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Effects of starvation,chilling, and injury on endocrine gland function in Galleria mellonella
Authors:Jaroslava Mal  Frantisek Sehnal  A Krishna Kumaran  Noelle A Granger
Institution:Jaroslava Malá,Frantisek Sehnal,A. Krishna Kumaran,Noelle A. Granger
Abstract:Starvation, chilling, and injury of last instar Galleria mellonella larvae typically elicit extra larval molts or a delay in pupation. The primary sites of action and the nature of the signals by which these treatments affect development are not known. However, since the connections of the brain to the nerve cord are crucial for the effects of starvation and chilling, these signals apparently affect the brain-centered program of developmental regulation via the nerve cord. Chilling, and occasionally starvation, cause extra larval molts in last instar larvae treated prior to the nervous inhibition of their corpora allata; release of a cerebral allatotropin, which stimulates the production of juvenile hormone, appears to be involved in this effect. After this time, a delay in pupation is the principal effect of starvation and chilling, and is apparently due to a temporal inhibition of the release of the prothoracicotropic hormone. Chilling also appears to inhibit unstimulated ecdysteroid production by the prothoracic glands. The effect of injury is not mediated by the nerve cord, but appears to involve an inhibitory humoral factor that affects either the brain or the prothoracic glands themselves. Injury also stimulates juvenile hormone production, an effect which is enhanced when the brain is separated from the nerve cord and which is evidenced by a delay of ecdysis and the occasional retention of some larval features in the ecdysed insects. None of the effects of these various treatments on the brain and the endocrine glands persist when the brains or glands are implanted into untreated hosts.
Keywords:insect development  endocrine gland regulation
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