| Literature DB >> 21088700 |
Abstract
Invertebrates are used extensively as model species to investigate neuro-endocrine processes regulating behaviors, and many of these processes may be extrapolated to vertebrates. However, when it comes to reproductive processes, many of these model species differ notably in their mode of reproduction. A point in case are simultaneously hermaphroditic molluscs. In this review I aim to achieve two things. On the one hand, I provide a comprehensive overview of the neuro-endocrine control of male and female reproductive processes in freshwater snails. Even though the focus will necessarily be on Lymnaea stagnalis, since this is the best-studied species in this respect, extensions to other species are made wherever possible. On the other hand, I will place these findings in the actual context of the whole animal, after all these are simultaneous hermaphrodites. By considering the hermaphroditic situation, I uncover a numbers of possible links between the regulation of the two reproductive systems that are present within this animal, and suggest a few possible mechanisms via which this animal can effectively switch between the two sexual roles in the flexible way that it does. Evidently, this opens up a number of new research questions and areas that explicitly integrate knowledge about behavioral decisions (e.g., mating, insemination, egg laying) and sexual selection processes (e.g., mate choice, sperm allocation) with the actual underlying neuronal and endocrine mechanisms required for these processes to act and function effectively.Entities:
Keywords: eggs; hermaphrodite; hormone; mollusc; neuropeptide; pulmonate; sexual selection; sperm
Year: 2010 PMID: 21088700 PMCID: PMC2981420 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2010.00167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Neuro-endocrine regulation of male and female reproduction in . (A) Schematic drawing of the involved ganglia of the central nervous system. The blue and red areas show, respectively, the neuronal clusters that are involved in male and female reproduction. The substances involved in male reproduction are also indicated in blue; the female ones are listed in red. com, cerebral commissure; icn, inferior cervical nerve; ni, nervus intestinalis; np, nervus penis; RN, ring neuron; RPeN, right pedal neurons; st statocyst. This figure is adapted from Jarne et al. (2010). (B) Overview of the identified neuropeptides and proteins involved in reproduction. SS stands for signal sequence, numbered Cs stand for different connecting peptides, all the other peptides can be found in (A) of the figure. See text and Table 1 for further details and references.
Central and peripheral location of neuro-endocrine substances involved in male and female reproduction of hermaphroditic freshwater snails.
| Sex | Transmitter | Ganglion | Neuron cluster | References | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | APGW | Cerebral | Anterior lobe | Li et al. ( | ||||
| Ventral lobe | Croll and Van Minnen ( | |||||||
| Ring neuron | Croll and Van Minnen ( | |||||||
| Pedal | Ib cluster | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||
| Peripheral | Sensory preputium cells | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||
| Conopressin | Cerebral | Anterior lobe | Smit et al. ( | |||||
| Ventral lobe | Croll and Van Minnen ( | |||||||
| Peripheral | Sensory preputium cells | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||
| C-terminally located anterior lobe peptide (CALP) | Cerebral | Anterior lobe | Li et al. ( | |||||
| DEILSR | Pleural and Parietal | Dispersed neurons | Van Golen et al. ( | |||||
| EFLRI | Cerebral | Ventral lobe | Bright et al. ( | |||||
| FLRF | Cerebral | Ventral lobe | Bright et al. ( | |||||
| FMRF | Cerebral | Ventral lobe | Schott and Boer ( | |||||
| FVRIs | Cerebral | Anterior lobe | El Filali et al. ( | |||||
| Pleural and Parietal | Dispersed neurons | |||||||
| Pedal | Ib cluster | |||||||
| G/SDPFLRF | Pleural and Parietal | Dispersed neurons | Van Golen et al. ( | |||||
| Gonadotropin releasing hormone | Cerebral | Ventral lobe | Young et al. ( | |||||
| (GnRH) | Lateral lobes | |||||||
| Lymnaea inhibitory peptides (LIP A, B, C) | Cerebral | Ventral lobe | Van Golen et al. ( | |||||
| Pleural and Parietal | Dispersed neurons | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||
| Peripheral | Sensory preputium cells | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||
| Lymnaea neuropeptide Y (LyNPY) | Cerebral | Anterior lobeVentral lobe | Croll and Van Minnen ( | |||||
| Pleural and Parietal | Dispersed neurons | |||||||
| Pedal | Ib cluster | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||
| Myomodulins | Cerebral Pedal | Ventral lobe Ib cluster | Li et al. ( | |||||
| Pedal peptide (PP) | Cerebral | Anterior lobe | Croll and Van Minnen ( | |||||
| Ventral lobe | ||||||||
| Pleural and Parietal | Dispersed neurons | |||||||
| Peripheral | Sensory preputium cells | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||
| pQFYRI | Cerebral | Ventral lobe | Bright et al. ( | |||||
| SEEPLY | Cerebral | Ventral lobe | Bright et al. ( | |||||
| Serotonin (5HT) | Pedal | Ventral lobe | Kemenes et al. ( | |||||
| Cerebral | Ib cluster | Elekes et al. ( | ||||||
| Female | 1788Da: HF(FH)FYGPYDVFQRDV | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Jiménez et al. ( | ||||
| 5895Da | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Jiménez et al. ( | |||||
| Amino terminal peptide (Nt) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Calfluxin (CaFl) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Carboxyl terminal peptide (CTP) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Caudodorsal cell hormone (CDCH) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Caudodorsal cell peptide α (α-CDCP) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Caudodorsal cell peptide β1 (β1-CDCP) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Caudodorsal cell peptide β2 (β2-CDCP) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Caudodorsal cell peptide β3 (β3-CDCP) | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| Dorsal body hormone (DBH) | Supracerebral | Dorsal bodies | Joosse ( | |||||
| LFRF | Cerebral | Lateral lobes | Hoek et al. ( | |||||
| Gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) | Cerebral | Lateral lobes | Young et al. ( | |||||
| γ-Peptide | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| δ-Peptide | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( | |||||
| ε-Peptide | Cerebral | Caudodorsal cells | Geraerts et al. ( |
Pattern of innervation by fibers containing the different transmitters involved in male reproduction of hermaphroditic freshwater snails.
| Transmitter | innervation pattern | References | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| np | PRM | PP | PE | VD | pace. | PG | SD | HD | SV | OO | ||
| APGW | + | + | + | + | + | + | Van Golen et al. ( | |||||
| Conopressin | + | + | + | + | + | Van Golen et al. ( | ||||||
| C-terminally located anterior lobe peptide (CALP) | ||||||||||||
| DEILSR | + | + | De Lange et al. ( | |||||||||
| EFLRI | + | + | + | Bright et al. ( | ||||||||
| FLRF | + | + | + | Bright et al. ( | ||||||||
| FMRF | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | Schott and Boer ( | ||||
| FVRIs | + | + | + | El Filali et al. ( | ||||||||
| G/SDPFLRF | ||||||||||||
| Gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) | + | Young et al. ( | ||||||||||
| Lymnaea inhibitory peptides (LIP A, B, C) | + | + | + | + | + | + | Smit et al. ( | |||||
| Lymnaea neuopeptide Y (LyNPY) | + | + | De Lange et al. ( | |||||||||
| Myomodulins | + | + | Li et al. ( | |||||||||
| Pedal peptide (PP) | + | De Lange et al. ( | ||||||||||
| pQFYRI | + | + | + | Bright et al. ( | ||||||||
| SEEPLY | + | + | + | Bright et al. ( | ||||||||
| Serotonin (5HT) | + | + | + | Croll and Chiasson ( | ||||||||
HD, hermaphroditic duct; np, nervus penis; OO, oothecal gland; pace, pacemaker area of vas deferens; PE, penis; PG, prostate gland; PP, preputium; PRM, preputial retractor muscle; SD, sperm duct; SV, seminal vesicles; VD, vas deferens. Locations with a plus (+) indicate that nerve fibers containing thetransmitter have been detected
Figure 2Reproductive morphology and behavior of . (A) General morphology of reproductive system and gamete movement. Schematic representation of the reproductive morphology. The blue dotted lines and arrows indicate the route that the snail's own sperm (autosperm) take after they are produced for storage (in the SV) and subsequently transfer to a partner. The red dotted lines and arrows indicate the fate of received sperm (allosperm) within the female tract. All the organs are indicated with capital letters. The different components of the egg mass are indicated in small letters, and their origin is indicated with an black arrow. The red solid lines indicate the course of the eggs during packaging in the female tract. AD, allosperm duct; AG, albumen gland; BC, bursa copulatrix; C, carrefour/fertilization pouch; fert., fertilization; HD, hermaphroditic duct; M, muciparous gland; me, membrana externa; mi, membrana interna; o, oocyte; O, oothecal gland; OT, ovotestis; P, penis; PCO, pars contorta; PE, preputium; pf, perivitellin fluid; PG, prostate gland; SD, sperm duct; sf, seminal fluid; SV, seminal vesicles; tc, tunica capsulis; ti, tunica interna; V, vaginal duct; VD, vas deferens. (B) Copulation behavior. The drawings show the different stages of male courtship and insemination behavior. Copulation starts with mounting (1) on the shell. For some 5 min, the sperm donor then performs counterclockwise circling (2), first toward the shell's tip and then toward its margin. It then takes on average 17 min from positioning (3) to intromission (4), during which eversion of and probing (5) with the preputium occur. Once intromission (6) is reached, an average insemination takes 35 min. The sperm donor is displayed in black, the sperm recipient in gray. (C) Egg-laying behavior. The drawings show the different stages of female reproductive behavior, i.e., egg laying. The behavior is redrawn from Ter Maat et al. (1987). Egg laying starts with a resting phase (1) of on average 40 min, during which locomotion stops, the shell is held still and slightly pulled forward over the tentacles and no rasping occurs. During the turning phase (2), lasting around 60 min, locomoting starts again, the shell is turned back and forth by 90° and the surface is rasped. Oviposition (3) usually lasts about 10 min during which the animal continues rasping, but stops shell turning and hardly moves. During inspection (4) the animal crawls along the mass for up to 30 min without rasping or shell turning. The panels are adapted from Jarne et al. (2010).
Effects of the neuro-endocrine substances involved in male and female reproduction of hermaphroditic freshwater snails.
| Sex | Transmitter | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male | APGW | Eversion of preputium | De Boer et al. ( |
| Relaxation of preputium retractor muscles | Croll et al. ( | ||
| Inhibition of excitatory effect of conopressin | Van Golen et al. ( | ||
| Hyperpolarization of CDCs and LGCs | Croll et al. ( | ||
| Conopressin | Stimulation of vas deferens’ contractions | Van Golen et al. ( | |
| Inhibition of CDC activity | Van Kesteren et al. ( | ||
| C-terminally located Anterior Lobe Peptide (CALP) | Unknown | ||
| DEILSR | Unknown | ||
| EFLRI | Unknown | ||
| FLRF | Contraction of preputium retractor muscles | Van Golen et al. ( | |
| FMRF | Eversion of preputium | Muschamp and Fong ( | |
| Contraction of preputium retractor muscles | Van Golen et al. ( | ||
| Inhibition of CDC activity | Brussaard et al. ( | ||
| FVRIs | Inhibition of vas deferens’ contractions | El Filali et al. ( | |
| G/SDPFLRF | Relaxation of preputium retractor muscles | Van Golen et al. ( | |
| Gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) | Unknown | ||
| Lymnaea inhibitory peptides (LIP A, B, C) | Relaxation of preputium retractor muscles | Li et al. ( | |
| Reduction of amplitude of preputium retractor muscles contractions | Van Golen et al. ( | ||
| Lymnaea neuropeptide Y (LyNPY) | Relaxation of preputium retractor muscles | Li et al. ( | |
| Inhibition of egg laying and reduction of growth | De Jong-Brink et al. ( | ||
| Myomodulins | Relaxation of preputium retractor muscles | Li et al. ( | |
| Modulation of amplitude of preputium retractor muscles contractions | Van Golen et al. ( | ||
| Pedal peptide (PP) | Unknown | ||
| pQFYRI | Unknown | ||
| SEEPLY | Unknown | ||
| Serotonin (5HT) | Contraction of preputium retractor muscles | Croll and Chiasson ( | |
| Increase in egg laying | Manger et al. ( | ||
| Female | 1788Da: HF(FH)FYGPYDVFQRDV | Unknown | |
| 5895Da | Unknown | ||
| Amino terminal peptide (Nt) | Unknown | ||
| Calfluxin (CaFl) | Influx of Calcium into mitochondria of albumen gland | Dictus et al. ( | |
| Antagonized by schistosomin | De Jong-Brink et al. ( | ||
| Carboxyl terminal peptide (CTP) | Unknown | ||
| Caudodorsal cell hormone (CDCH) | Initiation of ovulation (and thus egg laying behavior) | Ter Maat et al. ( | |
| Inhibition of right pedal motor neurons | Ter Maat et al. ( | ||
| (RPeN) | Ter Maat et al. ( | ||
| Local autoexcitation of CDCs | Wijdenes et al. ( | ||
| Stimulation of perivitellin fluid production | Jansen and Ter Maat ( | ||
| Inhibition of Ring neuron | |||
| Caudodorsal cell peptide α (α-CDCP) | Local autoexcitation of CDCs | Ter Maat et al. ( | |
| Excitation of motor neurons involved in shell movements and buccal rasping | Hermann et al. ( | ||
| Caudodorsal cell peptide β1 (β1-CDCP) | Unknown | ||
| Caudodorsal cell peptide β2 (β2-CDCP) | Unknown | ||
| Caudosorsal cell peptide β3 (β3-CDCP) | Excitation of motor neurons involved in locomotion, shell movements and buccal rasping | Hermann et al. ( | |
| Dorsal body hormone (DBH) | Inhibition of vitellogenesis | Geraerts and Joosse ( | |
| Stimulation of growth and development of female accessory sex organs | Geraerts and Joosse ( | ||
| Stimulation of perivitellin fluid production | Wijdenes et al. ( | ||
| Gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) | Unknown | ||
| LFRF | Inhibition of CDC and LGC activity | Hoek et al. ( | |
| γ-peptide | Unknown | ||
| δ-peptide | Unknown | ||
| ε-peptide | Unknown |