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1.
The kinetics of secretion of ecdysone by the prothoracic glands of Locusta migratoria were studied during the last larval instar. Three stages of intense production of ecdysone (α-ecdysone) were monitored during this developmental period: they correspond to three peaks of moulting hormone concentration in the blood, which indicates that the main regulation of the moulting hormone titre is achieved through variations in prothoracic gland activity. In the haemolymph the ratio of ecdysone to ecdysterone (20-hydroxy-ecdysone) is in favour of ecdysone during the two first moulting hormone peaks ecdysterone being by far predominant over ecdysone at the time of the third (major) peak; these results support previous studies on the metabolic fate of injected labelled ecdysone during the same developmental period in Locusta migratoria.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract. Attack by the ectoparasitoid Eulophus pennicornis Nees (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) prevents larvae of Lacanobia oleracea L. (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) from moulting. Prothoracic glands (PGs) excised from parasitized or artificially envenomated hosts show a reduced basal level of ecdysteroid release at a time when non-parasitized caterpillars produce an ecdysteroid surge (48 h post moult to 5th stadium = penultimate stadium in non-venomated hosts). By contrast, PGs from similarly parasitized or envenomated caterpillars release comparatively high levels of ecdysteroid at 120 h post-moult. Temporary inactivation of PGs cannot be attributed solely to a parasitoid-induced reduction in cell viability, and incubation in E. pennicornis venom in vitro does not exert any direct effect on either PG cell viability or ecdysteroid release. However, inactivated PGs are not stimulated by forskolin, which may indicate that the absence of the required pre-moult ecdysteroid surge in developmentally arrested L. oleracea is due to insensitivity to a prothoracicotropic hormone. Even though parasitized caterpillars never moult, reversed-phase HPLC separations and radioimmunoassay confirm that they produce active moulting hormone (20-hydroxyecdysone) at 120 h post-moult. These results suggest that E. pennicornis arrests host development through the indirect effects on their hosts' PGs. This effect is not achieved through the destruction of gland cells, but more likely reflects the interruption of an innate cycle in PG activity, such that they lose their ability to respond to a normal cue to produce an essential hormone peak at a crucial point in development.  相似文献   

3.
The timing of ecdysis in the penultimate instar of Bombyx mori was demonstrated to be under the control of a circadian clock. The temporal organization of secretion of prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH), ecdysone and juvenile hormone was studied with particular attention to the circadian control of the timing of hormone release. PTTH release occurs, at least, in the second and third night. The latter is responsible for evoking the larval ecdysis. Prothoracic gland initiates ecdysone secretion abruptly with a very short span after the second PTTH release and secrete enough amount of ecdysone for larval moulting, which takes place 11 h later. Juvenile hormone titer is relatively high before the second PTTH release and corpus allatum becomes dispensable for ensuring the larval moulting in 1.5 h. Based on these findings, interpretations for the endocrine system underlying precocious pupation and formation of intermediates, which are produced by neck ligation, are presented.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The degeneration of the prothoracic glands of Drosophila melanogaster during pupal-adult metamorphosis was analyzed by light microscopy, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy. The ultrastructural observations were correlated with the ability of the ring gland to synthesize ecdysteroids in vitro. The ring gland is prominent during larval life and is identifiable until just before adult eclosion but undergoes dramatic changes in location, shape, size, ultrastructure, and function during pupal-adult development. Prothoracic gland degeneration is characterized by: a gradual decrease in its ability to synthesize ecdysteroids; a decreasing quantity of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) and mitochondria; the absence of intercellular channels; cytoplasmic fragmentation; and the separation of the prothoracic gland from the corpus allatum and corpus cardiacum. An ultrastructural analysis of the corpus allatum during larval-pupal-adult metamorphosis and adult life was also correlated with function, i.e., juvenile hormone biosynthesis, using a radiochemical assay of ring glands and adult corpora allata in vitro. A relatively high concentration of SER, mitochondria, and mitochondrion-scalariform junction complexes are typical features of an active corpus allatum cell. The migration of the corpus allatum from the ring gland to its position as a separate gland in the adult fly was studied in detail. The capacity of the corpus allatum to synthesize juvenile hormone is at its peak in the ring gland of the early wandering third instar larva, whereas the corpus allatum of 2-day-old female adults displayed the greatest synthetic activity during adult life. The physiological significance of the alterations in gland activity is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Histolysis of pupal salivary glands and their further development during metamorphosis of Wilhelmia lineata were investigated by light microscopy. After pupal-adult apolysis the distal parts of the glands degenerate. The adult gland develops from a ring of tightly packed very small cells with small nuclei at the anterior end of the degenerating pupal gland. The gland of the female pharate adult consists of a spherical accessory gland with small cells and oval nuclei and a little U-shaped main gland with larger cells and round nuclei. The two U-shaped lobes are orientated horizontally. The gland of the male pharate adult has the same shape and cellular structure as the accessory gland of the female. During further development the main gland becomes greatly elongated as the cells increase in size, the cells become flattened, and the secretion of saliva into the gland lumen can be seen. The glands are fully differentiated at the time of pupal-adult ecdysis. Soluble proteins from the one-day-old female pharate adult show a very similar pattern to those of pupal and male glands. With growth of the female main gland and secretion of saliva into the gland lumen increasing amounts of proteins, which have been characterized earlier (Poehling et al., 1976) occur in the gland. This could suggest a specific rôle of these proteins during bloodsucking in the adult females.  相似文献   

7.
The objective of this study was to determine the distribution of somatotrophs and lactotrophs and conduct a morphometrical analysis of immunoreactive somatotrophs and lactotrophs in the pituitary glands of White Leghorn Hens (Gallus domesticus) during the period of induced moult. We divided the periods of induced moulting into three phases viz. 7, 14 and 21 days. The labeled alkalinephsphatase method with anti-GH (growth hormone) and anti-PRL (prolactin) as a primary antibody was used to detect somatotrophs and lactotrophs, in the midsagital sections of chicken adenohypophysis. Immunohistochemistry showed that somatotrophs are not only confined to the cephalo-caudal axis but can also be found in the caudal lobe; while lactotrophs were distributed in both lobes of the anterior pituitary gland at all stages of moulting (7, 14 and 21 days). Lactotrophs were of different shapes but somatotrophs were oval to round in morphology. At the given stages of induced moulting, some hypertrophied lactotrophs were also present after 7 days of induced moult in the anterior pituitary gland. However, there were moulting-related changes: from 7 to 21 days of induced moulting the immunoreactive-PRL cell population decreased, while the mean lactotroph size was more than that of somatotrophs. Basic quantitative and morphological information relating to somatotrophs and lactotrophs during the period of induced moult in laying hens is reported here and the changes brought about by induced moulting are restricted to PRL positive cells rather than GH positive cells.Key words: Moult, pituitary gland, somatotrophs, lactotrophs, chicken.  相似文献   

8.
The carotenoid uptake by the silk gland of the silkworm (Bombyx mori), which occurs only during the middle to late period of the last (fifth) instar in the natural condition, was studied in relation to the hormonal controls. During certain stages of the fourth and last instars, the corpus allatum hormone (JH) was found to inhibit the activation of the absorbing function of the silk gland. The absorbing activity was inactivated, if the activated silk gland was implanted into larva at the late stage of the fourth instar in the presence of the moulting hormone (MH). As more ponasterone-A (ecdysone-analogue) was injected into decapitated larvae, the pigmentation of the silk gland was increased; but injection of a high titre inhibited its activity. It seems that, through serial transplantations, the silk gland inactivated experimentally at the late stage of the fourth instar is reactivated in the presence of MH during the middle to late period of the last instar. The results indicate that MH and JH at each stage control the activity of the carotenoid uptake.  相似文献   

9.
The insect neuropeptide prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) triggers the biosynthesis and release of the molting hormone ecdysone in the prothoracic gland (PG), thereby controlling the timing of molting and metamorphosis. Despite the well-documented physiological role of PTTH and its signaling pathway in the PG, it is not clear whether PTTH is an essential hormone for ecdysone biosynthesis and development. To address this question, we established and characterized a PTTH knockout line in the silkworm, Bombyx mori. We found that PTTH knockouts showed a severe developmental delay in both the larval and pupal stages. Larval phenotypes of PTTH knockouts can be classified into three major classes: (i) developmental arrest during the second larval instar, (ii) precocious metamorphosis after the fourth larval instar (one instar earlier in comparison to the control strain), and (iii) metamorphosis to normal-sized pupae after completing the five larval instar stages. In PTTH knockout larvae, peak levels of ecdysone titers in the hemolymph were dramatically reduced and the timing of peaks was delayed, suggesting that protracted larval development is a result of the reduced and delayed synthesis of ecdysone in the PG. Despite these defects, low basal levels of ecdysone were maintained in PTTH knockout larvae, suggesting that the primary role of PTTH is to upregulate ecdysone biosynthesis in the PG during molting stages, and low basal levels of ecdysone can be maintained in the absence of PTTH. We also found that mRNA levels of genes involved in ecdysone biosynthesis and ecdysteroid signaling pathways were significantly reduced in PTTH knockouts. Our results provide genetic evidence that PTTH is not essential for development, but is required to coordinate growth and developmental timing.  相似文献   

10.
Eggs of Earias fabia were treated with three different quantities of a juvenoid, 6–7 epoxy-3-ethyl-1-(p-ethyl phenoxy)-7 methylnonane at 5 distinct stages. These were: (a) before blastoderm formation; (b) before gastrulation; (c) before segmentation; (d) before blastokinesis; and (e) just after blastokinesis. The effect on embryonic development was studied. If sufficient hormone is administered early enough, development may be arrested at stages as early as blastoderm formation. With moderate and smaller doses, developmental arrest mostly occurred at certain well-defined stages, such as germ-band formation; before blastokinesis; post blastokinesis; when the embryo assumes its larval form; at the time of chitin formation and during embryonic moulting. Observations also bring in focus the importance of the quantity of hormone and its relationship to the speed of its action. Toxic action is apparent when eggs are treated with relatively larger quantities of the compound: application of juvenoid to younger stages causes fewer deaths.  相似文献   

11.
Summary

An assay for the prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) has been established using in situ activation of the prothoracic glands (PG) of Bombyx mori in its larva-to-larva development. The timing of PTTH release was estimated by examining developmental response of 4th instar larvae to brain removal and neck ligation, and changes in the haemolymph ecdysteroid titer and ecdysone-releasing activity of PG in vitro during the development. Injection of Bombyx brain extracts into 4th instar larvae neck-ligated shortly before full activation of PG elicited larval moulting rather than precocious pupation in headless larvae. This developmental shift was regarded as due to the action of PTTH, and the PTTH unit has been defined from a linear log dose-response relationship. Materials chromatographically fractionated from Bombyx brain extracts were examined for the presence of stage- and species-specific PTTH molecules by using this Bombyx larva assay and Bombyx and Samia pupa assays previously developed. The same fractions were active when assayed by Bombyx larva and pupa assays.  相似文献   

12.
There are three known clusters of neurosecretory cells expressing a gene encoding diapause hormone (DH) and four related peptides in the suboesophageal ganglion (SOG) of Bombyx mori. Long-term chronic recordings were made from the axonal tract (NCC-3) of a pair of cells localized in the labial (posterior) neuromere of SOG during pupal-adult development. There was a significant difference in firing activity patterns of the labial neurosecretory cells between diapause-egg and non-diapause-egg producers: labial cells in the former were active throughout pupal-adult development, whereas the same cells in the latter usually maintained an inactive state until the last quarter of pupal-adult development, a time at which a secretion of DH seems to be too late to act on the developing ovary for the induction of diapausing eggs. This observation strongly supports the notion that labial cells release DH and are responsible for determination of embryonic diapause in the silkmoth.  相似文献   

13.
In Drosophila melanogaster, hypomorphic mutations in the gap gene giant (gt) have long been known to affect ecdysone titers resulting in developmental delay and the production of large (giant) larvae, pupae and adults. However, the mechanism by which gt regulates ecdysone production has remained elusive. Here we show that hypomorphic gt mutations lead to ecdysone deficiency and developmental delay by affecting the specification of the PG neurons that produce prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH). The gt1 hypomorphic mutation leads to random loss of PTTH production in one or more of the 4 PG neurons in the larval brain. In cases where PTTH production is lost in all four PG neurons, delayed development and giant larvae are produced. Since immunostaining shows no evidence for Gt expression in the PG neurons once PTTH production is detectable, it is unlikely that Gt directly regulates PTTH expression. Instead, we find that innervation of the prothoracic gland by the PG neurons is absent in gt hypomorphic larvae that do not express PTTH. In addition, PG neuron axon fasciculation is abnormal in many gt hypomorphic larvae. Since several other anteriorly expressed gap genes such as tailless and orthodenticle have previously been found to affect the fate of the cerebral labrum, a region of the brain that gives rise to the neuroendocrine cells that innervate the ring gland, we conclude that gt likely controls ecdysone production indirectly by contributing the peptidergic phenotype of the PTTH-producing neurons in the embryo.  相似文献   

14.
Sesamia nonagrioides (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) larvae reared under long day (LD; 16L:8D) conditions pupate after 5 or 6 larval instars, whereas under short day (SD; 12L:12D) conditions they undergo up to 12 additional molts before pupating. This extended period of repeated molting is maintained by high levels of juvenile hormone (JH). Previous work demonstrated that both LD and SD larvae decapitated in the 6th instar pupate but further development is halted. By contrast, about one-third of SD larvae from which only the brain has been removed, undergo first a larval molt, then pupate and subsequently developed to the adult stage. Debrained LD larvae molt to larvae exceptionally but regularly pupate and produce adults. Implanted brains may induce several larval molts in debrained recipient larvae irrespectively of the photoperiodic conditions. The results of present work demonstrate that the prothoracic glands (PGs) and the corpora allata (CA) of debrained larvae continue to produce ecdysteroids and JHs, respectively. PGs are active also in the decapitated larvae that lack JH, consistent with the paradigm that CA, which are absent in the decapitated larvae, are the only source of this hormone. Completion of the pupal-adult transformation in both LD and SD debrained insects demonstrates that brain is not crucial for the development of S. nonagrioides but is required for diapause maintenance. Application of JH to headless pupae induces molting, presumably by activating their PGs. It is likely that JH plays this role also in the induction of pupal-adult transformation in debrained insects. Application of the ecdysteroid agonist RH 2485 (methoxyfenozide) to headless pupae also elicits molting: newly secreted cuticle is in some cases thin and indifferent, in other cases it bears distinct pupal or adult features.  相似文献   

15.
In Drosophila, growth takes place during the larval stages until the formation of the pupa. Starvation delays pupariation to allow prolonged feeding, ensuring that the animal reaches an appropriate size to form a fertile adult. Pupariation is induced by a peak of the steroid hormone ecdysone produced by the prothoracic gland (PG) after larvae have reached a certain body mass. Local downregulation of the insulin/insulin-like growth factor signaling (IIS) activity in the PG interferes with ecdysone production, indicating that IIS activity in the PG couples the nutritional state to development. However, the underlying mechanism is not well understood. In this study we show that the secreted Imaginal morphogenesis protein-Late 2 (Imp-L2), a growth inhibitor in Drosophila, is involved in this process. Imp-L2 inhibits the activity of the Drosophila insulin-like peptides by direct binding and is expressed by specific cells in the brain, the ring gland, the gut and the fat body. We demonstrate that Imp-L2 is required to regulate and adapt developmental timing to nutritional conditions by regulating IIS activity in the PG. Increasing Imp-L2 expression at its endogenous sites using an Imp-L2-Gal4 driver delays pupariation, while Imp-L2 mutants exhibit a slight acceleration of development. These effects are strongly enhanced by starvation and are accompanied by massive alterations of ecdysone production resulting most likely from increased Imp-L2 production by neurons directly contacting the PG and not from elevated Imp-L2 levels in the hemolymph. Taken together our results suggest that Imp-L2-expressing neurons sense the nutritional state of Drosophila larvae and coordinate dietary information and ecdysone production to adjust developmental timing under starvation conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Oral administration of root extracts of a medicinal plant, Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) to last instar larvae of a polyphagous pest, Spodoptera litura resulted into abnormal morphogenesis and the effects comprised mortality, delay in larval-pupal and pupal-adult ecdysis, ecdysial stasis, formation of larval-pupal and pupal-adult intermediates, reduced pupation and formation of abnormal pupae, complete suppression of normal adult emergence and formation of adultoids. These effects are similar to those produced by the administration of JHAs and may be due to interference with the normal hormonal mechanism of moulting and metamorphosis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Identification of signals for systemic adaption of hormonal regulation would help to understand the crosstalk between cells and environmental cues contributing to growth, metabolic homeostasis and development. Physiological states are controlled by precise pulsatile hormonal release, including endocrine steroids in human and ecdysteroids in insects. We show in Drosophila that regulation of genes that control biosynthesis and signaling of the steroid hormone ecdysone, a central regulator of developmental progress, depends on the extracellular matrix protein Obstructor-A (Obst-A). Ecdysone is produced by the prothoracic gland (PG), where sensory neurons projecting axons from the brain integrate stimuli for endocrine control. By defining the extracellular surface, Obst-A promotes morphogenesis and axonal growth in the PG. This process requires Obst-A-matrix reorganization by Clathrin/Wurst-mediated endocytosis. Our data identifies the extracellular matrix as essential for endocrine ring gland function, which coordinates physiology, axon morphogenesis, and developmental programs. As Obst-A and Wurst homologs are found among all arthropods, we propose that this mechanism is evolutionary conserved.  相似文献   

19.
The sensitivity of the prothoracic glands to juvenile hormone and prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) of penultimate (5th)-instar larvae of Mamestra brassicae was compared with that of the same-instar larvae destined for pupal ecdysis by allatectomy. The activity of the prothoracic glands was assessed using either moulting of isolated abdomens or ecdysone radioimmunoassay. Juvenile hormone application immediately after neck-ligation (which removes brain-corpora cardiaca-corpora allata complex) prevented prothoracic gland function in larvae at all stages. When larvae were allatectomized 12 hr after ecdysis, followed by neck-ligation at different times and given juvenile hormone immediately, the hormone inhibited the prothoracic glands of young larvae, but activated the prothoracic glands from day-5 or older larvae. Juvenile hormone I, juvenile hormone II and methoprene activated the prothoracic glands, but juvenile hormone III was relatively ineffective. Brain implantation instead of juvenile hormone application led to activation of the prothoracic glands at all stages.Allatectomy thus caused changes leading to metamorphosis including a transformation of the prothoracic glands from ‘larval’ to ‘pupal’ type. After this change these prothoracic glands were able to respond not only to PTTH but also to juvenile hormone just as in last-instar larvae.  相似文献   

20.
Failure of the brain to stimulate the prothoracic gland to release ecdysone has been widely regarded as the basis for diapause in insect pupae. In diapause-destined flesh flies, the absence of a peak of moulting hormone around the time of pupal head eversion supports this contention, but in addition, major pulses of juvenile hormone (JH) activity with a rhythmicity of 24 hr are unique to flesh flies destined for pupal diapause. JH activity persists during diapause, and a pulse of JH precedes the rise of moulting hormone that initiates adult development.  相似文献   

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