Abstract

Seven major peptides belonging to the crustacean hyperglycemic hormone family were purified from the sinus gland located in the eyestalk of the kuruma prawn Marsupenaeus japonicus, and their effects on vitellogenin gene expression were examined using the ex vivo ovary incubation system. Six molecular species of crustacean hyperglycemic hormone, Pej-SGP-I, -II, -III, -V, VI, and VII, displayed significant inhibitory effects on vg expression with almost the same efficacies, whereas Pej-SGP-IV (known as molt-inhibiting hormone) did not. Two chromatophorotropic peptides, red pigment-concentrating hormone and pigment-dispersing hormone, which were also present in the sinus glands, did not have a clear effect on the gene expression levels in this incubation system. These results suggest that the six crustacean hyperglycemic hormones are potentially capable of acting as vitellogenesis-inhibiting hormones in M. japonicus.

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