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Journal of Clinical and Experimental Endocrinology - The Endocrine Regulation of Caecilian Reproduction: A Poorly Known Aspect of Physiology

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  • Editorial   
  • J Clin Exp Endocrinol 2: e106, Vol 2(1)

The Endocrine Regulation of Caecilian Reproduction: A Poorly Known Aspect of Physiology

Jean-Marie Exbrayat*
General Biology, Reproduction and Comparative Development, UMRS 449, Lyon Catholic University, Lyon, France
*Corresponding Author: Jean-Marie Exbrayat, General Biology, Reproduction and Comparative Development, UMRS 449, Lyon Catholic University, 10 Place Des Archives, 69288 Lyon Cedex 02, France, Tel: +330472325, Email: jmexbrayat@univ-catholyon.fr

Received: 19-Mar-2018 / Accepted Date: 21-Mar-2018 / Published Date: 29-Mar-2018

Editorial

The mechanisms of endocrine regulation of reproduction are currently well known in many vertebrate [1]. But some species are still poorly studied. Caecilian amphibians I have been studying for about 40 years, mainly from a rich collection of preserved animals, belong to these ones.

What are Caecilians still called Gymnophionans? They are burrowing or aquatic lengthened amphibians living in South and Central America, Africa, Asia [2]. Their reproductive biology is known in some species only. The fertilization of Caecilians is always internal. They are oviparous, direct developing or viviparous. Several works, sometimes published for a long time [3] described the anatomy and histology of male and female genital tracts. Sexual cycles have been reported, related to environmental factors such as seasons, temperature, or rain [4].

In oviparous species, males and females generally perform an annual breeding cycle [4]. In direct-developing species, males and females exhibit continuous cycles [5,6]. In viviparous species, pregnancy is 6 months to one year long, with a biennial cycle in females and an annual cycle in males.

The males and females genital tracts of a large number of species were described [7,8], but very few works have been devoted to the endocrine regulation of Caecilians reproduction. In males, Leydig cells were found between the seminiferous tubules. In Typhlonectes compressicauda, a South American viviparous species, our own studies have shown that Leydig cells reacting with anti-testosterone were more developed during the breeding season, which is also the rainy season, than during the period of quiescence at dry season [4]. In the females of several oviparous, direct-developing or viviparous species, some authors showed the evolution of ovarian follicles with the presence of corpora lutea [4,7]. In T. compressicauda, corpora lutea reacting positively with anti-progesterone persisted throughout the intrauterine development. The granulosa cells of ovarian follicles are equipped with enzymes implicated into the synthesis of steroids, and the presence of estrogenic hormones has been demonstrated with immunohistochemical method [4]. The lactotropic and gonadotropic cells developed at reproduction, in males as well as females. The presence of PRL RNAs was demonstrated in the pituitary gland [9]. The presence of α and β estrogenic receptors was demonstrated in the ovaries of B. taitanus, a direct-developing species [10]. The presence of gene expression of prolactin receptors was shown in the genital tract of T. compressicauda [11]. The oviducts of Caecilians are affected with some important variations throughout the sexual cycle, with alternation of cell proliferation and apoptosis [12,13]. The pituitary and sexual hormone receptors can certainly be visualized in the different parts of these organs.

After numerous years of study, the regulation of reproductive cycles in caecilian amphibians begins to be perceived.

These animals are hard to study because they are burrowing, and difficult to catch. Nevertheless, many collections are available in museums, universities and institutes. These collections can currently be studied with powerful techniques, which was not possible twenty years ago. The study of such animal models can provide new information on the regulation of the reproduction according to the variations of the biotopes consecutive to the seasons, the modification of the environment or the climate change. Knowledge of the biology of unconventional animal models can provide additional insights into the animal biology and physiology. These works also represent examples of the use of collections, a use that is currently extended to medical collections.

References

  1. Exbrayat JM (2014) From Bony Fishes to Mammals: Reproductive Cycles in Vertebrates. Hormones and Hormone-Receptors. Receptor Clin Invest 1: e86.
  2. Taylor EH (1968) The Caecilians of the World- A Taxonomic Review. University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.
  3. Sarasin P, Sarasin F (1887) Ergebnisse Naturwissenchaftlicher Forschungen auf Ceylon. Zur Entwicklungsgeschichte und Anatomie der Ceylonischen Blindwühle Ichthyophis glutinosus. CW Kreidel’s Verlag, Wiesbaden.
  4. Exbrayat JM (2006) Endocrinology of Reproduction in Gymnophiona in Exbrayat JM (Ed). Reproductive Biology and Phylogeny of Gymnophiona (Caecilians) 183-229.
  5. Measey GJ, Smita M, Beyo RS, Oommen OV (2008) Year-Round Spermatogenic activity in an Oviparous Subterranean Caecilian, Boulengerula taitanus Loveridge. Trop Zool 21: 109-122.
  6. Raquet MA, Measey GJ, Exbrayat JM (2015) Annual Variation of Ovarian Structures of Boulengerula taitana (Loveridge 1935) a Kenyan Caecilian. Afr J Herp 64: 116-134.
  7. Wake MH (1968) Evolutionary Morphology of the Caecilian Urogenital System. Part I: the Gonads and Fat Bodies. J Morph 126: 291-332.
  8. Wake MH (1970) Evolutionary Morphology of the Caecilian Urogenital System. Part II The Kidney and the Urogenital Ducts. Acta Anat 75: 321-358.
  9. Exbrayat JM, Morel G (2003) Visualization of Gene Expression of Prolactin-Receptor (PRL-R) by In Situ Hybridization in Reproductive organs of Typhlonectes compressicauda, a Gymnophionan Amphibian. Cell Tissue Res 312: 361-367.
  10. Exbrayat JM, Ouhtit A, Morel G (1997) Visualization of Gene Expression of Prolactin Receptors (PRL-R), by In Situ Hybridization, in Typhlonectes compressicaudus, a Gymnophionan Amphibian. Life Sci 61: 1915-1928.
  11. Raquet M, MEeasey J, Exbrayat JM (2013) Evidence of Receptors of Ostrogens α and β in the Ovaries of Boulengerula taitanus Amphibian Gymnophione. Rev Fr Histotechnol 26: 99-105.
  12. Brun C, Raquet MA, Measey GJ, Exbrayat JM (2017) Cyclic Variation of the Oviduct Structure of Boulengerula taitana, an Oviparous Species of Gymnophiona: Morphological Changes, Proliferation and Apoptosis. Afr J Herp 66: 93-105.
  13. Raquet M, Brun C, Exbrayat JM (2017) Patterns of Apoptosis and Proliferation throughout the Biennial Reproductive Cycle of Viviparous Female Typhlonectes compressicauda (Amphibia, Gymnophiona). Int J Mol Sci 2017: 16.

Citation: Exbrayat JM (2018) The Endocrine Regulation of Caecilian Reproduction: A Poorly Known Aspect of Physiology. J Clin Exp Endocrinol 2: e106.

Copyright: © 2018 Exbrayat JM. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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