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Release of egg development neurosecretory hormone in Aedes aegypti and Aedes taeniorhynchus induced by an ovarian factor
Authors:Dov Borovsky
Institution:Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, P.O. Box 520, Vero Beach, FL 32961, U.S.A.
Abstract:Ovariectomized Aedes aegypti do not synthesize vitellogenin after a blood meal, unless an ovary from a blood-fed donor is implanted. Decapitation, however, prior to implantation inhibits vitellogenin synthesis. A female ovariectomized and decapitated 6 hr after a blood meal, synthesizes vitellogenin if an ovary from a blood-fed donor is implanted. On the other hand, females that are fed on blood and immediately decapitated can not be stimulated to synthesize vitellogenin with implanted ovaries removed from blood-fed donors. These experiments led to the hypothesis that the blood meal stimulates the ovary to secrete a corpus cardiacum stimulating factor, that in turn promotes release of egg development neurosecretory hormone stored in the corpus cardiacum.Injection of 20-hydroxy-ecdysone or ovarian extract prepared from ovaries removed from unfed females does not release egg development neurosecretory hormone. Thus corpus cardiacum stimulating factor is not 20-hydroxy-ecdysone, and ovaries removed from unfed females do not store it.The rate of inactivation of egg development neurosecretory hormone released from the corpus cardiacum after a blood meal was investigated by implanting an ovary into females that were blood fed for various intervals than decapitated and ovariectomized. Seventy per cent of implants grow when the operation is done 18 hr after feeding, and 30% when the operation is done between 18 and 24 hr after feeding, indicating that egg development neurosecretory hormone is stable for the first 18 hr after a blood meal.Aedes taeniorhynchus females ovariectomized 24 hr after adult emergence do not synthesize vitellogenin. When such a female is implanted with an ovary removed from a sugar-fed or blood-fed Aedes aegypti donor vitellogenin synthesis is initiated, and the implant grows. Decapitation prior to implantation inhibit vitellogenin synthesis and implants do not grow. These results indicate that corpus cardiacum stimulating factor is not species specific.
Keywords:Vitellogenin synthesis  Aedes aegypti  Aedes taeniorhynchus  radioimmunoassay  implantation of ovaries  hormonal regulation  egg development neurosecretory hormone  corpus cardiacum stimulating factor
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