ROLE OF CHEMICAL INDUCERS IN LARVAL METAMORPHOSIS OF QUEEN CONCH, STROMBUS-GIGAS LINNAEUS - RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER MARINE INVERTEBRATE SYSTEMS

Citation
Aa. Boettcher et Nm. Target, ROLE OF CHEMICAL INDUCERS IN LARVAL METAMORPHOSIS OF QUEEN CONCH, STROMBUS-GIGAS LINNAEUS - RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER MARINE INVERTEBRATE SYSTEMS, The Biological bulletin, 194(2), 1998, pp. 132-142
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology",Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00063185
Volume
194
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
132 - 142
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3185(1998)194:2<132:ROCIIL>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
Chemical cues are important in the exogenous and endogenous control of metamorphosis in many marine invertebrate larvae. In the queen conch, Strombus gigas Linnaeus, larval metamorphosis is induced by low molec ular weight compounds associated with dominant species of red algae fo und in conch nursery grounds; these species include the foliose rhodop hyte Laurencia poitei (Lamouroux). The responses of conch larvae to th e algal-associated cues are dependent on concentration and length of e xposure, with the initial events of metamorphosis occurring within 10 min of treatment with an aqueous extract of L. poitei. The free amino acids valine and isoleucine mimic the effects of the natural inducer, and they may bind to and be recognized by the same sites on the larvae as the algal cues. Hydrogen peroxide, vanadate, and gamma-aminobutyri c acid (GABA), as well as elevated K+ concentrations (i.e., above ambi ent seawater levels), also induce larval metamorphosis. Acetylsalicyli c acid decreases the responses of conch larvae to the algal-associated cues and to the free amino acids, but it has no effect on the inducti on triggered by hydrogen peroxide. The chemical induction of metamorph osis in conch larvae shares many general features with chemoreception in aquatic invertebrates. The natural inducers of metamorphosis, like the cues involved in olfactory responses in other marine organisms, ar e of low molecular weight and water soluble. In addition, the results of the experiments with hydrogen peroxide, vanadate, and GABA suggest that second messenger pathways are involved in conch metamorphosis.