| Literature DB >> 29358214 |
Noriyo Takeda1,2, Yota Kon3, Gonzalo Quiroga Artigas4, Pascal Lapébie4, Carine Barreau4, Osamu Koizumi5, Takeo Kishimoto2, Kazunori Tachibana2, Evelyn Houliston6, Ryusaku Deguchi7.
Abstract
Oocyte meiotic maturation is crucial for sexually reproducing animals, and its core cytoplasmic regulators are highly conserved between species. By contrast, the few known maturation-inducing hormones (MIHs) that act on oocytes to initiate this process are highly variable in their molecular nature. Using the hydrozoan jellyfish species Clytia and Cladonema, which undergo oocyte maturation in response to dark-light and light-dark transitions, respectively, we deduced amidated tetrapeptide sequences from gonad transcriptome data and found that synthetic peptides could induce maturation of isolated oocytes at nanomolar concentrations. Antibody preabsorption experiments conclusively demonstrated that these W/RPRPamide-related neuropeptides account for endogenous MIH activity produced by isolated gonads. We show that the MIH peptides are synthesised by neural-type cells in the gonad, are released following dark-light/light-dark transitions, and probably act on the oocyte surface. They are produced by male as well as female jellyfish and can trigger both sperm and egg release, suggesting a role in spawning coordination. We propose an evolutionary link between hydrozoan MIHs and the neuropeptide hormones that regulate reproduction upstream of MIHs in bilaterian species.Keywords: Cnidaria; Hydrozoan; Meiosis; Neuropeptide; Oocyte maturation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29358214 DOI: 10.1242/dev.156786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Development ISSN: 0950-1991 Impact factor: 6.868