Published April 27, 2020 | Version v1

Data from: Laboratory culture of the California Sea Firefly Vargula tsujii (Ostracoda: Cypridinidae): developing a model system for the evolution of marine bioluminescence

  • 1. University of California, San Diego
  • 2. University of California, Santa Barbara
  • 3. California State University Los Angeles
  • 4. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • 5. University of California, Santa Cruz

Description

Bioluminescence, or the production of light by living organisms via chemical reaction, is widespread across Metazoa. Laboratory culture of bioluminescent organisms from diverse taxonomic groups is important for determining the biosynthetic pathways of bioluminescent substrates, which may lead to new tools for biotechnology and biomedicine. Some bioluminescent groups may be cultured, including some cnidarians, ctenophores, and brittle stars, but those use luminescent substrates (luciferins) obtained from their diets, and therefore are not informative for determination of the biosynthetic pathways of the luciferins. Other groups, including terrestrial fireflies, do synthesize their own luciferin, but culturing them is difficult and the biosynthetic pathway for firefly luciferin remains unclear. An additional independent origin of endogenous bioluminescence is found within ostracods from the family Cypridinidae, which use their luminescence for defense and, in Caribbean species, for courtship displays. Here, we report the first complete life cycle of a luminous ostracod (Vargula tsujii Kornicker & Baker, 1977, the California Sea Firefly) in the laboratory. We also describe the late-stage embryogenesis of Vargula tsujii and discuss the size classes of instar development. We find embryogenesis in V. tsujii ranges from 25-38 days, and this species appears to have five instar stages, consistent with ontogeny in other cypridinid lineages. We estimate a complete life cycle at 3-4 months. We also present the first complete mitochondrial genome for Vargula tsujii. Bringing a luminous ostracod into laboratory culture sets the stage for many potential avenues of study, including learning the biosynthetic pathway of cypridinid luciferin and genomic manipulation of an autogenic bioluminescent system.

Notes

 

 

Funding provided by: Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000997
Award Number: Beckman Young Investigator Award to Jing-Ke Weng

Funding provided by: University of California, Santa Barbara
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100007183
Award Number: Faculty Seed Grant to Todd Oakley

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Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1101/708065 (DOI)