Occurrence of L- and D-Crustacean Hyperglycemic Hormone Isoforms in the Eyestalk X-Organ/Sinus Gland Complex During the Ontogeny of the Crayfish Astacus leptodactylus
Laboratoire Génome, Populations, Interactions, Adaptation, UMR 5171, Equipe Adaptation Ecophysiologique et Ontogenèse, Université Montpellier II, Montpellier, France
Correspondence to: Dr. Céline Spanings-Pierrot, Laboratoire Génome, Populations, Interactions, Adaptation, UMR 5171, Equipe Adaptation Ecophysiologique et Ontogenèse, Université Montpellier II, Place E. Bataillon, CP 092, 34095 Montpellier Cédex 05, France. E-mail: pierrot{at}univ-montp2.fr
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Summary |
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Key Words: crustacea crayfish Astacus leptodactylus Eyestalk crustacean hyperglycemic hormone isomerization ontogeny
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Introduction |
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A variety of data are available on the eyestalk neuroendocrine centers in adults from a wide variety of decapod crustaceans (for reviews see Cooke and Sullivan 1982; Fingerman 1992
). The organization and the biochemical and physiological properties of the CHH neurosecretory cells of the XO/SG complex are also well documented (Van Herp and Van Buggenum 1979
; Jaros and Keller 1979
; Gorgels-Kallen and Van Herp 1981
; Gorgels-Kallen et al. 1982
).
The histogenesis of the eyestalk neuroendocrine centers, with special emphasis on the XO-SG axons, has been most often studied during the period of postembryonic development. Although the XO cell bodies were usually identified at the first larval stages, the SG was detected from the early post-hatch crustaceans (mainly in freshwater species) to the fifth larval stage (Rotllant et al. 1994,1995
). Through immunocytochemical (IHC) and in situ hybridization (ISH) techniques, well-defined neurohormone-producing cells have been detected during the postembryonic period: the CHH-producing system in juvenile Astacus leptodactylus (Gorgels-Kallen and Meij 1985
), cells producing proctolin-like substances in the larvae of H. americanus (Beltz and Krawitz 1987
; Beltz et al. 1990
), the MIH-producing system in the first zoeal stage of Carcinus maenas (Webster and Dircksen 1991
), CHH and GIH neuroendocrine cells in H. gammarus larvae and postlarvae (Rotllant et al. 1993
; Castany 1996
), and CHH-containing cells in two postembryonic stages of Procambarus clarkii (Escamilla-Chimal et al. 2001
).
However, studies dealing with the organogenesis of the eyestalk and the development of neurohormone-producing cells in the XO/SG complex during the embryonic phase of crustaceans are very scarce. In the crayfish, which undergoes direct development (postembryonic larval stages are suppressed), the genesis of one of the main neuroendocrine centers (XO/SG) appears important to investigate from the embryonic phase, while essential physiological processes develop. We therefore used light microscopy and immunocytochemical techniques to follow the histogenesis of the eyestalk and the localization and the appearance of two CHH enantiomers, L-CHH and D-Phe3-CHH, during the embryonic and postembryonic development of the crayfish A. leptodactylus.
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Materials and Methods |
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Fixation Procedure
Embryos, juveniles, and eyestalks from adult crayfish were fixed for 48 hr in Bouin's fixative (picric acid-saturated solution 75%; formaldehyde 20%; acetic acid 5%). Eggs membranes were opened with fine forceps to facilitate embryo fixation and the cephalothoraxes of juveniles were isolated under a dissecting microscope 8 hr after the beginning of the fixation. Samples were rinsed in 70% ethanol and fully dehydrated in a graded series of ethanol before embedding in Paraplast X-tra (Sigma-Aldrich; Saint-Quentin-Fallavier, France).
Light Microscopy
Serial transverse sections of embryos and juveniles, and longitudinal sections of eyestalks from adult, were cut at 7 µm on a Leitz Wetzlar microtome and collected on albuminated glycerine-coated slides. Sections were then deparaffinized in two baths of Histochoice Clearing Agent (Amresco; Solon, OH), rehydrated, and stained with Masson trichrome (Martoja and Martoja-Pierson 1967).
Anti-CHH Antisera
The primary antisera were two hapten-specific antisera discriminating between the N-terminal of CHH stereoisomers (anti-octapeptide antisera). These antisera were raised against two synthetic octapeptides with a sequence identical to the N-terminal part of the CHH isoforms of the lobster H. americanus: pGlu-Val-Phe-Asp-Gln-Ala-Cys-Lys for anti-octapeptide-L antiserum (anti-L-CHH) and pGlu-Val-D-Phe-Asp-Gln-Ala-Cys-Lys for anti-D-octapeptide antiserum (anti-D-Phe3-CHH). The production and characterization of the two antisera have been described by Soyez et al. (1998)(2000
).
Immunocytochemistry
Serial frontal sections of embryos and juveniles, and longitudinal sections of eyestalks from adults, were cut at 4 µm on a Leitz Wetzlar microtome and collected on poly-L-lysine-coated slides. Serial sections were then deparaffinized in two baths of Histochoice Clearing Agent (Amresco), rehydrated, and preincubated for 10 min in 0.01% Tween 20, 150 mM NaCl in 10 mM PBS, pH 7.3. They were then treated for 5 min with 50 mM NH4Cl in PBS and incubated for 10 min in a blocking solution [BS; 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 0.1% gelatin in PBS]. To identify the different CHH isoforms, a double immunofluorescence staining was applied to each slide. The sections were first incubated for 2 hr in a moist chamber at room temperature with 100 µl of a mix of both antibodies: guinea-pig anti-octapeptide-L serum diluted 1:200 and rabbit anti-octapeptide-D serum diluted 1:200 in PBS. After rinsing in BS (three times, 5 min), the slides were incubated for 1 hr in a dark moist chamber at RT with secondary antibodies diluted in 1% BSA in PBS: rhodamine TRITC-conjugated goat anti-guinea pig diluted 1:150 (Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories; West Chester, PA) and Alexa Fluor-conjugated goat anti-rabbit diluted 1:500 (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR). After extensive washes in BS (four times, 5 min), the sections were mounted in an anti-bleaching mounting medium (80% glycerin, 20% PBS, 2% N-propyl-gallate; Sigma-Aldrich). Control sections were prepared to determine the positively labeled cells and the putative autofluorescence of the tissues: they were treated as described above, except that the primary antisera were omitted.
Sections were examined with a fluorescent microscope (Leitz Diaplan coupled to a Ploemopak 1-Lambda lamp) equipped with two filter sets (570 nm and 488 nm to visualize rhodamine TRITC and Alexa Fluor, respectively) and a phase-contrast device.
Counting and Morphometric Analysis of Labeled Neurons
For counting and morphometric analysis, photographs of every eyestalk section displaying CHH-immunoreactive cell bodies in the XO were taken with a Leica DC 300F numeric camera mounted on the fluorescence microscope at x400 magnification. The number of labeled cells was counted on photographs of serial sections. On the same photographs, the maximal diameter of each labeled cell was measured using the Leica FW4000I software. The mean ± SD of the diameter and of the number of labeled cells was calculated.
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Results |
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The size of the crayfish eyestalk increases by 900% from the youngest metanauplius to the adult stage (Table 1).
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Localization of Immunoreactivity
During embryonic development from the metanauplius stage to embryos at EI 300 µm (Figures 3A3J), immunoreactivity to the anti-D-Phe3-CHH (in green fluorescence) remains negative (Figures 3B, 3D, 3F, 3H, and 3J), whereas the immunoreaction to the anti-L-CHH (in red fluorescence) is positive in a few XO cell bodies (Figures 3A, 3E, and 3G). The anti-L-CHH immunostaining of the tracts and of the presumptive SG is dim in the metanauplius (Figure 3C) but is brighter at EI 190300 µm (Figure 3I).
In embryos at EI 350 µm and 410 µm, in juveniles, and in adults, the immunoreactivity is positive for the two anti-CHH antisera in several perikarya of the XO neuroendocrine cells. These cells are located at the proximal side of each eyestalk in embryos (Figures 3K, 3L, 4A, and 4B) and in juveniles (Figures 4C and 4D), or they are typically clustered near the medulla terminalis in adults (Figures 4G and 4H). Immunostaining for the D-Phe3-CHH in the XO cells is notably weaker at EI 350 µm (Figure 3L) than at later stages. Two different stainings in the XO cell bodies have been observed from embryos at EI 350 µm to adults: the L-cells, which display a red fluorescence, i.e., staining by the anti-L-CHH alone, and the DL-cells, red and green fluorescence, attesting to labeling by both anti-CHH antisera.
The axon tracts between the neuroendocrine cells and the SG are strongly double-stained (Figures 4A, 4B, 4E, 4F, 4I, and 4J). In the SG, the immunostaining is positive and strong with both antisera, showing red and green aggregations (Figures 3M, 3N, 4E, and 4F). A double fluorescence is also observed close to the XO cell bodies in juveniles (not shown) and in adults (Figures 4K and 4L), whereas it has not been observed during embryonic development. This immunoreaction corresponds to the dendritic branches from the cluster of XO perikarya. When the immunoreactivity was positive in the SG, it was generally located on the external side (close to the yolk) between the medulla externa and medulla interna.
Counting and Morphometry of L- and DL-cells
The results of the morphometric study are summarized in Table 1. From the metanauplius stage to the embryos at EI 310 µm, the number of L-cells per eyestalk increases and then slightly decreases at EI 350 µm while the DL-cells appear. After hatching, the number of L- and DL-cells continues to increase, reaching 23.0 and 7.5, respectively, in adults. In embryos and juvenile I eyestalks, the L- and DL-cell perikarya are ovoid with large nuclei enclosed by a thin layer of cytoplasm, and their mean diameters remain constant (14 µm). In adults, the L- and DL-cells have a proportionally larger cytoplasm and a larger diameter (
30 µm) (Figures 4G and 4H). The two cell types are morphologically indistinguishable at all stages.
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Discussion |
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The existence of CHH enantiomers resulting from the isomerization of one amino acid residue in position 3 of the N-terminal fragment from the L- to the D-configuration has been demonstrated in adults of the lobster H. americanus (Soyez et al. 1994) and of several crayfish species such as Orconectes limosus (Soyez et al. 1998
), Procambarus bouvieri (Aguilar et al. 1995
), Procambarus clarkii (Yasuda et al. 1994
), A. leptodactylus (Serrano et al. 2003
), and Cherax destructor (Bulau et al. 2003
). In the present work, we have studied the ontogenetic pattern of occurrence of the two CHH stereoisomers in the eyestalk of A. leptodactylus. The L-CHH isoform was observed in the neuroendocrine cells of the XO/SG complex from the metanauplius stage to the adult. Immunostaining, intense in the perikarya but weak in the presumptive SG area at the metanauplius stage, showed that the synthesis and transport of this enantiomer start very early during embryonic development, even when the neurohemal organ is not yet well organized. The synthesis, axon transport, and storage of the D-Phe3-CHH in the neuroendocrine complex were observed from embryos at EI 350 µm only and in later stages, including the adult.
The results of the present immunocytochemical investigation on the localization of CHH in the eyestalk of A. leptodactylus complement previous studies on the identification of the CHH-producing system in juvenile and adult performed with a polyclonal anti-CHH Astacus antiserum (Van Herp and Van Buggenum 1979; Gorgels-Kallen and Van Herp 1981
; Gorgels-Kallen and Meij 1985
). CHH was visualized in some cell bodies of the medulla terminalis X-organ and in the bundle of their axons, which courses distally across the medulla terminalis and terminates in the SG. The organization of the sites of production, transport, storage, and release of CHH material is comparable in various groups of crustaceans, such as the Penaeidae (Laverdure et al. 1994
; Subramoniam et al. 1998
; Shih et al. 2003
), Caridea (Gorgels-Kallen et al. 1982
; Van Herp et al. 1984
; Sithigorngul et al. 1999
), Palinuridae (Gorgels-Kallen et al. 1982
; Marco and Gäde 1999
), Astacidae (Gorgels-Kallen et al. 1982
; Soyez et al. 1998
), and Brachyura (Jaros and Keller 1979
; Dircksen et al. 1988
).
In A. leptodactylus, the ratio of XO/SG complex L-cells to DL-cells increases from 2:0 to 6:3 during embryonic development and increases to 9:6 and 23:8 in juvenile I and in the adult, respectively. It is noteworthy that the number of DL-cells is proportionally important just before hatching and in early postembryonic stage. The physiological significance of this increase in D-Phe3-CHH production close to the hatching period is discussed below. The average diameter is 14 µm throughout embryonic and early postembryonic development and it reaches 30 µm in the adult. The CHH-cell diameter is remarkably smaller in the lobster embryo eyestalk (7 µm) compared with the crayfish (Rotllant et al. 1995
). The morphometric analysis is in agreement with previous studies on juveniles and adults of A. leptodactylus (Gorgels-Kallen and Meij 1985
; Gallois et al. 2003
) and is very close to the results reported on adults of the related crayfish species O. limosus (Gorgels-Kallen et al. 1982
; Soyez et al. 1998
,2000
). In H. gammarus, the number of CHH-cells increases progressively from 2 to 28 during embryonic development (Rotllant et al. 1995
), slightly declines in larval stage I (Rotllant et al. 1993
), and doubles in the adult (40 CHH-cells; Gorgels-Kallen et al. 1982
). Several authors have suggested that the increase in number of neurohormone-producing cells (CHH- or MIH-cells) during juvenile, larval, or postlarval development is caused by the differentiation of neuroblasts into neuroendocrine cells or by variations in neuropeptide gene expression in differentiated cells, rather than because of cell divisions (Gorgels-Kallen and Meij 1985
; Webster and Dircksen 1991
; Rotllant et al. 1993
).
Only a few studies have dealt with the occurrence of CHH or CHH enantiomers in the XO/SG complex of crustacean embryos. Using a polyclonal anti-CHH H. americanus antiserum in the European lobster H. gammarus, synthesis of CHH was detected from embryos at EI 114 µm (the mean EI at hatch for this species is 650 µm) (Rotllant et al. 1995). In the same species, Castany (1996)
showed a negative immunoreaction for both anti-L-CHH and anti-D-Phe3-CHH antisera in embryos at EI 100 µm and a positive immunoreaction for both antisera in embryos at EI 427 µm, but no data are available between these two stages. We report here that, in the eyestalk of A. leptodactylus, some neuroendocrine cell bodies have been labeled exclusively by anti-L-CHH antiserum (L-cells) or by both anti-L- and anti-D-Phe3-CHH antisera (DL-cells) starting at EI 350 µm. Such a co-localization has also been observed in adults of the same species by immunogold electron microscopy (Gallois et al. 2003
), of the crayfish O. limosus (Soyez et al. 2000
), and of the lobsters H. americanus (Soyez et al. 1998
) and H. gammarus (Van Herp 1998
). In DL-cells of A. leptodactylus, Gallois et al. (2003)
have demonstrated the presence of L-, D-, and DL-granules from the cell body to the SG, the percentage of L-granules decreasing and that of D-granules increasing throughout the transport. This observation indicates that the L to D isomerization occurs in the DL-cells' perikarya but also through the axons and in the SG. The DL-cells most probably derive from L-CHH-producing cells that acquire the ability to isomerize L-CHH during development. Another hypothesis is that non-producing CHH neurons start at a given time to produce CHH very rapidly isomerized in the D-isoform.
The presence of immunoreactivity in dendritic collateral branches close to the XO cell bodies observed in juveniles and adults of A. leptodactylus (this study) has also been reported for CHH in different crustacean groups (Dircksen et al. 1988; Subramoniam et al. 1998
; Soyez et al. 2000
) and for MIH in different crab species (Dircksen et al. 1988
; Watson et al. 2001
; Lee and Watson 2002
). These dendritic branches are classically considered as important regulatory input areas. In particular, Ollivaux et al. (2002)
reported in O. limosus close appositions between terminals of enkephalinergic neurons and dendritic branches of L- and DL-cells, suggesting a control via direct synaptic contacts.
Which Benefits in D-stereoisomerization? Why Does D-Phe3-CHH Occur Late During the Embryonic Development of A. leptodactylus?
Ten years after Montecucchi et al. (1981) discovered the first D-amino acid-containing peptide in a eukaryote, a dermorphin from the skin of the Brazilian frog Phyllomedusa sauvagei, "D-peptides" have been detected in several invertebrate groups, such as mollusks (Kamatani et al. 1989
) and arthropods (Heck et al. 1994
; Soyez et al. 1994
). Many studies have established that these D-peptides result from an enzymatic post-translational modification of one amino acid residue from the L- to the D-configuration during or after peptide chain biosynthesis (Fujimoto et al. 1991
; Heck et al. 1994
; Soyez et al. 1994
; Ollivaux and Soyez 2000
) and that they have differential biological effects compared with their L-counterparts (Yasuda et al. 1994
; Kreil 1997
; Serrano et al. 2003
).
CHH from the eyestalks of adult decapod crustaceans is known to be mainly involved in the regulation of carbohydrate metabolism. In this study we observed that the L-CHH is synthesized and transported starting at the embryonic metanauplius stage and that it is stored in a functional SG at EI 190 µm. These results indicate that L-CHH matures and is released rather precociously, probably to regulate a physiological function(s) that might be vital at the onset of embryonic development, such as control of glycemia.
More recently, studies have emphasized that CHH plays a direct or indirect role in crustacean osmoregulation. After the first demonstration of this function in H. americanus (Charmantier-Daures et al. 1994), the implication of a gut CHH-like peptide in osmoregulatory mechanisms at ecdysis has been reported in the crab Carcinus maenas (Chung et al. 1999
). Then a purified CHH from the sinus gland of the crab Pachygrapsus marmoratus was shown to increase Na+ influx in perfused gills (Spanings-Pierrot et al. 2000
). In addition, the neurohormone ITP isolated from different orthopteran insects, and showing a high structural homology with hormones of the CHH family (Soyez 1997
), stimulates ileal reabsorption of ions and fluid (reviewed in Phillips et al. 1998
; Macins et al. 1999
). Interestingly, two studies investigating differential effects of CHH isoforms on osmoregulatory parameters have revealed that the D-isomer was the most efficient one in the adult of two astacid crustaceans, the lobster H. americanus (Charmantier-Daures et al. 1994
) and the crayfish A. leptodactylus (Serrano et al. 2003
).
The ontogeny of osmoregulation has been studied in embryos of A. leptodactylus. The ability to hyper-osmoregulate and the presence of gill Na+-K+-ATPase, one of the main enzymes involved in ionoregulation, appear late in the course of embryonic development, corresponding to 9397% of the eye pigment development (Susanto 2000; Susanto and Charmantier 2001
). Interestingly, the synthesis, transport, and storage of the D-Phe3-CHH in the XO/SG complex start slightly earlier, i.e., at 85% of eye pigment development (this study). Because CHH is involved in osmoregulating processes in different crustaceans, and particularly because a stimulating effect of the D-Phe3-CHH on hemolymph osmolality and Na+ content has been demonstrated in adult A. leptodactylus, we can hypothesize that the occurrence of the D-Phe3-CHH is positively involved in the control of the ability to osmoregulate in crayfish late embryos. The occurrence of a functional neuroendocrine control (XO/SG and D-Phe3-CHH) would anticipate by a few days the onset of hyper-osmoregulation, occurring itself a few hours before hatching of the young juvenile crayfish in freshwater. During the very late embryogenesis of the shore crab C. maenas, new neurons in the nervous system also begin to express two CHH forms (X-organ variant or pericardial organ variant), and this peak of synthesis appears to be involved in the massive surge in CHH released immediately before larval eclosion (Webster and Chung 2003
). It is noteworthy that zoeae I of C. maenas are slightly able to osmoregulate at hatch (Cieluch et al. 2004
). Because their ability to osmoregulate increases during their postembryonic ontogeny, it would be worthwhile to study the expression of CHH over this period.
The advantage(s) of elaborating D-peptides is still an open debate. A first hypothesis is that the presence of a D-amino acid residue in the N-terminal part of a peptide may increase its resistance to proteolytic enzymes, thus extending its half-life. For example, the D-Ala2-dermorphin isolated from the skin of a frog is not hydrolyzed by aminopeptidases, whereas the L-peptide is rapidly degraded (Kreil 1997). The venom of the spider Agenelopsis aperta contains several calcium channel toxins, including w-aga-IVB (= D-Ser46-agatoxin) and w-aga-IVC (= L-agatoxin), the D-agatoxin being four times more efficient than the L-form (Heck et al. 1994
). The D-Phe3-CHH from the eyestalks of the crayfish O. limosus and A. leptodactylus shows a longer hyperglycemic effect compared with L-CHH (Keller et al. 1999
; Serrano et al. 2003
). A second postulate is that stereoisomerization may modify the affinity between the peptide and its receptors, owing to the change in the secondary structure of the peptide. This process would generate peptides with different specialized functions from one gene (Soyez et al. 2000
). For example, among several stereoisomers of achatin isolated from the African giant snail Achatina fulica (Kamatani et al. 1989
), D-Phe2-achatin (achatin-I) has a neuroexcitatory effect on the giant neurons of the snail, whereas its L-stereoisomer (achatin-II) does not possess biological activity and has not yet a defined role (Fujimoto et al. 1991
; Kamatani et al. 1991
; Kim et al. 1991
). The D-Phe3-CHH inhibits ecdysteroid synthesis like the MIH in Procambarus clarkii, whereas the L-CHH isomer has no effect on this process (Yasuda et al. 1994
). In eyestalkless A. leptodactylus, hemolymph osmolality and Na+ content increased after injection of D-Phe3-CHH, but no effect on osmolality and a much lower effect on ionic concentration were noted with L-CHH (Serrano et al. 2003
).
This study reports the entire pattern of occurrence of the L-CHH and the D-Phe3-CHH throughout the embryonic development of a freshwater crustacean. In summary, the L-isomer is synthesized early in the young Astacus leptodactylus metanauplius, whereas the D-enantiomer occurs late in the course of embryonic life. Crayfish embryos may start to isomerize CHH at the end of their development to generate a hormonal factor involved in osmoregulation and essential at hatching. Unlike marine or brackish water species larvae, in which the ability to osmoregulate generally occurs during the metamorphic transition (for review see Charmantier 1998), the freshly hatched crayfish juveniles are efficient hyperosmoregulators (Susanto and Charmantier 2001
). Because they hatch in freshwater and therefore must respond to the corresponding osmotic stress (massive water influx and ion loss), the osmoregulatory mechanisms and the (neuro) endocrine systems that regulate them are functional when the egg membranes open.
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Acknowledgments |
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Footnotes |
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