LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Exploration of Chemosensory Ionotropic Receptors in Cephalopods: the IR25 gene is expressed in the Olfactory Organs, Suckers, and Fins of Sepia officinalis.

Photo by timbar from unsplash

While they are mostly renowned for their visual capacities, cephalopods are also good at olfaction for prey, predator and conspecific detection. The olfactory organs and olfactory cells are well described… Click to show full abstract

While they are mostly renowned for their visual capacities, cephalopods are also good at olfaction for prey, predator and conspecific detection. The olfactory organs and olfactory cells are well described but olfactory receptors -genes and proteins- are still undescribed in cephalopods. We conducted a broad phylogenetic analysis of the ionotropic glutamate receptor family in molluscs (iGluR), especially to identify IR members (Ionotropic Receptors), a variant subfamily whose involvement in chemosensory functions has been shown in most studied protostomes. A total of 312 iGluRs sequences (including 111 IRs) from gastropods, bivalves and cephalopods were identified and annotated. One orthologue of the gene coding for the chemosensory IR25 co-receptor has been found in Sepia officinalis (Soff-IR25). We searched for Soff-IR25 expression at the cellular level by in situ hybridization in whole embryos at late stages before hatching. Expression was observed in the olfactory organs, which strongly validates the chemosensory function of this receptor in cephalopods. Soff-IR25 was also detected in the developing suckers, which suggests that the unique « taste by touch » behavior that cephalopods execute with their arms and suckers share features with olfaction. Finally, Soff-IR25 positive cells were unexpectedly found in fins, the two posterior appendages of cephalopods, mostly involved in locomotory functions. This result opens new avenues of investigation to confirm fins as additional chemosensory organs in cephalopods.

Keywords: sepia officinalis; olfactory organs; ionotropic receptors; chemosensory; soff ir25

Journal Title: Chemical senses
Year Published: 2021

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.