The sea urchin blastula secretes a hatching enzyme (HE) that dissolves the fertilization envelope. HE was collected from the supernatant seawater of cultures of hatched Strongylocentrotus purpuratus blastulae, and concentrated 20 times by ultrafiltration. The proteolytic activity of HE using casein as substrate was inhibited by the chymotrypsin inhibitors, chymostatin and N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone. The activity was not inhibited by inhibitors (antipain, elastatinal, pepstatin, phosphoramidon, soybean trypsin inhibitor, and N alpha-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone) of other types of proteases. HE did not hydrolyze the synthetic trypsin substrate, alpha-N-benzoyl-L-arginine ethyl ester, but did hydrolyze the synthetic substrate of chymotrypsin, N-benzoyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester (BTEE). The BTEEase activity of HE was completely inhibited by the chymotrypsin inhibitors chymostatin and 2-nitro-4-carboxyphenyl N,N-diphenylcarbamate (NCDC). Chymostatin inhibited the natural hatching of sea urchin blastulae. Application of HE to freshly fertilized sea urchin eggs, 2 h after insemination, caused premature dispersal of the hardened fertilization envelope. Chymostatin and NCDC inhibited HE-induced lysis of the fertilization envelope, while inhibitors of other types of proteases were ineffective. These data suggest that sea urchin HE is a chymotrypsin-like protease we call "chymotrypsin."
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PeerJ
January 2025
Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States of America.
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Unconventional Computing Laboratory, University of the West of England, Coldharbour Ln, Stoke Gifford, Bristol BS16 1QY, U.K.
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January 2025
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
The evolutionary origin of the vertebrate brain remains a major subject of debate, as its development from a dorsal tubular neuroepithelium is unique to chordates. To shed light on the evolutionary emergence of the vertebrate brain, we compared anterior neuroectoderm development across deuterostome species, using available single-cell datasets from sea urchin, amphioxus, and zebrafish embryos. We identified a conserved gene co-expression module, comparable to the anterior gene regulatory network (aGRN) controlling apical organ development in ambulacrarians, and spatially mapped it by multiplexed in situ hybridization to the developing retina and hypothalamus of chordates.
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January 2025
Shandong Laboratory of Yantai Drug Discovery, Bohai Rim Advanced Research Institute for Drug Discovery, Yantai 264117, China.
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December 2024
CESAM-Centre for Environmental and Marine Studies, Department of Environment and Planning, Campus Universitário de Santiago, University of Aveiro, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal.
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