Luciferin production and luciferase transcription in the bioluminescent copepod Metridia lucens

PeerJ. 2018 Sep 14:6:e5506. doi: 10.7717/peerj.5506. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Bioluminescent copepods are often the most abundant marine zooplankton and play critical roles in oceanic food webs. Metridia copepods exhibit particularly bright bioluminescence, and the molecular basis of their light production has just recently begun to be explored. Here we add to this body of work by transcriptomically profiling Metridia lucens, a common species found in temperate, northern, and southern latitudes. In this previously molecularly-uncharacterized species, we find the typical luciferase paralog gene set found in Metridia. More surprisingly, we recover noteworthy putative luciferase sequences that had not been described from Metridia species, indicating that bioluminescence produced by these copepods may be more complex than previously known. This includes another copepod luciferase, as well as one from a shrimp. Furthermore, feeding experiments using mass spectrometry and 13C labelled L-tyrosine and L-phenylalanine firmly establish that M. lucens produces its own coelenterazine luciferin rather than acquiring it through diet. This coelenterazine synthesis has only been directly confirmed in one other copepod species.

Keywords: Coelenteramine; Coelenterazine; Copepoda; Luciferase; Luciferin; Metridia lucens.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by DARPA-NESD Grant #N66001-17-C-4012 to Vincent A. Pieribone, David F. Gruber, Jean P. Gaffney, Jason M. Crawford. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.