An α7-related nicotinic acetylcholine receptor mediates the ciliary arrest response in pharyngeal gill slits of <i>Ciona</i>

  • Kei Jokura
    Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University, Hirosaki 036-8561, Japan
  • Junko M. Nishino
    United Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences, Iwate University, Hirosaki 036-8561, Japan
  • Michio Ogasawara
    Graduate School of Science, Chiba University, Chiba 263-8522, Japan
  • Atsuo Nishino
    Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University, Hirosaki 036-8561, Japan

Description

<jats:p>Ciliary movement is a fundamental process to support animal life, and the movement pattern may be altered in response to external stimuli under the control of nervous systems. Juvenile and adult ascidians have ciliary arrays around their pharyngeal gill slits (stigmata), and continuous beating is interrupted for seconds by mechanical stimuli on other parts of the body. Although it has been suggested that neural transmission to evoke ciliary arrest is cholinergic, its molecular basis has not yet been elucidated in detail. We herein attempted to clarify the molecular mechanisms underlying this neurociliary transmission in the model ascidian Ciona. Acetylcholinesterase histochemical staining showed strong signals on the laterodistal ciliated cells of stigmata, hereafter referred to as trapezial cells. The direct administration of acetylcholine (ACh) and other agonists of nicotinic ACh receptors (nAChRs) onto ciliated cells reliably evoked ciliary arrest that persisted for seconds in a dose-dependent manner. Only one isoform among all nAChR subunits encoded in the Ciona genome, called nAChR-A7/8-1, a relative of vertebrate α7 nAChRs, was expressed by trapezial cells. Exogenously expressed nAChR-A7/8-1 on Xenopus oocytes responded to ACh and other agonists with consistent pharmacological traits to those observed in vivo. Further efforts to examine signaling downstream of this receptor revealed that an inhibitor of phospholipase C (PLC) hampered ACh-induced ciliary arrest. We herein propose that homomeric α7-related nAChR-A7/8-1 mediates neurociliary transmission in Ciona stigmata to elicit persistent ciliary arrest by recruiting intracellular Ca2+ signaling.</jats:p>

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