Abstract

Neuropeptides are ancient neuronal signaling molecules that have diversified across Cnidaria (e.g., jellyfish, corals, and sea anemones) and its sister group Bilateria (e.g., vertebrates, insects, and worms). Over the course of neuropeptide evolution emerged lineage-specific neuropeptides, but their roles in the evolution and diversification of nervous system function remain enigmatic. As a step toward filling in this knowledge gap, we investigated the expression pattern of a cnidarian-specific neuropeptide—RPamide—during the development of the starlet sea anemone Nematostella vectensis, using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. We show that RPamide precursor transcripts first occur during gastrulation in scattered epithelial cells of the aboral ectoderm. These RPamide-positive epithelial cells exhibit a spindle-shaped, sensory-cell-like morphology, and extend basal neuronal processes that form a nerve net in the aboral ectoderm of the free-swimming planula larva. At the aboral end, RPamide-positive sensory cells become integrated into the developing apical organ that forms a bundle of long cilia referred to as the apical tuft. Later during planula development, RPamide expression becomes evident in sensory cells in the oral ectoderm of the body column and pharynx, and in the developing endodermal nervous system. At metamorphosis into a polyp, the RPamide-positive sensory nerve net in the aboral ectoderm degenerates by apoptosis, and RPamide expression begins in ectodermal sensory cells of growing oral tentacles. In addition, we find that the expression pattern of RPamide in planulae differs from that of conserved neuropeptides that are shared across Cnidaria and Bilateria, indicative of distinct functions. Our results not only provide the anatomical framework necessary to analyze the function of the cnidarian-specific neuropeptides in future studies, but also reveal previously unrecognized features of the sea anemone nervous system—the apical organ neurons of the planula larva, and metamorphosis-associated reorganization of the ectodermal nervous system.

Highlights

  • Neuropeptides are short polypeptide hormones that are generated from a larger precursor protein via proteolytic cleavage in neurons and neuroendocrine cells [reviewed in [1]]

  • It has been previously reported that the genome of the starlet sea anemone N. vectensis contains two RPamideprecursor genes [Nv37852 and Nv244953; [36]]

  • We reported the expression pattern of a cnidarianspecific neuropeptide, RPamide, during development of the starlet sea anemone N. vectensis

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Summary

Introduction

Neuropeptides are short polypeptide hormones that are generated from a larger precursor protein via proteolytic cleavage in neurons and neuroendocrine cells [reviewed in [1]]. In an attempt to better understand how the primordial nervous system may have functioned, efforts have been directed toward resolving deeply conserved functions of neuropeptides that are shared across Cnidaria and Bilateria. These studies suggest a likely ancestral role of deeply conserved Wamide neuropeptides in modulating life cycle transition [4,5,6]. As a step toward understanding the role of lineage-specific neuropeptides in the evolution of neural function in Cnidaria, we investigated the expression pattern of a cnidarian-specific neuropeptide— RPamide—during development of the starlet sea anemone Nematostella vectensis

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