Abstract

BackgroundEcdysis is an innate behaviour programme by which all arthropods moult their exoskeletons. The complex suite of interacting neuropeptides that orchestrate ecdysis is well studied in insects, but details of the crustacean ecdysis cassette are fragmented and our understanding of this process is comparatively crude, preventing a meaningful evolutionary comparison. To begin to address this issue we identified transcripts coding for neuropeptides and their putative receptors in the central nervous system (CNS) and Y-organs (YO) within the crab, Carcinus maenas, and mapped their expression profiles across accurately defined stages of the moult cycle using RNA-sequencing. We also studied gene expression within the epidermally-derived YO, the only defined role for which is the synthesis of ecdysteroid moulting hormones, to elucidate peptides and G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) that might have a function in ecdysis.ResultsTranscriptome mining of the CNS transcriptome yielded neuropeptide transcripts representing 47 neuropeptide families and 66 putative GPCRs. Neuropeptide transcripts that were differentially expressed across the moult cycle included carcikinin, crustacean hyperglycemic hormone-2, and crustacean cardioactive peptide, whilst a single putative neuropeptide receptor, proctolin R1, was differentially expressed. Carcikinin mRNA in particular exhibited dramatic increases in expression pre-moult, suggesting a role in ecdysis regulation. Crustacean hyperglycemic hormone-2 mRNA expression was elevated post- and pre-moult whilst that for crustacean cardioactive peptide, which regulates insect ecdysis and plays a role in stereotyped motor activity during crustacean ecdysis, was elevated in pre-moult.In the YO, several putative neuropeptide receptor transcripts were differentially expressed across the moult cycle, as was the mRNA for the neuropeptide, neuroparsin-1. Whilst differential gene expression of putative neuropeptide receptors was expected, the discovery and differential expression of neuropeptide transcripts was surprising. Analysis of GPCR transcript expression between YO and epidermis revealed 11 to be upregulated in the YO and thus are now candidates for peptide control of ecdysis.ConclusionsThe data presented represent a comprehensive survey of the deduced C. maenas neuropeptidome and putative GPCRs. Importantly, we have described the differential expression profiles of these transcripts across accurately staged moult cycles in tissues key to the ecdysis programme. This study provides important avenues for the future exploration of functionality of receptor-ligand pairs in crustaceans.

Highlights

  • Ecdysis is an innate behaviour programme by which all arthropods moult their exoskeletons

  • The first consisted of central nervous system tissues (CNS: eyestalk ganglia [ESG], cerebral ganglion [Cerebral ganglia (CG)], and ventral ganglion [Ventral ganglia (VG)] comprising the fused sub-oesophageal [Sub-oesophageal ganglia (SOG)], thoracic [Thoracic ganglia (TG)], abdominal ganglia [Abdominal ganglia (AG)]); the second, pairs of Y-organs (YO); and the third consisted of inter-moult (C3–4) pairs of YOs and epidermis from the branchiostegite region of the carapace

  • Our analysis revealed that only 5 neuropeptides were differentially expressed across the moult cycle: carcikinin/ecdysis triggering hormone (ETH), crustacean hyperglycemic hormone-2 (CHH-2), crustacean female sex hormone (CFSH), crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP), and neuroparsin-3 (P < 0.05, false discovery rate (FDR) < 0.05; Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Ecdysis is an innate behaviour programme by which all arthropods moult their exoskeletons. We studied gene expression within the epidermally-derived YO, the only defined role for which is the synthesis of ecdysteroid moulting hormones, to elucidate peptides and G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) that might have a function in ecdysis. Manduca sexta, the neuropeptide corazonin (CRZ), a paralog of gonadotropin-releasing hormone, initiates the release of ETH from ‘Inka’ cells [8]. This is not the case in Drosophila and in some insects corazonin is entirely absent [9]. Our knowledge on the species-specific actions of ETH, EH, CCAP, and bursicon is under constant review, but the emerging picture is that whilst the functions of these neuropeptides are mostly conserved throughout insects, they may have subtly different roles in different taxonomic groups and at different developmental stages

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