Author:
MONEYPENNY C. G.,KRESHCHENKO N.,MOFFETT C. L.,HALTON D. W.,DAY T. A.,MAULE A. G.
Abstract
The physiological effects of selected classical transmitters and FMRFamide-related peptides (FaRPs) on dispersed muscle
fibres from the marine turbellarian, Procerodes littoralis have been examined. Confocal scanning laser microscopy coupled
with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) or tetramethylrhodamine (TRITC)-labelled phalloidin revealed a highly developed
body wall muscle system with circular, longitudinal and diagonal layers of muscle fibres. Dispersed muscle fibres
contracted when depolarized by exposure to extracellular media with elevated K+ (15–100 mM) in a
concentration-dependent manner, with a maximal response of 87% achieved at [ges ] 75 mM. 5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) induced
concentration-dependent muscle contraction between 0·01 and 1000 μM, with 10 μM producing a near maximal contraction
response of 75%. Acetylcholine (ACh) had less pronounced excitatory effects (0·01–1000 μM), inducing contraction of
only 32% of the fibres at 100 μM. The flatworm FMRFamide-related peptides (FaRPs), GYIRFamide, YIRFamide and
GNFFRFamide each had concentration-dependent myocontractile effects, indicating the occurrence of at least 1 FaRP
receptor on P. littoralis muscle fibres. At 10 μM peptide, GNFFRFamide induced contractions in < 40% of the muscle
fibres examined, whereas YIRFamide and GYIRFamide induced contraction in 70 and 75%of muscle fibres, respectively.
The order of potency of the peptides was: GYIRFamide > YIRFamide > GNFFRFamide. Pre-incubation of the muscle
fibres in 5 μM 5-HT significantly reduced the responses to GYIRFamide, YIRFamide and 5-HT, while the responses to
high K+ remained unaltered. Muscle fibres pre-incubated in GYIRFamide (0·1 μM) were also less responsive to 5-HT but
not to ACh and high-K+. The GYIRFamide analogue, GYIRdFamide, did not induce muscle contraction (0·01–100 μM)
per se, but when co-applied with the myoactive peptides GYIRFamide, YIRFamide or GNFFRFamide, it significantly
blocked their ability to elicit contractions. This suggests that the peptides tested may act via a common muscle-based
neuropeptide receptor. GYIRdFamide did not alter the contractile effects of high K+, 5-HT or ACh. Collectively, these
results indicate that FaRPs, 5-HT and ACh all have the potential to cause muscle contraction in flatworms and that
5-HT and FaRPs alter muscle sensitivity to each other, but do not influence the ability of flatworm muscle fibres to
contract.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology