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Volume 270, Number 47, Issue of November 24, 1995 pp. 28487-28493
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Mutually Exclusive Neuronal Expression of Peptides Encoded By the FMRFa Gene Underlies a Differential Control of Copulation in Lymnaea

(Received for publication, August 15, 1995)

Floral A. van Golen Ka Wan Li Robert P. J. de Lange Sonja Jespersen Wijnand P. M. Geraerts

An innovative method, direct peptide profiling of small samples of nervous tissue by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry, in combination with peptide characterization, immunocytochemistry in conjunction with specific neuronal labeling by backfilling of the penis nerve, and bioassay of peptides was used to study the intrinsic neuronal expression patterns of distinct sets of related FMRFa peptides and their significance for the organization of male copulation behavior in the mollusk, Lymnaea stagnalis. Previous studies indicate that the sets of FMRFa-related and GDPFLRFa-related peptides are encoded by two alternatively spliced transcripts of the single FMRFa gene. Direct mass spectrometry revealed that both FMRFa-related and GDPFLRFa-related peptides are present in the penis nerve, the sole nerve that innervates the penis complex. Accordingly, authentic FMRFa, GDPFLRFa, and related peptides were purified from the penis complex. The loci of synthesis of FMRFa and related peptides could be traced to the right cerebral ventral lobe, those of GDPFLRFa and related peptides to the B group neurons in the right parietal ganglion and to a few unidentified neurons in the right pleural ganglion. Notwithstanding their related structures, the two sets of peptides have distinctly different actions on the penis retractor muscle.




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Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USAHome page
G. Cazzamali and C. J. P. Grimmelikhuijzen
Molecular cloning and functional expression of the first insect FMRFamide receptor
PNAS, September 17, 2002; 99(19): 12073 - 12078.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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