the corpora cardiaca and abdominal perisympathetic organs. For the experiments we selected four related species of polyphagous stinkbugs (Pentatomidae), three of which are known to attack several important food crops. Peptide sequences were identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry; tandem fragmentation of myosuppressin, sNPF, CAPA-periviscerokinins and pyrokinins revealed novel sequences not known from other insects so far. Most Leu/Ile and Glu/Lys ambiguities could be solved by either specific side-chain fragmentations or on-plate acetylation experiments. The identification of the specific sequences provides a solid basis for forthcoming pharmacological tests to study the neuroendocrine system of these pest insects. However, it should be mentioned in this context that the sequences of the peptides from different stinkbugs are likely not representative of Hemiptera in general. The forthcoming release of the genome from the reduviid Rhodnius prolixus will provide sufficient data to clear this point.  相似文献   

13.
The myotropic neuropeptide proctolin is, in additional to its action on proctodaeum and on some other systems, highly effective on the hyperneural muscle of Periplaneta americana and evokes long-term contractions. During this proctolin response the input resistance (Rinput) increases by about 25% accompanied by only slight depolarization. These processes require extracellular Ca2+ but are still present in Na+-free solution.Junction potentials evoked by threshold stimulation of the nerve are not affected by proctolin. Synaptic processes do not seem to be important for the proctolin action on hyperneural muscle. It is more likely that the whole membrane of the muscle fibre serves as target for proctolin. Proctolin reduces the threshold for neurally evoked muscle contractions, the only available route of excitation since the muscle fibres themselves are not electrically excitable.The K+-channel blocker 4-aminopyridine may evoke contraction as well as proctolin, but this is only a transitory response. In contrast to proctolin, 4-aminopyridine is still effective after blocking the Ca2+-channels by Co2+, but the response is smaller. Therefore proctolin seems to be primarily effective via Ca2+-channels, whereas 4-aminopyridine exerts its effects via K+-channels. The decrease in membrane conductance produced by proctolin could result from a Ca2+-dependent reduction of the K+-outward current.  相似文献   

14.
FMRFamide-related peptides are common to a wide variety of invertebrate species, including helminths and arthropods. In arthropods, five distinct FMRFamide-related peptide subfamilies are recognised: the myosuppressins, extended-FLRFamides, -FMRFamides, -RFamides, and sulfakinins, members of which induce potent and diverse myotropic effects. Whilst >80 FMRFamide-related peptides have been identified in nematodes, only four FMRFamide-related peptides have been characterised from flatworms. The Ascaris suum ovijector/body wall bioassay and the Procerodes littoralis muscle fibre bioassay have proved both reliable and sensitive systems for assessing the functional activities of FMRFamide-related peptides in vitro, and data describing the effects of native FMRFamide-related peptides in these systems are rapidly accumulating. This is the first study to determine the cross-phyla activities of non-native FMRFamide-related peptides in both nematode and flatworm species. In the present study, the effects of 10 arthropod FMRFamide-related peptides (leucomyosuppressin [pQDVDHVFLRFamide], schistoFLRFamide [PDVDHVFLRFamide] and truncated analogues [HVFLRFamide and VFLRFamide], lobster peptide I [TNRNFLRFamide], lobster peptide II [SDRNFLRFamide], manducaFLRFamide II [GNSFLRFamide], manducaFLRFamide III [DPSFLRFamide], calliFMRFamide 4 [KPNQDFMRFamide] and perisulfakinin [EQFDDY(SO(3)H)GHMRFamide]), representing the five subfamilies, were examined on the body wall and ovijector of the parasitic porcine nematode, A. suum and dispersed muscle fibres from the free-living turbellarian, P. littoralis. The muscle activity of the ovijector was found to be modulated significantly by each of the arthropod FMRFamide-related peptides tested; the effects were concentration-dependent, reversible and repeatable. All but one (perisulfakinin) of the 10 arthropod FMRFamide-related peptides examined modulated significantly the activity of A. suum body wall muscle. In addition, all of the arthropod FMRFamide-related peptides examined induced potent concentration-dependent contractions of P. littoralis muscle fibres. These results reveal similarities in the ligand requirement(s) between FMRFamide-related peptide receptors within the Phyla Arthropoda, Nematoda and Platyhelminthes, and indicate significant receptor promiscuity, which highlights the potential of FMRFamide-related peptide receptors as legitimate targets for novel endectocidal agents.  相似文献   

15.
Different insect neuropeptides (helicokinins, tachykinin-related and allatoregulating peptides) were investigated with regard to their myostimulatory effects using whole-gut preparations isolated from fifth instar Heliothis virescens larvae. The experiments demonstrated that representatives of all three peptide families are able to induce and amplify gut contractions in this species in a dose-dependent manner. Structure-activity studies (alanine scan, D-amino acid scan and truncated analogues) with the helicokinin Hez-K1 supported the finding, that the core sequence for biological activity of kinins is the amidated C-terminal pentapeptide (FSPWG-amide). Similar investigations with insect tachykinin isolated from Leucophaea madera (Lem-TRP1) revealed that the minimum sequence evoking a physiological gut response in H. virescens is the amidated hexapeptide (GFLGVR-amide), which represents the conserved amino acid sequence for Leucophaea TRPs in general. The peptide concentration causing a half-maximal gut contraction (EC(50)) for Lem-TRP1 was about 26 nM. Although the potency of Lem-TRP1 was 9-fold lower compared with Hez-KI (EC(50): 3 nM), the maximal tension of the gut obtained with Lem-TRP1 was 1.7-fold higher compared with Hez-KI. The EC(50) of Manduca sexta allatotropin (Mas-AT; 79 nM) was of lowest potency among all three peptides tested. In a pharmacological study, co-incubation experiments with Lem-TRP1, Hez-KI or Mas-AT and compounds interfering with signal transduction pathways were employed to investigate the mode of action of the myotropic effects of these peptides. Cadmium and the protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor tamoxifen attenuated the contractile effects of all three peptides tested. The data suggest that in the gut muscle of H. virescens the myotropic peptides bind to G-protein-coupled receptors that cause contraction by promoting the entry of extracellular calcium mediated by a PKC involved pathway.  相似文献   

16.
Peptides from the pyrokinin (PK) family are a large, structurally and functionally diverse group of the insect neuropeptides produced by neurosecretory cells of the insect nervous system. This family contains short and long peptides which share C-terminal -FXPRLa amino acid sequence. Pyrokinins regulate the visceral muscle contractions, pheromone biosynthesis, pupariation and diapause duration in insects. They are encoded by two genes PBAN and capa, which are mainly expressed in the suboesophageal ganglion. Peptides are then transported to the retrocerebral complex and released into haemolymph. Recent studies are focused on application of pyrokinins as biopesticides in the regulation of insect pests growth and development.  相似文献   

17.
The hyperneural muscle of Periplaneta americana responded with sustained contracture to applications of l-glutamic acid at near 10?4 M. d-glutamic acid was much less active. The responses of a particular preparation to glutamate were usually extremely consistent and highly reproducible; however, some preparations showed no response to l-glutamic acid even at 10?2 M whereas neurally evoked responses were normal. High magnesium, low calcium perfused onto the preparations blocked neurally evoked contractions. The glutamate response was blocked reversibly in low calcium solutions. suggesting that the glutamate effect, when present, was presynaptic.Dopamine, acetylcholine, 5-hydroxytryptamine, synephrine, Rogitine®, strychnine, strychnine, pentobarbital, and picrotoxin, all suspected to varying degrees of some action on insect central or peripheral synaptic transmission, had no effect on the patterns of neurally evoked contracture of the hyperneural muscle. A new transducer is described for use with low force insect muscle contractions.  相似文献   

18.
Traditionally, muscle cell lines are cultured on glass coverslips and differentiated to investigate myoblast fusion and differentiation. Efficient differentiation of myoblasts produces a dense network of myotubes with the correct organisation for contraction. Here we have tested the ability of artificially generated, precisely controlled peptide surfaces to enhance the efficiency of myoblast differentiation. We focused on specific short peptides from α-laminin-2 (IKVSV, VQLRNGFPYFSY and GLLFYMARINHA) as well as residues 15–155 from FGF1. We tested if these peptides in isolation, and/or in combination promoted muscle differentiation in culture, by promoting fusion and/or by improving sarcomere organisation. The majority of these peptides promoted fusion and differentiation in two different mouse myogenic cell lines and in primary human myoblasts. The additive effects of all four peptides gave the best results for both mouse cell lines tested, while primary human cell cultures differentiated equally well on most peptide surfaces tested. These data show that a mixture of short biomimetic peptides can reliably promote differentiation in mouse and human myoblasts.  相似文献   

19.
The hyperneural muscle of Periplaneta americana is striated with an A-band at least 2 μm long. Z-bands were discrete units, but arranged with some order in the myoplasm. The sarcoplasmic reticulum was reduced and 1 thick was surrounded by 10 to 12 thin myofilaments. The muscle is innervated from the median nerves by axons containing electron-dense granules which may be opaque near the neuromuscular junction amid numerous synaptic vesicles. Depolarizing intracellular current injection produces an ohmic voltage response of the membrane potential and neurally evoked contraction is effected by summated excitatory postsynaptic potentials. All contractal activity ceases when the innervation is removed. The muscle appears to be electrically inexcitable and to be under obligatory control of central motor units. By virtue of attachments along the ventral nerve cord in the abdomen, the hyperneural muscle, when activated, moves the nerve cord unidirectionally. In effect, the hyperneural muscle is called upon by the central nervous system to move the ventral nerve cord presumably into a greater mix with the haemolymph in response to as yet unknown stimuli.  相似文献   

20.
Peptides from the pyrokinin/PBAN family and some structurally related compounds identified in various arthropods were tested for acceleration of puparial contraction in flesh fly larvae. Modifications of behavioural patterns of pupariation were further studied for the active compounds using a behavioural analysis based on the recording of changes in tension of the cuticle. Nine peptides belonging to the pyrokinin/PBAN family (Lem-PK, Pea-PK-5, Lom-PK II, Hez-PBAN, Bom-DH-I), identified in five different insect species, two pyrokinin peptides derived from the genome of Drosophila melanogaster (capa-3, and hugin), and two pyrokinins identified from the white shrimp Penaeus vannamei were very active in the pupariation assay, with threshold doses within the range of 0.1-5.0 pmol larva(-1). High activity was also detected for a related peptide ETH1 from Drosophila. All of these peptides share a C-terminal PRLamide, which is essential and sufficient for the activity. Interestingly, two other structurally related peptides from Drosophila--ETH2 and capa-1--which feature conservative changes (Ile and Val, respectively) at the C-terminal Leu position, were inactive within a physiological range of concentrations. It is clear that the receptor mediating the acceleration of puparial contraction behaviour is sensitive to the introduction of greater steric bulk at the C-terminal Leu position. The peptides that accelerated pupariation showed very similar patterns of muscular and cuticular activity.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号