首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The effects of juvenile hormone (JH) and 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) on the developmental expression of the two insecticyanin genes, ins-a and ins-b, were investigated with two gene-specific probes. Removal of the corpora allata (-CA, source of JH) clearly delayed and down-regulated the epidermal expression of these genes but enhanced their expression in the fat body during the early development of the fifth instar. Application of JH I to the -CA larvae at the time of head capsule slippage completely restored the normal epidermal expression pattern of the two genes in the early fifth instar, then INS-a mRNA declined prematurely whereas INS-b mRNA remained similar to that in the intact larvae. By contrast, in the fat body of -CA larvae, the exogenous JH had little effect on the levels of INS-a mRNA, but enhanced expression of INS-b mRNA relative to intact larvae. Culture of epidermis from day 1 fifth instar larvae with 40 ng/ml 20E for up to 24 h accelerated the loss of INS-a mRNA without affecting the levels of INS-b mRNA. Both mRNAs declined in isolated larval abdomens over a 24 h period, and this decline was slowed by 1 g methoprene (a JH analog). Together these results indicate that JH controls the levels of the two mRNAs in both the epidermis and fat body, with additional factors involved in regulating these genes in the fat body during the molt and in the epidermis during the growth phase.  相似文献   

2.
Two gene-specific probes were generated from the unique sequences in the 3' non-coding regions of the two insecticyanin genes, ins-a and ins-b to study the developmental expression of these genes in Manduca sexta. Both genes were initially transcribed in the freshly hatched first instar larvae and then expressed in the epidermis and to a lesser degree in the fat body during every larval feeding stage. In the epidermis of the 4th and 5th instar larvae, both mRNAs appeared shortly before ecdysis and accumulated to maximal levels within a day. As the larval epidermis became pupally committed on day 3 of the 5th (final) instar, INS-a mRNA quickly decreased, whereas INS-b mRNA showed a second peak of accumulation. In the fat body, both genes showed a similar expression pattern within the 4th instar to that of the epidermis except that levels were lower and ins-b mRNA dominated. In the final instar, only ins-b mRNA was present in significant amount. These findings not only reveal that the two duplicated insecticyanin genes have diverged in their expression pattern but also demonstrate, for the first time, that fat body also expresses insecticyanin genes.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Three cDNA clones coding for the 12.8, 13.3, and 14.6 kDa larval cuticular proteins of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, were isolated and characterized. Hybridization to abdominal epidermal RNA from different stages showed that the genes for the 12.8 and 13.3 kDa proteins were expressed only during larval life. By contrast, the gene for the 14.6 kDa protein was expressed throughout the segment during the feeding, growing larval stages, then only in the flexible intersegmental regions during the deposition of endocuticle in the pharate pupa and adult. Quantitative RNA dot blot hybridizations showed that the RNA for each protein disappeared during the larval molt when the ecdysteroid titer was high, then reappeared during the preecdysial deposition of endocuticle. All disappeared when the epidermis became pupally committed at the onset of wandering. Exposure of the fourth instar epidermis to 20-hydroxyecdysone (20HE) in vitro under conditions that lead to the formation of a new larval cuticle by 48 hr caused the disappearance of these RNAs by 18 hr. Exposure of Day 2 fifth instar epidermis to 20HE in vitro caused a depression of these RNAs which in the case of the RNAs coding for the 12.8 and 13.3 kDa proteins was partially prevented by simultaneous exposure to methoprene, a juvenile hormone (JH) mimic. By contrast, the RNA for the 14.6 kDa protein was suppressed by exposure to methoprene alone. Thus, each of these larval cuticular genes is turned off by high ecdysteroid; the presence or absence of JH determines whether or not this suppression is permanent in some or all cells.  相似文献   

5.
Summary During the final larval instar the epidermis of the tobacco hornworm,Manduca sexta, synthesizes the larval cuticular proteins and the pigment insecticyanin. Then at the onset of metamorphosis the cells first become pupally-committed, then later produce the pupal cuticle. The changes in the pattern of epidermal protein synthesis during this period were followed by incubating the integument in vitro with either3H-leucine or35S-methionine, then analyzing the proteins by 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Precipitation by larval and pupal cuticular antisera and by insecticyanin antibody identified these proteins. Three distinct changes in epidermal protein synthesis were noted: 1) Stage-specific proteins, some of which are larval cuticular proteins, appear just before and during the change of commitment on day 3. (2) By late the following day (wandering stage), synthesis of these and many other proteins including all the identified larval cuticular proteins and insecticyanin was undetectable. Several noncuticular proteins were transiently synthesized by this pupally committed cell during wandering and sometimes the following day. (3) During the production of pupal cuticle a new set of pupal-specific cuticular proteins as well as some common cuticular proteins (precipitated by both antisera) were synthesized. Some of the latter were also synthesized during the period between pupal commitment and pupal cuticle deposition.In spite of an apparent absence of methionine in both larval and pupal cuticle, many cuticular proteins incorporated35S-methionine. Thus they may be synthesized as proproteins.Insecticyanin was shown to have two forms differing in isoelectric point, the cellular form being more acidic than the hemolymph form. Synthesis of the cellular form ceased before that of the hemolymph form.  相似文献   

6.
Previous studies have shown that the larval epidermis of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, contains a 29 kDa nuclear protein (JP29) that binds pothoaffinity analogs of juvenile hormone (JH), but does not bind JH I with high affinity. We now find that JP29 is also associated with the insecticyanin granules, and we show that JP29 mRNA is regulated in a complex fashion by both 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and JH. Studies with day 2 fourth instar larval epidermis in vitro showed that a molting concentration 12 μg/ml) of 20E caused the disappearance of JP29 mRNA, irrespective of the presence or absence of JH; this effect was dependent on the concentration of 20E (ED50=200 ng/ml). The reappearance of JP29 mRNA around the time of ecdysis required the presence of JH at head capsule slippage (HCS), since little appeared in larvae allatectomized about 6 h before HCS unless JH I was applied at the time of HCS. Maintenance of JP29 mRNA in fifth instar epidermis also required the continued presence of JH in both isolated abdomens and in vitro. Culture of either day 1 or day 2 fifth instar epidermis without hormones for 24 h caused decline of JP29 mRNA, which was accelerated by 20E in a concentration-dependent manner (ED50 = 30 and 10 ng/ml 20E respectively). When day 2 epidermis was exposed to 500 ng/ml 20E for 24 h to cause pupal commitment, JP29 mRNA disappeared. Neither methoprene nor JH I (in either the presence or the absence of the esterase inhibitor O-ethyl, S-phenyl phosphamidethiolate [EPPAT]) was able to prevent this loss, although both slowed its rate. The mRNA for the larval cuticle protein LCP14 was found to be regulated similarly to that for JP29 by 20E, but differently by JH. The JP29 protein was relatively long-live, persisting after the disappearance of its mRNA for at least 19 h during the larval molt and for more than 24 h in vitro. Although trace amounts of JP29 are found for the first 12 h after pupal ecdysis, injection of 5 μg JH II into pupae during the critical period to cause the synthesis of a second pupal cuticle had no effect on the amount of JP29 present. Thus, although the presence of JP29 in larval epidermis is associated with and dependent on JH, high amounts are not associated with the “status quo” action of JH on the pupa. The role of this protein consequently remains obscure. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 34:409–428, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Hormonal Control of Epidermal Cell Development   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
SYNOPSIS. During larval life the insect epidermis makes a larvalcuticle and certain pigments due to the presence of juvenilehormone (JH) at critical times during the molt cycle. The presenceof JH also permits growth of imaginal discs and maintains strictlylarval epidermis. At metamorphosis the lepidopteran epidermisresponds to a low level of 20- hydroxyecdysone (20HE) in theabsence of JH by becoming pupally committed, then later it formsa pupal cuticle when more 20HE appears, even though JH is present.During the change of commitment, DNA synthesis occurs but isnot essential, whereas both RN A and protein synthesis are.The major changes in the translatable mRNA population at thistime are threefold: a decline in most larval cuticle mRNAs,a transient increase followed by a disappearance of a few larvalcuticle mRNAs, and an appearance of at least one ‘pupalcommitment’ mRNA and two to three mRNAs for small pupalcuticular proteins. Similar changes are seen in the proteinsynthetic patterns. Thus, a pupally committed cell is one whichcan no longer make larval products but which is not yet ableto make most pupal products. Juvenile hormone prevents the changeto pupal commitment by directing some of both the primary andthe secondary actions of 20HE on the genome.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Expression of Manduca Broad-Complex (BR-C) mRNA in the larval epidermis is under the dual control of ecdysone and juvenile hormone (JH). Immunocytochemistry with antibodies that recognize the core, Z2, and Z4 domains of Manduca BR-C proteins showed that BR-C appearance not only temporally correlates with pupal commitment of the epidermis on day 3 of the fifth (final) larval instar, but also occurs in a strict spatial pattern within the abdominal segment similar to that seen for the loss of sensitivity to JH. Levels of Z2 and Z4 BR-C proteins shift with Z2 predominating at pupal commitment and Z4 dominant during early pupal cuticle synthesis. Both induction of BR-C mRNA in the epidermis by 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and its suppression by JH were shown to be independent of new protein synthesis. For suppression JH must be present during the initial exposure to 20E. When JH was given 6 h after 20E, suppression was only seen in those regions that had not yet expressed BR-C. In the wing discs BR-C was first detected earlier 1.5 days after ecdysis, coincident with the pupal commitment of the wing. Our findings suggest that BR-C expression is one of the first molecular events underlying pupal commitment of both epidermis and wing discs.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, metamorphosis occurs in response to two releases of ecdysone that occur 2 days apart. Epidermis was explanted from feeding final-instar larvae before the first release of ecdysone and was cultured in Grace's medium. When exposed to 1 μg/ml of β-ecdysone for 24 hr and then to hormone-free medium for 24 hr, followed by 5 μg/ml of β-ecdysone for 4 days, the epidermis produced tanned pupal cuticle in vitro. During the first 24 hr of exposure to β-ecdysone, the epidermis first changed its cellular commitment to that for pupal cuticle formation (ET50 = 14 hr), then later (by 22 hr) it became committed to tan that cuticle. Then, for most of the pupal cuticle to be tanned, at least a 12-hr period of culture in hormone-free medium was required before the cuticle synthesis was initiated. Consequently, some events prerequisite to sclerotization of pupal cuticle not only occur during the ecdysone-induced change in commitment but also during the ecdysone-free period. When the tissue was preincubated in 3 μg/ml of juvenile hormone (JH I or a mimic epoxygeranylsesamole) for 3 hr and then exposed to both ecdysone and juvenile hormone for 24 hr, it subsequently formed larval cuticle. The optimal conditions for this larval cuticle formation were exposure to 5 μg/ml of β-ecdysone in the presence of 3 μg/ml of epoxygeranylsesamole for 48 hr. When the epidermis was cultured in Grace's medium for 3 days and then exposed to 5 μg/ml of β-ecdysone for 4 days, 70% of the pieces formed pupal cuticle. By contrast, if both ecdysone and JH were added, 77% formed larval cuticle. Therefore, the change from larval to pupal commitment of the epidermal cells requires not only the absence of JH, but also exposure to ecdysone.  相似文献   

12.
At the initiation of metamorphosis when exposed to ecdysteroid in the absence of juvenile hormone (JH), the lepidopteran epidermis changes its commitment from one for larval differentiation to one for pupal differentiation. Changes in mRNA populations during this change both in vivo and in vitro were followed by a one-dimensional SDS-gel electrophoretic analysis of translation products made in a mRNA-dependent rabbit reticulocyte lysate system. The larval epidermal cell was found to lose its translatable mRNAs for larval cuticular proteins and the larval-specific pigment insecticyanin during the change in commitment; these never reappeared. For Class I cuticular proteins and for insecticyanin, this loss occurred during the exposure to ecdysteroid, each with a differing time course. By contrast, Class II cuticular mRNAs first increased during this time, then also disappeared by the time the cells were pupally committed. In vitro these mRNAs appeared in only trace amounts in response to 20-hydroxyecdysone (20-HE). The pupally committed cell (late in the wandering stage) contained mRNAs for three low-molecular-weight proteins which were precipitable with the pupal cuticular antiserum. The remainder of the pupal cuticular mRNAs were not translatable until the third day after wandering, a time when pupal cuticle is being deposited in response to a molting surge of ecdysteroid. The pupally committed cell also had at least one new noncuticular mRNA which coded for a 34K protein and which was absent from both larval and pupal epidermal cells making cuticle. Since its appearance in response to 20-HE in vitro is repressed by JH, it is called a pupal commitment-specific protein. Thus, during the change of commitment 20-HE inactivates larval-specific genes irreversibly in a sequential cascade of events. The activation of most pupal-specific genes then requires a subsequent exposure to more ecdysteroid.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
E75A and E75B, isoforms of the E75 orphan nuclear receptor, are sequentially up-regulated in the abdominal epidermis of the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta by 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) during larval and pupal molts, with E75A also increasing at pupal commitment (Zhou et al., Dev. Biol. 193, 127-138, 1998). We have now cloned E75C and show that little is expressed in the epidermis during larval life with trace amounts seen just before ecdysis. Instead, E75C is found in high amounts during the development of the adult wings as the ecdysteroid titer is rising, and this increase was prevented by juvenile hormone (JH) that prevented adult development. By contrast, E75D is expressed transiently during the larval and pupal molts as the ecdysteroid titer begins to decline and again just before ecdysis, but in the developing adult wings is expressed on the rise of 20E. Removal of the source of JH had little effect on either E75C or E75D mRNA expression during the larval and pupal molts. At the time of pupal commitment, in vitro experiments show that 20E up-regulates E75D and JH prevents this increase. Neither E75A nor E75D mRNA was up-regulated by JH alone. Thus, E75C is primarily involved in adult differentiation whereas E75D has roles both during the molt and pupal commitment.  相似文献   

16.
The eye imaginal disc of Manduca sexta is created early in the final larval instar from the adult eye primordium, which is composed of fully differentiated cells of the larval head capsule epidermis. Concomitant with the down-regulation of the larval epidermal program, expression of broad, a marker of pupal commitment, is activated in the primordium. The cells then detach from the cuticle, fold inward, and begin to proliferate at high levels to produce the inverted, eye imaginal disc. These and other events that begin on the first day of the final larval instar appear to mark the initiation of metamorphosis. Little is known about the endocrine control of the initiation of metamorphosis in any insect. The hemolymph titer of juvenile hormone (JH) declines to low levels during this period and the presence of JH is sufficient to repress development in cultured eye primordia. However, maintenance of JH at high levels in vivo by treatment with long-lasting JH mimics has no apparent effect on early steps in eye imaginal disc development. We discuss our findings in the context of the endocrine control of metamorphosis. The initiation of metamorphosis in Manduca, and perhaps a wide range of insect species, appears to involve the overcoming of JH repression by an unidentified, nutrient-dependent, hormonal factor.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) activity, ecdysone titre, and developmental competence of the epidermis were determined in last instar larvae and pupae of Galleria mellonella. Haemolymph JHE activity reaches a peak before increases are observed in ecdysone titre both during larval-pupal and pupal-adult metamorphosis. JHE activity is low during the penultimate larval instar although general esterase activity is relatively high. In last instar larvae two ecdysone peaks are noted after the increase in JHE activity. Furthermore, epidermal cell reprogramming occurs just after the increase in haemolymph JHE activity and possibly before the first increase in ecdysone titre. This was tested by injection of high doses of β-ecdysone into last instar larvae of different ages resulting in rapid cuticle deposition. Reprogramming occurred if the resulting cuticle was of the pupal type. These correlative observations may increase our understanding of the relative importance of an ecdysone surge in the absence of JH in reprogramming of the insect epidermis.  相似文献   

19.
The granular phenoloxidase (PO) that is responsible for cuticular melanization in Manduca sexta larva was purified and an antibody was prepared. This granular PO was found to consist of four isozymes of 90 kDa with isoelectric points ranging from 5.7 to 5.85. The enzyme was immunologically and electrophoretically distinct from the cuticular wound PO, a second cuticular PO common to all larval cuticle, and the hemolymph PO. Both [14C]mannose and [14C]sialic acid were incorporated into the granular PO, showing that this granular PO was a glycoprotein whose sugar moiety was a complex oligosaccharide. When no juvenile hormone (JH) was present at the head capsule slippage (HCS) stage, the epidermis began synthesizing PO 6 hr later. This epidermal synthesis was maximal 12 hr after HCS at which time the PO appeared in the cuticle, and then synthesis declined. When synthesis ceased about 23 hr after HCS, no further incorporation into the cuticle was observed. As melanization proceeded, immunologically detectable cuticular PO decreased. Application of 0.1 microgram JH I at the time of HCS inhibited synthesis of PO by the epidermis and thus prevented melanization. JH application after PO synthesis had begun (8 hr after HCS) prevented its subsequent synthesis, causing partial melanization. Thus, the absence of JH is necessary during the period of epidermal synthesis of the granular PO to allow complete melanization.  相似文献   

20.
 Insect molting and metamorphosis are orchestrated by ecdysteroids with juvenile hormone (JH) preventing the actions of ecdysteroids necessary for metamorphosis. During the molt and metamorphosis of the dorsal abdominal epidermis of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, the isoforms involved in the ecdysone receptor (EcR)/Ultraspiracle (USP) complex change with the most dramatic switch being the loss of USP-1 and the appearance of USP-2 during the larval and pupal molts. We show here that this switch in USP isoforms is mediated by high 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and that the presence of JH is necessary for the down-regulation of USP-1 mRNA. The decrease of USP-1 mRNA in day 2 fourth instar larval epidermis in vitro required exposure to a high concentration (10–5 M) of 20E equivalent to the peak ecdysteroid concentration in vivo, whereas the increase of USP-2 mRNA occurred at lower concentrations (effective concentrations, EC50=6.3×10–7 M). During the pupal molt of allatectomized larvae which lack JH, USP-2 mRNA increased normally with the increasing ecdysteroid titer, whereas USP-1 mRNA remained high until pupation. When day 2 fifth instar larval epidermis was exposed to 500 ng/ml 20E in the absence of JH to cause pupal commitment of the cells by 24 h, USP-1 RNA remained at its high preculture level for 12 h, then increased two- to threefold by 24 h. The increase was prevented by the presence of 1 μg/ml JH I which also prevents the pupal commitment of the cells. By contrast, USP-2 mRNA increased steadily with the same EC50 as in fourth stage epidermis, irrespective of the presence or absence of JH. Under the same conditions, mRNAs for both EcR-B1 and EcR-A isoforms were up-regulated by 20E, each in its own time-dependent manner, similar to that seen in vivo. These initial mRNA increases were unaffected by the presence of JH I, but those seen after 12 h exposure to 20E were prevented by JH, indicating a difference in response between larvally and pupally committed cells. The presence of JH which maintained larval commitment of the cells also prolonged the half-life of the EcR proteins in these cells. These results indicate that both EcR and USP RNAs are regulated by 20E and can be modulated by JH in a complex manner with only that of USP-2 apparently unaffected. Received: 16 July 1998 / Accepted: 5 August 1998  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号