Abstract

To comprehensively characterize the metabolic roles of crustacean hyperglycemic hormone (CHH), metabolites in two CHH target tissues of the crayfish Procambarus clarkii, whose levels were significantly different between CHH knockdown and control (saline-treated) animals, were analyzed using bioinformatics tools provided by an on-line analysis suite (MetaboAnalyst). Analysis with Metabolic Pathway Analysis (MetPA) indicated that in the muscle Glyoxylate and dicarboxylate metabolism, Nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism, Alanine, aspartate and glutamate metabolism, Pyruvate metabolism, and Nitrogen metabolism were significantly affected by silencing of CHH gene expression at 24 hours post injection (hpi), while only Nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism remained significantly affected at 48 hpi. In the hepatopancreas, silencing of CHH gene expression significantly impacted, at 24 hpi, Pyruvate metabolism and Glycolysis or gluconeogenesis, and at 48 hpi, Glycine, serine and threonine metabolism. Moreover, analysis using Metabolite Set Enrichment Analysis (MSEA) showed that many metabolite sets were significantly affected in the muscle at 24hpi, including Ammonia recycling, Nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism, Pyruvate metabolism, Purine metabolism, Warburg effect, Citric acid cycle, and metabolism of several amino acids, and at 48 hpi only Nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism, Glycine and serine metabolism, and Ammonia recycling remained significantly affected. In the hepatopancreas, MSEA analysis showed that Fatty acid biosynthesis was significantly impacted at 24 hpi. Finally, in the muscle, levels of several amino acids decreased significantly, while those of 5 other amino acids or related compounds significantly increased in response to CHH gene silencing. Levels of metabolites related to nucleotide metabolism significantly decreased across the board at both time points. In the hepatopancreas, the effects were comparatively minor with only levels of thymine and urea being significantly decreased at 24 hpi. The combined results showed that the metabolic effects of silencing CHH gene expression were far more diverse than suggested by previous studies that emphasized on carbohydrate and energy metabolism. Based on the results, metabolic roles of CHH on the muscle and hepatopancreas are suggested: CHH promotes carbohydrate utilization in the hepatopancreas via stimulating glycolysis and lipolysis, while its stimulatory effect on nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism plays a central role in coordinating metabolic activity in the muscle with diverse and wide-ranging consequences, including enhancing the fluxes of glycolysis, TCA cycle, and pentose phosphate pathway, leading to increased ATP supply and elevated protein and nucleic acid turnovers.

Highlights

  • Crustacean hyperglycemic hormone (CHH) is a polypeptide hormone originally identified in the X-organ/sinus gland (XO/SG) complex of the eyestalks [1,2]

  • Glycogen mobilization in two CHH target tissues has been shown to be stimulated by CHH through regulating activity of the enzymes involved in glycogen metabolism [28,29,30,31,32]; other studies suggested that CHH stimulates glycolytic flux by increasing the availability of glycolysis substrate [22, 33]

  • Combined data derived from Metabolic Pathway Analysis (MetPA) and Metabolite Set Enrichment Analysis (MSEA) revealed that, in the muscle nucleotide metabolism was severely reduced, likely due to a negatively impacted pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), and amino acid metabolism significantly affected that would likely result in slowing down protein synthesis, while in the hepatopancreas fatty acid biosynthesis was significantly affected

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Summary

Introduction

Crustacean hyperglycemic hormone (CHH) is a polypeptide hormone originally identified in the X-organ/sinus gland (XO/SG) complex of the eyestalks [1,2]. Biochemical studies of CHHs isolated from various decapod crustaceans showed they are of 72–73 amino acid residues in length, with 3 disulfide bridges formed by 6 highly position-conserved cysteine residues [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]; peptide sequencing analyses indicated that CHH is N- and C-terminally blocked; the C-terminal amide was found critical for its hyperglycemic activity [10,11,12,13,14] These and subsequent molecular studies [15,16,17] have established that CHH, being a prototypical member, belong to a family of polypeptide hormones, the CHH family, which includes molt-inhibiting hormone (MIH), vitellogenesis-inhibiting hormone (VIH), and mandibular organ-inhibiting hormone (MOIH), and insect ion transport peptide (ITP) [18,19,20,21]. A complete profile of CHH metabolic function is presented and discussed

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