Regulation of growth and reproduction.

Author(s):  
A. G. de Vaufleury
1999 ◽  
Vol 343 (2) ◽  
pp. 355-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chenhui TANG ◽  
Weiqun LU ◽  
Geoffrey WAINWRIGHT ◽  
Simon G. WEBSTER ◽  
Huw H. REES ◽  
...  

Methyl farnesoate, the crustacean juvenoid, is synthesized and secreted from the mandibular organs of crustaceans under the negative control of the sinus gland-derived mandibular organ-inhibiting hormone (MO-IH). Previously we isolated and sequenced two isoforms, MO-IH-1 and MO-IH-2, differing by just one amino acid, from sinus glands of the edible crab, Cancer pagurus. We now report the isolation of cDNAs encoding MO-IH-1 and MO-IH-2 by a combination of reverse-transcriptase-mediated PCR in conjunction with 5′ and 3′ rapid amplification of cDNA ends (‘RACE’). Full-length clones of MO-IH-1 and MO-IH-2 encoded a 34-residue putative signal peptide and the mature 78-residue MO-IH sequences. Northern blot analysis of various tissues showed that MO-IH expression is confined to the X-organ (a cluster of perikarya within the eye). Southern blot analysis indicated that there are approx. 10 copies of the gene for MO-IH in C. pagurus. Additional Southern blotting experiments detected MO-IH-hybridizing bands in another Cancer species, C. antennarius. In support of this, an HPLC-radioimmunoassay analysis of sinus gland extracts of C. antennarius and C. magister also revealed MO-IH-like immunoreactivity.


Author(s):  
Jan A. Veenstra

AbstractInsulin and related peptides play important roles in the regulation of growth and reproduction. Until recently three different types of insulin-related peptides had been identified from decapod crustaceans. The identification of two novel insulin-related peptides from Sagmariasus verreauxi and Cherax quadricarinatus suggested that there might a fourth type. Publicly available short read archives show that orthologs of these peptides are commonly present in these animals. Most decapods have two genes coding such peptides, but Penaeus species have likely only one and some palaemonids have three. Interestingly, expression levels can vary more than thousand-fold in the gonads of Portunus trituberculatus, where gonadulin 1 is expressed by the testis and gonadulin 2 by the ovary. Although these peptides are also expressed in other tissues, the occasionally very high expression in the gonads led to them being called gonadulins.


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