Identification of an α-peptide in Haliotis rubra with homology to the Lymnaea α-CDCP spawning peptide
journal contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00authored byS Cummins, Peter Hanna
It is now understood that a combination of molluscan reproductive peptides are commonly cleaved from a large preprohormone and influence different aspects of spawning behavior. One type of reproductive peptide, known in Lymnaea stagnalis as [alpha]-CDCP, and in Aplysia californica as [alpha]-BCP, acts in egg laying via temperature-dependent autoinhibition or autoexcitation of neuronal cells. In our study, the expression of [alpha]-CDCP-like peptide in the blacklip abalone, Haliotis rubra, was identified by Western blots and immunocytochemistry, using an antiserum developed against [alpha]-CDCP. Western blots of total protein isolated from the central nervous system, cerebral and pleuropedal ganglia, as well as gonad and heptopancreas tissues of sexually mature adults, identified a protein of approximately 100 kDa as well as a range of smaller reactive peptides. This finding suggests that a reproductive [alpha]-peptide is probably synthesized from a single larger precursor protein. The larger peptides were also identified in Western blots of several abalone tissues, lmmunocytochemistry using the same antiserum showed the presence of immunoreactive axons in all the tissues studied, indicating synthesis or transport of products. The function of the abalone [alpha]-CDCP-like peptide is yet to be determined.