Artículos de revistas
Functional conservation of clock output signaling between flies and intertidal crabs
Fecha
2011-12Registro en:
Beckwith, Esteban Javier; Lelito, Katherine R.; Hsu, Yun Wei A.; Medina, Billie M.; Shafer, Orie; et al.; Functional conservation of clock output signaling between flies and intertidal crabs; Sage Publications; Journal Of Biological Rhythms.; 26; 6; 12-2011; 518-529
0748-7304
Autor
Beckwith, Esteban Javier
Lelito, Katherine R.
Hsu, Yun Wei A.
Medina, Billie M.
Shafer, Orie
Ceriani, Maria Fernanda
de la Iglesia, Horacio O
Resumen
Intertidal species have both circadian and circatidal clocks. Although the behavioral evidence for these oscillators is more than 5 decades old, virtually nothing is known about their molecular clockwork. Pigment-dispersing hormones (PDHs) were originally described in crustaceans. Their insect homologs, pigment-dispersing factors (PDFs), have a prominent role as clock output and synchronizing signals released from clock neurons. We show that gene duplication in crabs has led to two PDH genes (β-pdh-I and β-pdh-II). Phylogenetically, β-pdh-I is more closely related to insect pdf than to β-pdh-II, and we hypothesized that β-PDH-I may represent a canonical clock output signal. Accordingly, β-PDH-I expression in the brain of the intertidal crab Cancer productus is similar to that of PDF in Drosophila melanogaster, and neurons that express PDH-I also show CYCLE-like immunoreactivity. Using D. melanogaster pdf-null mutants (pdf(01)) as a heterologous system, we show that β-pdh-I is indistinguishable from pdf in its ability to rescue the mutant arrhythmic phenotype, but β-pdh-II fails to restore the wild-type phenotype. Application of the three peptides to explanted brains shows that PDF and β-PDH-I are equally effective in inducing the signal transduction cascade of the PDF receptor, but β-PDH-II fails to induce a normal cascade. Our results represent the first functional characterization of a putative molecular clock output in an intertidal species and may provide a critical step towards the characterization of molecular components of biological clocks in intertidal organisms.