4.7 Article

Transcriptome Profiling of the Pacific Oyster Crassostrea gigas Visceral Ganglia over a Reproduction Cycle Identifies Novel Regulatory Peptides

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 19, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md19080452

Keywords

nervous system; transcriptome; neuropeptides; reproduction

Funding

  1. ANR project NEMO (Agence Nationale de la Recherche) [14CE02 0020]
  2. Council of the Normandy Region [RIN ECUME: 18E01643-18P02383]
  3. NEMO project
  4. European Union

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The study revealed that the neuropeptides involved in the regulation of reproduction in the Pacific oyster are diverse, with novel neuropeptide precursors identified. These precursors show stage-specific expression across different reproductive stages, indicating their involvement in hormone control and metabolic regulation.
The neuropeptides involved in the regulation of reproduction in the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) are quite diverse. To investigate this diversity, a transcriptomic survey of the visceral ganglia (VG) was carried out over an annual reproductive cycle. RNA-seq data from 26 samples corresponding to VG at different stages of reproduction were de novo assembled to generate a specific reference transcriptome of the oyster nervous system and used to identify differentially expressed transcripts. Transcriptome mining led to the identification of novel neuropeptide precursors (NPPs) related to the bilaterian Eclosion Hormone (EH), crustacean female sex hormone/Interleukin 17, Nesfatin, neuroparsin/IGFBP, prokineticins, and urotensin I; to the protostome GNQQN, pleurin, prohormones 3 and 4, prothoracotropic hormones (PTTH), and QSamide/PXXXamide; to the lophotrochozoan CCWamide, CLCCY, HFAamide, and LXRX; and to the mollusk-specific NPPs CCCGS, clionin, FYFY, GNamide, GRWRN, GSWN, GWE, IWMPxxGYxx, LXRYamide, RTLFamide, SLRFamide, and WGAGamide. Among the complete repertoire of NPPs, no sex-biased expression was observed. However, 25 NPPs displayed reproduction stage-specific expression, supporting their involvement in the control of gametogenesis or associated metabolisms.

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