AI Article Synopsis

  • Oxytocin and vasopressin are key hormones that regulate various physiological functions like osmoregulation, reproduction, and social behavior, with origins tracing back about 600 million years.
  • Recent advances in genomic data (over 200 insect datasets) allow researchers to study the molecular structure of inotocin (the insect counterpart of these hormones) and their receptors.
  • Notably, some insect groups (like Trichoptera and Lepidoptera) lack inotocin genes, indicating a loss of this peptide-receptor system in their common ancestor around 280 million years ago, shedding light on the evolution of neuroendocrine hormones in a large animal group.

Article Abstract

Oxytocin and vasopressin mediate a range of physiological functions that are important for osmoregulation, reproduction, social behaviour, memory and learning. The origin of this signalling system is thought to date back ~600 million years. Oxytocin/vasopressin-like peptides have been identified in several invertebrate species and they appear to be functionally related across the entire animal kingdom. There is little information available about the biology of this peptide G protein-coupled receptor signalling system in insects. Recently over 200 insect genome/transcriptome datasets were released allowing investigation of the molecular structure and phylogenetic distribution of the insect oxytocin/vasopressin orthologue - inotocin peptides and their receptors. The signalling system is present in early arthropods and representatives of some early-diverging lineages. However, Trichoptera, Lepidoptera, Siphonaptera, Mecoptera and Diptera, lack the presence of inotocin genes, which suggests the peptide-receptor system was probably lost in their common ancestor ~280 million-years-ago. In addition we detected several losses of the inotocin signalling system in Hemiptera (white flies, scale insects and aphids), and the complete absence in spiders (Chelicerata). This unique insight into evolutionarily patterns and sequence diversity of neuroendocrine hormones will provide opportunities to elucidate the physiology of the inotocin signalling system in one of the largest group of animals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5153645PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep39177DOI Listing

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