1. Myomodulin gene of Lymnaea: structure, expression, and analysis of neuropeptides
E Kellett, J F Burke, N Santama, P R Benjamin, S J Perry, B M Worster J Neurosci . 1996 Aug 15;16(16):4949-57. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.16-16-04949.1996.
The myomodulin family of neuropeptides is an important group of neural cotransmitters in molluscs and is known to be present in the neural network that controls feeding behavior in the snail Lymnaea. Here we show that a single gene encodes five structurally similar forms of myomodulin: GLQMLRLamide, QIPMLRLamide, SMSMLRLamide, SLSMLRLamide, and PMSMLRLamide, the latter being present in nine copies. Analysis of the organization of the gene indicates that it is transcribed as a single spliced transcript from an upstream promoter region that contains multiple cAMP-responsive elements, as well as putative elements with homology to tissue-specific promoter-binding sites. The presence in nervous tissue of two of the peptides, GLQMLRLamide and PMSMLRLamide, is confirmed by mass spectrometry. In situ hybridization analysis indicates that the gene is expressed in specific cells in all ganglia of the CNS of Lymnaea, which will allow physiological analysis of the function of myomodulins at the level of single identified neurons.
2. Myomodulin increases Ih and inhibits the NA/K pump to modulate bursting in leech heart interneurons
Ronald L Calabrese, Anne-Elise Tobin J Neurophysiol . 2005 Dec;94(6):3938-50. doi: 10.1152/jn.00340.2005.
In the medicinal leech, a rhythmically active 14-interneuron network composes the central pattern generator for heartbeat. In two segmental ganglia, bilateral pairs of reciprocally inhibitory heart interneurons (oscillator interneurons) produce a rhythm of alternating bursts of action potentials that paces activity in the pattern-generating network. The neuropeptide myomodulin decreases the period of this bursting and increases the intraburst spike frequency when applied to isolated ganglia containing these oscillator interneurons. Myomodulin also decreases period, increases spike frequency, and increases the robustness of endogenous bursting in synaptically isolated (with bicuculline) oscillator interneurons. In voltage-clamp experiments using hyperpolarizing ramps, we identify an increase in membrane conductance elicited by myomodulin with the properties of a hyperpolarization-activated current. Voltage steps confirm that myomodulin indeed increases the maximum conductance of the hyperpolarization-activated current I(h). In similar experiments using Cs(+) to block I(h), we demonstrate that myomodulin also causes a steady offset in the ramp current that is not associated with an increase in conductance. This current offset is blocked by ouabain, indicating that myomodulin inhibits the Na/K pump. In current-clamp experiments, when I(h) is blocked with Cs(+), myomodulin decreases period and increases spike frequency of alternating bursting in synaptically connected oscillator interneurons, suggesting that inhibiting the Na/K pump modulates these burst characteristics. These observations indicate that myomodulin decreases period and increases spike frequency of endogenous bursting in synaptically isolated oscillator heart interneurons and alternating bursting of reciprocally inhibitory pairs of interneurons, at least in part, by increasing I(h) and by decreasing the Na/K pump.
3. The myomodulin-related neuropeptides: characterization of a gene encoding a family of peptide cotransmitters in Aplysia
K R Weiss, S Beushausen, I Kupfermann, A Vitek, M W Miller, S Stamm, J Brosius J Neurosci . 1993 Aug;13(8):3358-67. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.13-08-03358.1993.
The myomodulin-related peptides comprise a family of cotransmitters that modulate neuromuscular signaling in the feeding system of Aplysia. In this study, cDNA clones encoding a myomodulin precursor polypeptide were isolated and characterized. This precursor contains seven different myomodulin-related peptides, one of which, myomodulin A, is present in 10 contiguous copies. The sequence of a myomodulin genomic clone indicates that all of these myomodulin-related peptides are encoded on a single exon. The myomodulin gene is expressed in a tissue-specific manner and myomodulin mRNA is localized to specific neurons in the Aplysia CNS. The presence of multiple related neuropeptides can greatly increase the range and precision of signaling at synapses where they act as modulator cotransmitters.