Conservation of ecdysis-triggering hormone signalling in insects
it
an1,*
it
anová1,2
1
1 Institute of Zoology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Dúbravská
cesta 9, 84206 Bratislava, Slovakia
2 Institute of Medical Chemistry and Biochemistry, School of Medicine,
Comenius University, Sasinkova 2, 81108 Bratislava, Slovakia
3 Department of Zoology, Comenius University, Mlynská dolina B2,
84215 Bratislava, Slovakia
4 Departments of Entomology and Neuroscience, 5429 Boyce Hall, University of
California, Riverside, CA 92521, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: dusan.zitnan{at}savba.sk)
Accepted 23 January 2003
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Summary |
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Key words: Inka cell, ecdysis-triggering hormone, peptide, behaviour, insect, PETH, ETH
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Introduction |
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The discovery of homologous Inka cells producing ETH1 and ETH2 in
Drosophila provided evidence that this endocrine system is conserved
and therefore presumably vital to the life history of insects
(Park et al., 1999). The
importance of ETHs could be addressed in Drosophila through the use
of genetic tools to delete the eth gene. Production of genetic null
mutant flies carrying micro-deletions in the eth locus resulted in
severe defects and lethality at the first ecdysis. The fatal consequences of
hormonal deletion included failure both to perform the ecdysis behavioural
sequence and to inflate the new respiratory system. Virtually all flies died
at the time of the first expected ecdysis
(Park et al., 2002a
). These
findings establish an obligatory role for eth and active peptides
encoded by this gene and demonstrate how lack of a specific chemical signal in
a specialized endocrine system results in a lethal behavioural deficit.
With the importance of ETH signalling established, the question naturally arises as to what extent it functions generally in insect ecdysis. Therefore, in this paper we describe the morphology and function of Inka cells in representatives of all major insect orders and show that the hormonal content of these cells is released at each larval, pupal and adult ecdysis. Bioassays and immunoassays suggest that active peptide hormones from Inka cells of different insects are closely related to PETH and ETH and have interspecific functions in ecdysis. No other peptides have been detected in extracts of these cells. Our data show that the ETH signalling system is widespread in insects and indicate that different insects use similar mechanisms for regulation of ecdysis. Since disturbances in the hormonally regulated events are life-threatening, ecdysis represents an extremely vulnerable period in insect development that is repeated many times during ontogeny. This vulnerability offers opportunities for new approaches to control insect pests and disease vectors.
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Materials and methods |
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Larval stages of these insects were collected in the field or obtained in our laboratory colonies. Since larvae of aquatic insects were difficult to rear, tracheae from freshly collected animals were dissected and immediately processed for immunohistochemical staining. Other field and lab species were reared at 25°C and observed until they developed new cuticle (pharate stage) before larval, pupal or adult ecdysis. Tracheae from these pharate larvae, pupae or adults were then used for immunohistochemistry, enzyme immunoassays and bioassays. To detect the release of Inka cell peptides during ecdysis and to determine the presence of Inka cells after adult emergence, tracheae of several lab species were stained with the PETH antiserum 1-15 min after each ecdysis. These species are marked in the list above with an asterisk.
Bioassays
To determine biological activity in Inka cells of various insects, we used
tracheae from pharate adults of Nauphoeta, Acheta and
Pyrrhocoris, pharate pupae and adults of Tenebrio, pharate
larvae of Aedes and wandering larvae of Drosophila. Tracheae
of these species were dissected under phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), heated
at 90°C for 5 min, homogenized and centrifuged at 10 000 g
for 10 min. Supernatants containing active peptide hormones were injected into
pharate 5th instar larvae of Bombyx, and induced pre-ecdysis and
ecdysis contractions were observed under a dissection microscope. Latencies
from injection to initiation of pre-ecdysis and the durations of pre-ecdysis
and ecdysis were measured with a stopwatch.
Since peptide-immunoreactivity (IR) in Inka cells is depleted after ecdysis, we used tracheal extracts from freshly ecdysed adults of Nauphoeta, Acheta and Pyrrhocoris and fresh pupae and adults of Tenebrio as negative controls in our bioassays. Ecdysis was difficult to monitor in Aedes and Drosophila larvae, so we used extracts of entire larvae deprived of the CNS, gut and longitudinal tracheal trunks with attached Inka cells, which are known sources of active peptides. These extracts were injected into Bombyx pharate 5th instar larvae as negative controls in parallel with tracheal extracts from pharate animals.
Immunohistochemistry
For immunohistochemical identification of Inka cells in different insects
we followed a procedure described previously (it
an et al.,
2001). Briefly, tracheae of pharate larvae, pupae and adults from the insects
listed above were dissected under PBS and fixed overnight in 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS (pH 7.4). The tissue was washed with PBS0.3%
Triton X-100 (PBST), pre-absorbed with 5% normal goat serum and incubated in
the rabbit antiserum against PETH for 2 days, washed with PBST and incubated
overnight with the Cy3- or peroxidase-labelled goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin
G (IgG; Jackson Immunoresearch Lab., West Grove, PA, USA) diluted 1:1000 or
1:400, respectively. Cy3-labelled tracheae were then washed in PBST and
mounted in glycerol containing 4',6'-diamino-2-phenylindole (DAPI;
2 µg ml-1; Sigma, St Louis, MO, USA). Peroxidase-labelled tissue
was stained with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (DAB; Sigma)
and hydrogen peroxide. Several antibodies to insect, mollusc and vertebrate
peptides (Table 2) were used
for staining of sectioned Inka cells of Bombyx and Manduca
before and after larval, pupal and adult ecdysis. For single and double
immunohistochemical staining of these sections we followed the procedures
described by
it
an et al.
(1993a
,
1999
).
|
To determine if the myomodulin antiserum cross-reacts with ETH or
myomodulin-related peptide(s) in Inka cells of Drosophila, we used
fixed tracheae with attached Inka cells of 1st instar control CantonS larvae
and 1st instar eth mutants lacking ETH
(Park et al., 2002a). These
tracheae were incubated with the rabbit antiserum against myomodulin (diluted
1:1000), followed by incubation with the Cy3-labelled goat anti-rabbit IgG as
described above. Control experiments included pre-absorption of all antibodies
with their respective antigen (100 µmol l-1) overnight.
Pre-absorbed antibodies were applied on sections in parallel with normal
antibodies. Stained tissues were observed under a Nikon microscope (Eclipse
600) using a triple band pass filter for the fluorescent microscopy, Nomarski
differential interference optics for the light microscopy or a combination of
both and were photographed with a Nikon digital camera Coolpix 990.
Enzyme immunoassays
We used enzyme immunoassays with antisera raised against PETH (dilution
1:70 000), ETH (dilution 1:25 000), FMRFamide (dilution 1:30 000) and
myomodulin (dilution 1:100 000) to detect the possible presence of
corresponding peptides in Inka cell extracts from pharate pupae of
Bombyx and Manduca or wandering larvae of Musca and
Drosophila. Conjugates were prepared by coupling synthetic PETH, ETH,
FMRFamide or myomodulin to horseradish peroxidase (HRP; Sigma) with
glutaraldehyde (Harlow and Lane,
1988). Conjugates were used in the following dilutions:
PETHHRP (1:4000), ETHHRP (1:1500), FMRFamideHRP (1:200)
and myomodulinHRP (1:100). Enzyme immunoassays were performed as
described by
it
anová et al.
(2001
).
Peptide isolation and identification of the eth
gene
Tracheae from approximately 500 pharate adults of the cockroach
Nauphoeta and 30 pharate adults of Pyrrhocoris were
dissected under saline, homogenised in 90% methanol/9% water/1% acetic acid
and centrifuged at 10 000 g. Supernatants were fractionated by
reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) using a
Microsorb-MVTM C4 column, 300 Å, 4.6 mmx250 mm
(Rainin Instruments, Woburn, MA, USA) with a linear gradient of acetonitrile
(3-50% in 90 min) in constant 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid in water. PETH-IR and
ETH-IR fractions were identified with our antiserum against PETH by enzyme
immunoassay as described above
(it
anová et al.,
2001
).
The 38 amino acid sequences of Drosophila ETH1 and ETH2, including
processing sites, were used for a BLAST search (tblastn) to identify
eth in genomic blast page of Anopheles gambiae at the
National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI). The complete genomic
sequence of the putative Anopheles eth gene was identified using the
Softberry FGENESH gene prediction program
(Salamov and Solovyev,
2000).
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Results |
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Inka cells of all examined insect species showed a strong reaction with PETH antiserum within one day prior to ecdysis. All representatives of the Apterygota and Hemimetabola contained large numbers of Inka cells of variable size and shape distributed throughout the surface of the tracheae. A large number of small, oval Inka cells were found on tracheae in one representative of the Apterygota the silverfish Lepisma and in primitive aquatic Pterygota, including the mayflies Epeorus and Heptagena, the damselfly Callopteryx and the dragonfly Sympetrum (Fig. 1). Each lateral side of the dragonfly and damselfly larvae contained one major longitudinal tracheal trunk, which sent out a branching cluster of thin tracheae in each segment. These narrow tracheal branches were densely covered with small, oval Inka cells (Fig. 2A), with a lesser number occurring on the broad tracheal trunks (Fig. 2B). In the mayfly Epeorus, numerous oval Inka cells (either single or grouped in twos or threes) were scattered over the surface of narrow tracheae (Fig. 2C). The stonefly Perla contained only narrow tracheae with larger single or coupled Inka cells that had conspicuous cytoplasmic processes (Fig. 2D).
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Tracheae of cockroaches and crickets exhibited Inka cells of different sizes and morphologies, depending on whether they were associated with broad or narrow tracheae. In these insects, each segment contained two pairs of broad transverse tracheae (Fig. 1); one pair was attached to the heart and spiracles on the dorsal side, and a second pair was connected to the CNS and spiracles on the ventral side. Only narrow tracheae were attached to the gut and gonads. In the cockroach Nauphoeta, these narrow tracheae contained Inka cells with several cytoplasmic processes (Fig. 3A). On the other hand, only simple, oval Inka cells were widely scattered over the surface of the broad segmental tracheae (Fig. 3B). Very similar oval Inka cells were found on broad tracheae of Periplaneta and Locusta (not shown). In Acheta, two different cell types were identified on broad and narrow tracheae. Small cells with few cytoplasmic processes were attached to narrow tracheae on the gut and gonads and on narrow branches of transverse tracheal trunks (Fig. 3C). By contrast, large `astrocyte-like' Inka cells with numerous branching processes were distributed throughout the broad transverse tracheae (Fig. 3D). Similar Inka cells with elongated branching processes were found in the stick insect Eurycantha and the cockroaches Blabera and Phylodromica (not shown). The bugs Triatoma and Pyrrhocoris contained only narrow tracheae covered by numerous Inka cells with several cytoplasmic branches (Fig. 3EG).
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We observed a complete disappearance of PETH-IR in Inka cells of freshly ecdysed larvae and adults of Nauphoeta, Acheta and Pyrrhocoris (Fig. 3H). This is consistent with previous observations in moths and flies, where these cells release their contents at ecdysis. PETH-IR was also absent in tracheae of 1-2-week-old adults, suggesting that Inka cells may degenerate after adult ecdysis.
Many holometabolous insects examined exhibited a large number of small Inka cells widely distributed over the tracheal surface, as described above (Fig. 1). A more organized pattern of 8-9 pairs of segmentally distributed Inka cells associated with epitracheal glands was observed in one member of the Coleoptera, most Hymenoptera and all lepidopterans and dipterans investigated thus far (Fig. 1). Numerous small, oval or drop-like cells were attached to narrow tracheae of pharate larvae and pupae of primitive Holometabola, including the alderfly Sialis (Fig. 4A) and the antlion Myrmeleon (Fig. 4B). Within the Coleoptera, examples of both distributed and ordered Inka cell patterns were observed. Pharate larvae of aquatic beetles contained one long, broad tracheal trunk along each lateral side, from which narrow tracheal processes branched in each segment (Fig. 1). A large number of Inka cells with long cytoplasmic processes were attached to these branching tracheae. Single or coupled Inka cells were found in Graphoderus and Dytiscus (Fig. 4C), while Laccophilus contained paired cells (Fig. 4D). Pharate larvae, pupae and adults of most ground beetles contained a large number of scattered Inka cells with short processes. In Nebria, Melanotus and Dicronorhina, most of these cells were located on tracheae close to each spiracle (Fig. 1). In the mealworm beetle Tenebrio, two distinct Inka cell types were observed; large cells with a small nucleus and broad cytoplasmic processes and much smaller round or drop-like cells (Fig. 1). Usually, 4-6 large Inka cells were attached to broad tracheae near each prothoracic spiracle, while only 1-2 large cells were located near each abdominal spiracle. The number, shape and distribution of this cell type were similar in all pharate larval, pupal and adult stages. On the other hand, the small Inka cells showed considerable variation during development. In pharate larvae and pharate pupae, a group of 5-12 small cells with short cytoplasmic processes was attached to the major branching trachea close to each spiracle (not shown), while in pharate adults these cells were more numerous and scattered throughout the tracheal surface (Fig. 4E). Both cell types persisted after adult ecdysis and showed strong PETH-IR in 1-2-week-old adults (Fig. 4F). However, the number of small cells decreased to approximately 4-10 near each spiracle, and narrow cytoplasmic processes disappeared (Fig. 4F).
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The only coleopteran to exhibit segmentally organized sets of epitracheal
glands is the Colorado potato beetle Leptinotarsa. Nine pairs of
these glands, each composed of a large Inka cell and 2-3 smaller cells, were
individually attached to tracheae near each prothoracic and abdominal spiracle
of pharate larvae and pharate pupae (Fig.
1). Small gland cells disappeared during metamorphosis, with only
one pair of prothoracic and eight pairs of abdominal Inka cells present in
pharate adults (Fig. 5A), as
described in the moth Manduca
(it
an et al.,
1996
).
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Likewise, nine pairs of large Inka cells were stained in pharate larvae,
pupae and adults of most hymenopterans, including the sawfly
Trichiocampus (Fig.
5B), the ant Myrmica
(Fig. 5C) and the endoparasitic
wasp Coptera (not shown). Surprisingly, pharate larvae, pupae and
adults of the honeybee Apis contained numerous small, oval Inka cells
scattered on tracheae (Figs 1,
5D). The moths
Cameraria and Galleria and the butterfly Pieris
contained nine pairs of Inka cells arranged in oval or elongated epitracheal
glands (Fig. 1) similar to
those described in the moths Lymantria, Bombyx and Manduca
(Klein et al., 1999;
it
anová et al.,
2001
;
it
an et
al., 2002
). In the Diptera, 8-9 pairs of oval epitracheal glands
were segmentally distributed along the lateral tracheal trunks. These glands
contained one prominent Inka cell and 2-4 small cells. Examples of epitracheal
glands with immunoreactive Inka cells are shown in pharate larvae of the
mosquito Aedes (Fig.
4G) and the crane fly Tipula
(Fig. 4H). Since the small
gland cells degenerated during metamorphosis, only Inka cells were stained in
pharate adults, as shown in the black fly Simulia
(Fig. 5E) and the fruit fly
Drosophila (Fig.
5F).
PETH-IR invariably disappeared from Inka cells during larval, pupal and adult ecdyses in all holometabolous insects examined (Tenebrio, Leptinotarsa, Galleria, Bombyx, Aedes, Musca and Drosophila), indicating the release of hormones during shedding of the cuticle. In contrast to hemimetabolous insects, Inka cells of these holometabolous species persist after adult emergence and show strong PETH staining in 1-2-week-old adults. Fig. 4F shows an example of immunoreactive Inka cells in 1-week-old adult Tenebrio.
Biological activity of tracheal extracts
In previous studies, we showed that Inka cell peptides of moths and
Drosophila act on the CNS to induce the ecdysis behavioural sequence
in vivo and in vitro (it
an et al.,
1999
,
2002
;
Park et al., 2002a
). Our
observations of widespread PETH-IR in Inka cells throughout the Insecta led us
to test tracheal extracts from various unrelated insect species for
ecdysis-triggering activity in pharate larvae of Bombyx. In all
cases, these tracheal extracts induced pre-ecdysis, and in most instances
ecdysis behaviours, in Bombyx larvae
(Table 1). Each Bombyx
larva was injected with an extract containing 0.1 tracheal equivalents from
pharate adults of Nauphoeta or Acheta. Extracts from both
species induced pre-ecdysis contractions in 4-7 min, and 14 out of 17 animals
switched to ecdysis behaviour 44-80 min later. Tracheal extracts from
Pyrrhocoris and Tenebrio also elicited ecdysis behaviours
but were less effective. Injection of one tracheal equivalent of
Pyrrhocoris pharate adult or one tracheal equivalent of
Tenebrio pharate pupa induced pre-ecdysis behaviour in 8-17 min in 23
out of 24 Bombyx larvae. However, only five of 12 animals injected
with Pyrrhocoris extracts switched to ecdysis contractions 43-72 min
later, while Tenebrio tracheal extracts induced ecdysis behaviour in
only two of 12 larvae. Aedes tracheal extracts were potent inducers
of ecdysis behaviour. Injection of five tracheal equivalents from 3rd instar
larvae of Aedes induced pre-ecdysis in 6-10 min followed by ecdysis
contractions 30-60 min later in all Bombyx larvae (N=8).
Injection of Drosophila extracts (equivalents of tracheae from 5 or
10 wandering larvae) induced pre-ecdysis within 8-10 min in all
Bombyx larvae (N=12), and seven of these animals switched to
ecdysis behaviour 47-85 min later. These bioassays and the immunohistochemical
staining described above indicate that active peptides in tracheal extracts
are related to PETH and ETH.
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The specificity of the bioassay was checked by negative control experiments, which included injections of Bombyx pharate larvae with tracheal extracts of freshly ecdysed adults of Nauphoeta, Acheta and Pyrrhocoris or freshly ecdysed pupae and adults of Tenebrio. Inka cells of these animals lack PETH-IR. Separate sets of ten Bombyx larvae were injected with equivalents of 0.1 tracheae from Nauphoeta or Acheta or one tracheal equivalent from Pyrrhocoris or Tenebrio. In addition, two groups of seven and nine Bombyx larvae were injected with extracts containing equivalents of 5-6 Aedes or Drosophila larvae lacking the CNS, gut and Inka cells, respectively. These extracts invariably failed to induce pre-ecdysis or ecdysis behaviours in Bombyx larvae.
Isolation and characterization of ETH-like peptides in
Nauphoeta and Pyrrhocoris
We used enzyme immunoassay with PETH antiserum to isolate related peptides
and determine their relative amounts in RP-HPLC-fractionated tracheal extracts
of the cockroach Nauphoeta and the bug Pyrrhocoris. In
chromatograms of Nauphoeta tracheae, we detected four PETH-IR
fractions eluting at 27 min, 37 min, 47 min and 64 min
(Fig. 6). These fractions
contained 1.90±0.4 pmol PETH-IR per cockroach tracheal system
equivalent, 1.49±0.2 pmol cockroach-1 equiv.,
2.14±0.5 pmol cockroach-1 equiv. and 4.50±0.9 pmol
cockroach-1 equiv. (the total amount of PETH-IR peptides was
10±1.9 pmol cockroach-1 equiv.). These amounts represent the
mean ± S.D. of five samples, each containing tracheal extracts of 10
cockroaches. In tracheal extracts of Pyrrhocoris, we identified two
PETH-IR fractions eluting at 15 min and 23 min
(Fig. 7). These fractions
contained 1.35 pmol bug-1 equiv. and 2.14 pmol bug-1
equiv. (total 3.49 pmol bug-1 equiv.). These amounts represent the
mean of two samples, each containing tracheal extracts of 10 bugs.
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Identification of ETH in Anopheles gambiae
We used a fragment containing sequences of Drosophila ETH1 and
ETH2 to search for the eth gene in the genomic sequence of the
malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae. This analysis resulted in
identification of a highly homologous gene encoding two putative active
peptides, AngETH1 and AngETH2 (62% identity in the region for the DrmETH1 and
DrmETH2; Figs 8,
9). This gene was located on
the 2nd chromosome at position 25D28D. Anopheles eth is
interrupted by a short intron (Fig.
8) that is also found in Drosophila eth at the same
location (Park et al., 1999).
A putative ecdysone receptor response element (EcRE) was identified upstream
of the open reading frame. This element contains an imperfect palindromic
repeat of AGGTCA separated by AT at -473 to -495 (aggtcaattcacct;
Fig. 8), while the EcRE of
Drosophila is an imperfect direct repeat aggtcaggttagttca
(Park et al., 1999
). An
obvious homology of Drosophila eth with the putative Anopheles
eth (Fig. 9) suggests that
this mosquito gene plays an essential role in ecdysis, as described in
Drosophila (Park et al.,
2002a
).
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Neuropeptide antisera cross-react with Inka cell hormones
Using immunohistochemistry with antisera to a variety of invertebrate and
vertebrate neuropeptides, we detected strong reactions in Inka cells of
Bombyx and Manduca (Fig.
10; Table 2).
Strong neuropeptide IR was detected in Inka cells dissected 4-12 h prior to
initiation of the ecdysis behaviour, while ecdysis onset was associated with
size decrease of Inka cells and depletion or reduction of this staining.
Fig. 10 shows examples of
strong neuropeptide IR in Inka cells of pharate larvae, pupae and adults of
Bombyx, which is depleted or considerably reduced after each
ecdysis.
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PETH, ETH and all immunoreactive neuropeptides detected in Inka cells share
RXamide or PRXamide sequence motifs at carboxyl termini
(Table 3). Immunoreactivity
detected in Inka cells can be explained according to two alternative
hypotheses: (1) antibodies to these neuropeptides cross-react with PETH and
ETH or (2) Inka cells contain several other peptide hormones in addition to
PETH and ETH. To test these hypotheses, we used enzyme immunoassays to compare
reactions of antisera raised against PETH, ETH, FMRFamide and myomodulin in
RP-HPLC-fractionated extracts of approximately 1000 Inka cells from
Manduca pharate pupae. An antiserum raised against the entire
molecule of PETH showed strong immunoreactivity with a fraction containing
PETH (9 pmol Inka-1 cell;
it
anová et al.,
2001
), and a weaker cross-reactivity was detected in a fraction
containing ETH (0.5 pmol Inka-1 cell). The antiserum against the
ETH amino terminus reacted only with fractions containing ETH (7 pmol
Inka-1 cell) and its precursor forms, as previously described
(
it
anová et al.,
2001
).
|
Enzyme immunoassays with antisera raised against FMRFamide and myomodulin revealed very weak immunoreactivities in the same fractions containing PETH and ETH (Fig. 11) but failed to detect specific immunopositive fractions anywhere else in the chromatogram. Specifically, the FMRFamide antiserum cross-reacted only very weakly with the PETH fraction (3 fmol Inka-1 cell), while the myomodulin antiserum showed even weaker cross-reactivity in fractions containing PETH and ETH (0.9 fmol Inka-1 cell and 0.6 fmol Inka-1 cell, respectively). Detected amounts of FMRFamide-IR and myomodulin-IR are very close to the background levels, indicating that antisera raised against these peptides cross-react to a minor extent with PETH and ETH in enzyme immunoassays.
|
We also used immunohistochemistry and enzyme immunoassays to detect
FMRFamide- and myomodulin-related peptides in Inka cells of wandering larvae
of Musca and Drosophila. Inka cells of both flies failed to
react with the FMRFamide antiserum but showed strong immunohistochemical
staining with the myomodulin antiserum (not shown). However, enzyme
immunoassay with myomodulin antiserum showed only a very weak reaction, which
was close to background levels (0.3-0.5 fmol per entire tracheal system of one
larva), in tracheal extracts of wandering larvae of Drosophila and
Musca. Since myomodulin and Drosophila ETH1 share the same
RLamide carboxyl terminal sequence motif
(Table 3), it is likely that
the myomodulin antiserum cross-reacts with the carboxyl terminal of ETH1 in
fixed Inka cells. Therefore, reaction of the myomodulin antiserum was compared
in Inka cells of the control CantonS larvae and the deletion mutant line
eth25b, which lacks the eth gene
(Park et al., 2002a).
Wholemount immunostaining revealed strong myomodulin-IR in Inka cells of
control larvae but no staining in Inka cells of the eth mutant
(Fig. 12). These data
demonstrate that Inka cells lack myomodulin and that the myomodulin antiserum
cross-reacts with Drosophila ETH.
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Discussion |
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In contrast to our first descriptions of Inka cells in moths and flies,
which are organized in 8-9 pairs of epitracheal glands
(it
an et al.,
1996
; Park et al.,
2002a
), Inka cells in most insects form a diffuse and widely
distributed network over the surface of the tracheal system. In some insects,
we observed a tendency for Inka cells to associate as sets of 2-4, and two
distinct cell types were observed in Nauphoeta, Acheta and
Tenebrio. Only representatives of the Lepidoptera, Diptera and some
Coleoptera and Hymenoptera contain well-defined paired epitracheal glands in
prothoracic and abdominal segments. The basis for the switch from distributed
Inka cells of different size and shape to a more organized, discrete pattern
of large Inka cells associated with epitracheal glands and spiracles is not
clear at the present time, but we note that all these cell types invariably
release their hormonal content to initiate the ecdysis behaviours.
We found that Inka cells of many insects contain conspicuous cytoplasmic
processes. A function for these processes is not clear, but we speculate that
they may serve as release sites similar to processes identified in the gut
endocrine/paracrine cells (Sehnal and
it
an, 1996
). These processes increase the surface
area of each cell and may accelerate the release of peptides, which have to
reach relatively high concentrations in the hemolymph to induce the complete
ecdysis behavioural sequence
(
it
an et al.,
1999
).
Several bioassays in vivo and in vitro have shown that
PETH and ETH apparently act on targets in the CNS, resulting in the activation
of specific neurons and release of neuropeptide(s) and possibly other
neurotransmitters involved in the control of pre-ecdysis and ecdysis motor
programs (Baker et al., 1999;
it
an and Adams,
2000
; Park et al.,
2002a
). Inka cell peptides are unique in their ability to activate
central neuronal circuits for pre-ecdysis and ecdysis through the
bloodbrain barrier. Mechanisms of this activation are not known, but we
speculate that PETH and ETH receptors are expressed on the surface of specific
neurons projecting processes through the neural sheath, which may be
accessible to blood-borne peptides secreted from Inka cells. Recent progress
in identification of G-protein-coupled receptors for several neuropeptides in
Drosophila (Park et al.,
2002b
; Staubli et al.,
2002
) may provide valuable tools for isolation of ETH receptors
and identification of ETH targets in the CNS. Inka cell peptide hormones may
also act on other peripheral neurons on the surface of the gut
(Sehnal and
it
an,
1996
) and epidermis (Grueber
and Truman, 1999
) or on various endocrine cells and other organs.
Since Inka cells in most insects are distributed throughout the entire
tracheal system, released ETH homologues may easily reach these possible
targets.
Although Inka cells of hemimetabolous insects seem to degenerate after adult emergence, strong PETH staining was detected in Inka cells of 1-2-week-old adults of all holometabolous species tested. The functional role(s) of Inka cell peptides in adults is not known. PETH- and ETH-related peptide hormones may control programmed behaviours associated with reproduction or other functions. Alternatively, these peptides may not be released and may degenerate in ageing adults.
Identity of Inka cell peptides
Immunoassays and immunohistochemistry showed that Inka cells of a diverse
range of insects produce peptides related to PETH and ETH in moths and flies.
RP-HPLC fractionation of tracheae from Nauphoeta and
Pyrrhocoris yielded several PETH-IR fractions, which showed
biological activity upon injection into Bombyx larvae. Furthermore,
we identified the gene encoding putative ETH1 and ETH2 in Anopheles.
The structure of this gene and the peptide sequences encoded therein are
reminiscent of those identified in moths and Drosophila
(it
an et al.,
1996
,
1999
,
2002
;
Park et al., 2002a
). These
data support our hypothesis that peptides of the ETH family show high levels
of homology among various insects.
PETH and ETH identified in moths, Anopheles and
Drosophila share a common amino acid sequence motif (PRXamide; X=I,
L, M, V) with the insect and mollusc cardioactive peptides CAP2B,
SCPA and SCPB
(Huesmann et al., 1995;
Mahon et al., 1985
;
Morris et al., 1982
) and with
a family of insect neuropeptides including pyrokinins, pheromonotropic and
diapause hormones derived from the same gene
(Davis et al., 1992
;
Kawano et al., 1992
;
Sato et al., 1993
). The
amidated carboxyl termini of Inka cell hormones also show limited homology
with extended isoforms of FLRFamide produced in the insect CNS and gut
(Gäde et al., 1997
;
Kingan et al., 1997
),
myomodulins from mollusc CNS (Miller et
al., 1993
) and even vertebrate and invertebrate neuropeptides
related to Arg-vasopressin (van Kesteren
et al., 1992
), neuromedin U
(Park et al., 2002b
),
neuropeptide Y and pancreatic polypeptides
(Rajpara et al., 1992
;
Huang et al., 1998
). Therefore,
it is not surprising that antibodies to most of these peptides show strong
reactions in fixed Inka cells. This was noted previously with respect to
SCP-IR and FMRFamide-IR in Inka cells of Manduca and Bombyx
(
it
an et al.,
1996
; Adams and
it
an, 1997
).
A network of `peritracheal myomodulin' (PM) cells on the tracheal surface
of Drosophila and several other insects was described in an
immunohistochemical study using an antiserum to myomodulin
(O'Brien and Taghert, 1998).
The strong myomodulin staining observed in these PM cells disappeared at each
ecdysis. It was suggested that these cells are Inka cell homologues, and the
authors speculated that `myomodulin-like peptide(s)' was co-released with ETHs
to regulate different functions during insect ecdysis
(O'Brien and Taghert, 1998
).
However, no function of the PM cells has been described and no
myomodulin-related peptide(s) has been identified either in
Drosophila or in any other insects.
We used specific enzyme immunoassays to detect the possible presence of myomodulin- or FMRFamide-related peptides in RP-HPLC-fractionated extracts of 1000 Inka cells from Manduca and tracheal extracts of Drosophila and Musca. The antisera to myomodulin and FMRFamide show very weak immunoreactivity with PETH and ETH fractions in RP-HPLC chromatograms and fail to react with other specific fractions. This indicates that myomodulin and FMRFamide antisera cross-react with PETH and ETH. The absence of myomodulin-like immunoreactivity in Inka cells of the Drosophila mutant eth25b, in which the ETH gene has been selectively removed, confirms that the myomodulin antiserum cross-reacts with ETH. These data suggest that no myomodulin- or FMRFamide-related peptides are produced by Inka cells.
Our results have revealed important differences between immunoreactivity of neuropeptide antibodies in fixed cells using immunohistochemistry and in tissue extracts using enzyme immunoassays. We found that a number of antibodies to neuropeptides with an RXamide carboxyl terminus (Table 2) show strong immunohistochemical staining in fixed Inka cells. However, our enzyme immunoassays indicate that the immunoreactivity revealed by the same antisera in tissue extracts is much more specific, and successful binding of antibodies to respective antigen(s) requires a very conserved epitope. For example, the myomodulin antiserum showed strong cross-reactivity with PETH and ETH in fixed Inka cells, but very weak cross-reactivity with these peptides was detected in Inka cell extracts. On the other hand, a strong reaction of the PETH antiserum in both fixed Inka cells and tracheal extracts of several insects indicates that these cells produce peptides closely related to PETH and/or ETH. This is supported by interspecific biological activity of tracheal extracts from various insects.
In summary, we have shown that Inka cells of all insects tested form a highly specialized endocrine system on the tracheal surface, which produces peptides related to PETH and ETH. In spite of our efforts, no other biologically active or immunoreactive peptides have been identified in tracheal extracts containing Inka cells. Our data provide evidence that Inka cells of a diverse range of insects release PETH, ETH or closely related peptides at the end of each instar to activate the ecdysis behavioural sequence. We conclude that, although Inka cells of different insects are very variable in number and morphology, they have a conserved function in activation of the pre-ecdysis and ecdysis motor programs within the CNS.
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