Literature DB >> 9344541

Serotonin plays an early role in the metamorphosis of the hydrozoan Phialidium gregarium.

D W McCauley1.   

Abstract

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 in Phialidium. 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 in Phialidium gregarium. Copyright 1997 Academic Press.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9344541     DOI: 10.1006/dbio.1997.8698

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Biol        ISSN: 0012-1606            Impact factor:   3.582


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