Caused by changes in cholesterol production
From: University of Washington News
May 12, 2022 -- For all their
uncanny intelligence and seemingly supernatural abilities to change color and
regenerate limbs, octopuses often suffer a tragic death. After a mother octopus
lays a clutch of eggs, she quits eating and wastes away; by the time the eggs
hatch, she is dead. Some females in captivity even seem to speed up this
process intentionally, mutilating themselves and twisting their arms into a
tangled mess.
The source of this
bizarre maternal behavior seems to be the optic gland, an organ similar to the
pituitary gland in mammals. For years, just how this gland triggered the
gruesome death spiral was unclear. But in a new study published May
12 in Current Biology, researchers from the University of Washington, the
University of Chicago and the University of Illinois Chicago show that the
optic gland in maternal octopuses undergoes a massive shift in cholesterol
metabolism, resulting in dramatic changes in the steroid hormones produced.
Alterations in cholesterol metabolism in other animals, including humans, can
have serious consequences on longevity and behavior, and the team believes this
reveals important similarities in the functions of these steroids across the
animal kingdom — in soft-bodied cephalopods and vertebrates alike.
“We know cholesterol is
important from a dietary perspective, and within different signaling systems in
the body, too,” said lead author Z Yan Wang, an incoming assistant
professor of psychology and of biology at the University of Washington, who
initiated this study as a doctoral student at the University of Chicago. “It’s
involved in everything from the flexibility of cell membranes to production of
stress hormones, but it was a big surprise to see it play a part in this life
cycle process as well.”
In 1977, Brandeis
University psychologist Jerome Wodinsky showed that if he removed the optic
gland from Caribbean two-spot octopus mothers, they abandoned their eggs,
resumed feeding, and lived for months longer. At the time, cephalopod
biologists concluded that the optic gland must secrete some kind of
“self-destruct” hormone, but just what it was and how it worked was unclear.
In 2018, Wang and
Clifton Ragsdale, a University of Chicago professor of neurobiology, identified which
genes are switched on and which ones are switched off in several California
two-spot octopuses — Octopus bimaculoides — at different
stages of their maternal decline. As the animals began to fast and decline,
there were higher levels of activity in genes that metabolize cholesterol and
produce steroids, the first time the optic gland had been linked to something
other than reproduction.
In the new paper, Wang
and Ragsdale worked with Stephanie Cologna, an associate professor of chemistry
at UIC, and Melissa Pergande, a former UIC graduate student, to analyze the
chemicals produced by the maternal octopus optic gland — focusing on
cholesterol and related molecules.
They found three
different biochemical pathways were involved in increasing steroid hormones
after reproduction. One of them produces pregnenolone and progesterone, two
steroids commonly associated with pregnancy. Another produces maternal
cholestanoids, or intermediate compounds for making
bile acids. The third produces increased levels
of 7-dehydrocholesterol, or 7-DHC, a precursor to cholesterol.
The new research shows
that the maternal optic gland undergoes dramatic changes to produce more
steroid hormones during the stages of decline. While the pregnancy hormones are
to be expected, this is the first time anything like the components for bile
acids or cholesterol have been linked to the maternal octopus death spiral.
Some of these same
pathways are used for producing cholesterol in mice and other mammals as well,
according to Wang.
“There are two major
pathways for creating cholesterol that are known from studies in rodents, and
now there’s evidence from our study that those pathways are probably present in
octopuses as well,” said Wang. “It was really exciting to see the similarity
across such different animals.”
Elevated levels of
7-DHC are toxic in humans; It’s the hallmark of a genetic disorder called
Smith-Lemli-Opitz Syndrome, which is caused by a mutation in the enzyme that
converts 7-DHC to cholesterol. Children with the disorder suffer from severe
developmental and behavioral consequences, including repetitive self-injury
reminiscent of octopus end-of-life behaviors.
The findings suggest
that disruption of cholesterol production process in octopuses has grave
consequences, just as it does in other animals. So far, what Wang and her team
have discovered is another step in the octopus self-destruct sequence,
signaling more changes downstream that ultimately lead to the mother’s odd
behavior and demise.
“What’s striking is that
they go through this progression of changes where they seem to go crazy right
before they die,” said Ragsdale. “Maybe that’s two processes, maybe it’s three
or four. Now, we have at least three apparently independent pathways to steroid
hormones that could account for the multiplicity of effects that these animals
show.”
Wang has earned a Grass
Fellowship to conduct research this summer at the University of Chicago’s
Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. There, she will
study the optic gland of another species, the lesser Pacific striped
octopus, or Octopus chierchiae. This species doesn’t
self-destruct after breeding like the animals Wang and Ragsdale have been
studying so far. Wang hopes to find clues as to how it avoids the octopus death
spiral.
“The optic gland exists
in all other soft-bodied cephalopods, and they have such divergent reproductive
strategies,” said Wang. “It’s such a tiny gland and it’s underappreciated, and
I think it’s going to be exciting to explore how it contributes to such a great
diversity of life history trajectories in cephalopods.”
https://www.washington.edu/news/2022/05/12/octopus-cholesterol/
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