Abstract

Several cardioactive peptides have been identified in insects and most of them are likely to act on the heart as neurohormones. Here we have investigated the cardioactive properties of members of a family of insect tachykinin-related peptides (TRPs) in heterologous bioassays with two coleopteran insects, Tenebrio molitor and Zophobas atratus. Their effects were compared with the action of the pentapeptide proctolin. We tested the cardiotropic activity of LemTRP-4 isolated from the midgut of the cockroach Leucophaea maderae, CavTK-I and CavTK-II isolated from the blowfly Calliphora vomitoria. The semi-isolated hearts of the two coleopteran species were strongly stimulated by proctolin. We observed a dose dependent increase in heartbeat frequency (a positive chronotropic effect) and a decrease in amplitude of contractions (a negative inotropic effect). In both beetles the TRPs are less potent cardiostimulators and exert lower maximal frequency responses than proctolin. LemTRP-4 applied at 10 −9–10 −6 M was cardiostimulatory in both species inducing an increase of heart beat frequency. The amplitude of contractions was stimulated only in Z. atratus. CavTK-I and CavTK-II also exerted cardiostimulatory effects in Z. atratus at 10 −9–10 −6 M. Both peptides stimulated the frequency, but only CavTK-II increased the amplitude of the heart beat. In T. molitor, however, the CavTKs induced no significant effect on the heart. Immunocytochemistry with antisera to the locust TRPs LomTK-I and LomTK-II was employed to identify the source of TRPs acting on the heart. No innervation of the heart by TRP immunoreactive axons could detected, instead it is possible that TRPs reach the heart by route of the circulation. The likely sources of circulating TRPs in these insects are TRP-immunoreactive neurosecretory cells of the median neurosecretory cell group in the brain with terminations in the corpora cardiaca and endocrine cells in the midgut. In conclusion, LemTRP-4, CavTK-I and CavTK-II are less potent cardiostimulators than proctolin and also exert stimulatory rather than inhibitory action on amplitude of contractions. The differences in the responses to proctolin and TRPs suggest that the peptides regulate heart activity by different mechanisms.

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