Department of Entomology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-2475, USA.
BMC Neurosci. 2011 Jun 14;12:57. doi: 10.1186/1471-2202-12-57.
Insect neuropeptides are involved in diverse physiological functions and can be released as neurotransmitters or neuromodulators acting within the central nervous system, and as circulating neurohormones in insect hemolymph. The insect short neuropeptide F (sNPF) peptides, related to the vertebrate neuropeptide Y (NPY) peptides, have been implicated in the regulation of food intake and body size, and play a gonadotropic role in the ovaries of some insect species. Recently the sNPF peptides were localized in the brain of larval and adult Drosophila. However, the location of the sNPF receptor, a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), has not yet been investigated in brains of any adult insect. To elucidate the sites of action of the sNPF peptide(s), the sNPF receptor tissue expression and cellular localization were analyzed in queens of the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta Buren (Hymenoptera), an invasive social insect.
In the queen brains and subesophageal ganglion about 164 cells distributed in distinctive cell clusters (C1-C9 and C12) or as individual cells (C10, C11) were immuno-positive for the sNPF receptor. Most of these neurons are located in or near important sensory neuropils including the mushroom bodies, the antennal lobes, the central complex, and in different parts of the protocerebrum, as well as in the subesophageal ganglion. The localization of the sNPF receptor broadly links the receptor signaling pathway with circuits regulating learning and feeding behaviors. In ovaries from mated queens, the detection of sNPF receptor signal at the posterior end of oocytes in mid-oogenesis stage suggests that the sNPF signaling pathway may regulate processes at the oocyte pole.
The analysis of sNPF receptor immunolocalization shows that the sNPF signaling cascade may be involved in diverse functions, and the sNPF peptide(s) may act in the brain as neurotransmitter(s) or neuromodulator(s), and in the ovaries as neurohormone(s). To our knowledge, this is the first report of the cellular localization of a sNPF receptor on the brain and ovaries of adult insects.
昆虫神经肽参与多种生理功能,可作为神经递质或神经调质释放,在中枢神经系统内发挥作用,并作为昆虫血淋巴中的循环神经激素发挥作用。与脊椎动物神经肽 Y (NPY) 肽相关的昆虫短神经肽 F (sNPF) 肽被认为参与了食物摄入和体型的调节,并在一些昆虫物种的卵巢中发挥促性腺作用。最近,sNPF 肽在幼虫和成虫果蝇的大脑中被定位。然而,sNPF 受体(G 蛋白偶联受体 (GPCR))在任何成年昆虫的大脑中的位置尚未被研究。为了阐明 sNPF 肽的作用部位,分析了红火蚁,红火蚁入侵红火蚁(膜翅目),一种入侵的社会性昆虫的蜂王的大脑和食管下神经节中 sNPF 受体的组织表达和细胞定位。
在蜂王的大脑和食管下神经节中,约 164 个细胞分布在独特的细胞簇 (C1-C9 和 C12) 或单个细胞 (C10、C11) 中,对 sNPF 受体呈免疫阳性。这些神经元中的大多数位于或靠近重要的感觉神经神经丛,包括蘑菇体、触角叶、中央复合体,以及原脑的不同部位,以及食管下神经节。sNPF 受体的定位将受体信号通路与调节学习和摄食行为的回路广泛联系起来。在交配后的蜂王卵巢中,在卵母细胞的后末端检测到 sNPF 受体信号,表明 sNPF 信号通路可能调节卵母细胞极的过程。
sNPF 受体免疫定位分析表明,sNPF 信号级联可能参与多种功能,sNPF 肽可能作为神经递质或神经调质在大脑中发挥作用,作为神经激素在卵巢中发挥作用。据我们所知,这是成年昆虫大脑和卵巢中 sNPF 受体细胞定位的首次报道。