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1.
Ecdysteroid titers were determined in tissues (gut plus Malpighian tubules, carcass tissue, fat body, muscles, haemolymph, accessory reproductive glands, and testes) of male adult crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus, during the first 20 days of adult life as well as in spermatophores. In all tissues, except testes, total ecdysteroid titers are high on the day of imaginal moulting and then drop more or less continuously until day 8 after moulting. Distinctly higher levels are found on day 12 and 18 as well. Freshly moulted males contain high quantities of polar ecdysteroid conjugates in the digestive tract, testes, accessory reproductive glands, and haemolymph. Apolar ecdysteroid conjugates are mainly detectable in carcass tissue and fat body, but also in the haemolymph during entire adulthood. Free ecdysteroids represent the domineering class of moulting hormones in the gut during all stages of adult life. The significance of cycling ecdysteroid concentrations during adulthood is discussed in relation to spermatophore production and development of male accessory reproductive glands.  相似文献   

2.
The last larval moult of Galleria mellonella is induced by an elevation of ecdysteroid titre to more than 200 ng/g. After ecdysis the titre remains very low until 70 hr of the last-instar when a slight elevation in ecdysteroid concentration initiates the onset of metamorphosis. An ecdysteroid peak (275 ng/g), which occurs between 108 and 144 hr, is associated with wandering and cocoon spinning. Pupal ecdysis follows about 20 hr after a large ecdysteroid peak (780 ng/g) with a maximum in slowly-mobile prepupae (160 hr of the last larval instar). The ecdysteroid decrease between the two peaks coincides with the period when the larvae exposed to unfavourable conditions enter diapause. The pupal-adult moult is initiated by a high ecdysteroid peak (1500–2500 ng/g) in early pupae and imaginal cuticle is secreted in response to a smaller peak (ca. 500 ng/g) in the middle of pupal instar.Until early pupae, the ecdysteroid content is regulated by the prothoracic glands. In decapitated larvae the glands become spontaneously active after 30–40 days and the body titre of ecdysteroids undergoes an increase; the glands revert to inactivity when the insects accomplish secretion of pupal cuticle. A similar ecdysteroid increase occurs within 10 days when the decapitated larvae receive implants of brains releasing the prothoracicotropic neurohormone (PTTH). In either case, the pupation-inducing increase of ecdysteroids is 3 times higher than the large ecdysteroid peak in the last-instar of intact larvae. This indicates that the function of prothoracic glands in intact larvae is restrained, probably by the juvenile hormone (JH). Exogenous JH suppresses the spontaneous activation of the prothoracic glands in decapitated larvae and reduces the ecdysteroid concentration in those larvae (both decapitated and intact), whose glands were activated by PTTH. Furthermore, JH influences the PTTH release from the brain in situ: depending on JH concentration and the age and size of treated larvae, the PTTH liberation is either accelerated or delayed.Neither in G. mellonella larvae, nor in the diapausing pupae of Hyalophora cecropia and Celerio euphorbiae, does JH directly activate the prothoracic glands. It is suggested that the induction of the moult by JH in decerebrate insects, which has been observed in some species, is either due to indirect stimulation of ecdysteroid production or to increased sensitivity of target tissues to ecdysteroids. In G. mellonella, a moult occurs at a 5–15 times lower than usual ecdysteroid concentration when the last-instar larvae are exposed to JH.  相似文献   

3.
In many animals, male copulation is dependent on the detection and processing of female-produced sex pheromones, which is generally followed by a sexual refractory post-ejaculatory interval (PEI). In the male moth, Agrotis ipsilon, this PEI is characterized by a transient post-mating inhibition of behavioral and central nervous responses to sex pheromone, which prevents males from re-mating until they have refilled their reproductive tracts for a potential new ejaculate. However, the timing and possible factors inducing this rapid olfactory switch-off are still unknown. Here, we determined the initial time delay and duration of the PEI. Moreover, we tested the hypothesis that the brain, the testis and/or the sex accessory glands (SAGs) could produce a factor inducing the PEI. Lastly, we investigated the possible involvement of ecdysteroids, hormones essential for development and reproduction in insects, in this olfactory plasticity. Using brain and SAG cross-injections in virgin and newly-mated males, surgical treatments, wind tunnel behavioral experiments and EIA quantifications of ecdysteroids, we show that the PEI starts very shortly after the onset of copulation, and that SAGs contain a factor, which is produced/accumulated after copulation to induce the PEI. Moreover, SAGs were found to be the main source of ecdysteroids, whose concentration decreased after mating, whereas it increased in the haemolymph. 20-Hydroxyecdysone (20E) was identified as the major ecdysteroid in SAGs of A. ipsilon males. Finally, 20E injections did not reduce the behavioral pheromone response of virgin males. Altogether our data indicate that 20E is probably not involved in the PEI.  相似文献   

4.
The ecdysteroid hormones, mainly 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E), play a pivotal role in insect development by controlling gene expression involved in molting and metamorphosis. In the model insectManduca sexta the production of ecdysteroids by the prothoracic gland is acutely controlled by a brain neurohormone, prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH). PTTH initiates a cascade of events that progresses from the influx of Ca2+ and cAMP generation through phosphorylation of the ribosomal protein S6 and S6-dependent protein synthesis, and concludes with an increase in the synthesis and export of ecdysteroids from the gland. Recent studies indicate that S6 phosphorylation probably controls the steroidogenic effect of PTTH by gating the translation of selected mRNAs whose protein products are required for increased ecdysteroid synthesis. Inhibition of S6 phosphorylation prevents an increase in PTTH-stimulated protein synthesis and subsequent ecdysteroid synthesis. Two of the proteins whose translations are specifically stimulated by PTTH have been identified, one being a β tubulin and the other a heat shock protein 70 family member. Current data suggest that these two proteins could be involved in supporting microtubule-dependent protein synthesis and ecdysone receptor assembly and/or function. Recent data also indicate that the 20E produced by the prothoracic gland feeds back upon the gland by increasing expression and phosphorylation of a specific USP isoform that is a constituent of the functional ecdysone receptor. Changes in the concentration and composition of the ecdysone receptor complex of the prothoracic gland could modulate the gland's potential for ecdysteroid synthesis (e.g. feedback inhibition) by controlling the levels of enzymes or other proteins in the ecdysteroid biosynthetic pathway.  相似文献   

5.
When insect larvae have fully grown, prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) is released from the brain, triggering the initiation of metamorphic development through stimulation of ecdysteroid secretion by the prothoracic glands. The present study analyzes the mechanism that regulates the occurrence of this PTTH surge. In the silkworm Bombyx mori, the PTTH surge occurs on day 6 of the fifth instar and is preceded by a small rise in hemolymph ecdysteroid titer, which occurs late on day 5. We therefore hypothesized that this rise of ecdysteroid titer is involved in the induction of the PTTH surge. To test this hypothesis, two experiments were conducted. First, a small amount of 20-hydroxyecdysone was injected on day 4, two days before the expected day of the PTTH surge, to simulate the small rise in hemolymph ecdysteroid titer on day 5. This injection led to a precocious surge of PTTH the next day. Next, the hemolymph ecdysteroid titer on day 5 was artificially lowered by injecting ecdysteroid-22-oxidase, which inactivates 20-hydroxyecdysone. After this treatment, the PTTH surge did not occur on day 6 in 80% of the animals. These results indicate that a small rise of the hemolymph ecdysteroid titer plays a critical role in the induction of the PTTH surge. Since basal ecdysteroidogenic activity of the prothoracic glands increases with larval growth, a circulating level of ecdysteroids may convey information about larval maturity to the brain, to coordinate larval growth and metamorphosis. This is the first report in invertebrates to demonstrate positive feedback regulation of the surge of a tropic hormone by a downstream steroid hormone.  相似文献   

6.
In Spodoptera littoralis, testicular sperm release occurs in a daily rhythm, which is controlled by endogenous circadian oscillator located in the male reproductive system. Although this rhythm is essential for male fertility, factors that initiate and maintain daily sperm release are not understood. In this study, we investigated a modulatory role for ecdysteroids in the sperm release rhythm and identified the source of ecdysteroids in adult males. We found that the onset of sperm release occurs two days pre-eclosion and coincides with a significant decrease in haemolymph ecdysteroids levels. 20-HE injection into the pupae prior to the first sperm release delayed its initiation and disrupted the developing rhythm in a dose dependent manner. 20-HE injection into adults depressed the number of sperm bundles leaving the testes. A day before the initial sperm release, ecdysteroid levels in the haemolymph and testes begin to oscillate in a circadian fashion. Ecdysteroid rhythms continue throughout imaginal life and correlate with the rhythm of sperm release. In each cycle, testicular sperm release coincides with a trough in testicular ecdysteroid concentration. Rhythmic changes in ecdysteroid levels are regulated by an endogenous circadian oscillator that continues to function in decapitated males. The generation of a complete cycle of ecdysteroid release by testes cultured in vitro indicates that this oscillator is located in the gonads. The haemolymph ecdysteroid levels are significantly lower and arrhythmic in males with removed testes, indicating that the testes are an important ecdysteroid source that may contribute to oscillations in haemolymph ecdysteroid levels.  相似文献   

7.
Considerable amounts of ecdysteroids are produced during each ovarian cycle in adult females of Locusta when vitellogenesis is almost completed. The hormonal molecules are synthesized at the end of the maturation of the terminal oöcytes during each cycle, at the time when vitellogenesis is almost completed. No synthesis takes place in the absence of ovarian development (allatectomy, ovariectomy), whereas extirpation of the prothoracic glands at the beginning of adult life does not affect ecdysteroid production. More than 95% of the total ecdysteroid content of female adults can be recovered from the ovaries. In vitro studies show that the ovaries produce ecdysteroids and convert labelled cholesterol into ecdysone. Microsurgical experiments indicate that this synthesis takes place in the follicle cells surrounding the oöcyte. The newly synthesized ecdysteroids do not enter massively into the blood, but pass into the oöplasm where they are progressively converted to polar compounds; as a result, at the end of each ovarian cycle, egg-laying corresponds to the disappearance of ecdysteroids from the female insects, the hormonal molecules can easily be recovered from the eggs. A gas chromatographic analysis coupled to mass spectrometry shows that the principal ecdysteroid synthesized by the adult females of Locusta is by far ecdysone. Ecdysterone, the paramount ecdysteroid of the larvae of Locusta, is not present in noticeable amounts in the female adult of this species.  相似文献   

8.
A haemolymph ecdysteroid titre of the fifth (last)-larval instar of the hemipteran, Rhodnius prolixus has been determined by radioimmunoassay. During the last-larval stadium the ecdysteroid titre increases from a negligible level in the unfed insect to a detectable level within minutes following a blood meal. The titre reaches a plateau of ~50–70 ng/ml at 3–4 hr and this level is maintained until day 5–6, the time of the head-critical period in Rhodnius. At the head-critical period the titre begins to increase again, this time dramatically, reaching a peak of ~ 3500 ng/ml at day 13. From day 14 to ecdysis (day 21) the titre declines to a low level, ~ 30 ng/ml. Basal levels of ecdysteroids, ~ 15 ng/ml, were detectable in young adult males and females. A survey of haemolymph volumes during the last-larval instar indicates that the changes in the ecdysteroid titre reflect changes in the rates of ecdysteroid synthesis, and not changes in haemolymph volume. Excretion of ecdysteroids varies systematically during the instar, suggesting that control of ecdysteroid excretion may be important in regulation of the haemolymph titre. Qualitative analysis of the haemolymph ecdysteroid RIA activity revealed the presence of only ecdysone and 20-hydroxy-ecdysone. For the large peak preceding larval-adult ecdysis, 20-hydroxy-ecdysone was the predominant hormone. These results indicate that there may be two periods of release of prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) from the brain in Rhodnius, one immediately following the blood meal and the second on day 5 or 6. The significance of these times of PTTH release is discussed in relation to classical evidence of the timing of moulting hormone action, the response of target tissues, and with more recent findings on the timing of release of neurosecretory material from the brain of Rhodnius during moulting.  相似文献   

9.
Prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) is a brain neurohormone that has been studied for over 80 years. The only known target of PTTH is the prothoracic glands (PGs) of larvae, which synthesize the insect molting hormones (ecdysteroids) and a massive literature exists on this axis. The PGs degenerate around the time of adult emergence, yet presence of PTTH has been reported in the brains of several adult insects. Using an in vitro bioassay system, we confirm that PTTH is present in the adult female brain of Rhodnius prolixus. The material is electrophoretically, immunologically and biologically indistinguishable from larval PTTH. The amount of PTTH in the brain shows a daily rhythm during egg development. We show that brains in vitro release PTTH with a daily rhythm over this period of time. PTTH is released at each scotophase. This is the first report that PTTH is released from the adult brain and functions as a hormone, inviting explanation of its function. Larval PTTH is also known to be released with a daily rhythm, and the clock in the brain controls both larval and adult rhythms. The potential significance of rhythmic PTTH release in female adults is discussed in relation to the regulation of ecdysteroids, egg development and the concept of internal temporal order.  相似文献   

10.
Ecdysteroid titres in whole flies and different tissues of adult male and female Drosophila were determined at various times after eclosion using a radioimmunoassay. The ecdysteroid titre decreased as the flies matured after eclosion. The differences in titre between males and females can be accounted for by their difference in body weight. The ecdysteroids were found to be distributed throughout several tissues. At eclosion not all of the ecdysteroid complement present could be accounted for by that found localised in tissues. After maturation of the flies the ecdysteroids in various tissues can account for the majority of that detected in whole-fly extracts. Ecdysteroids were produced during in vitro culture of various tissues, but the quantities detected were low by comparison with ring glands of wandering 3rd-instar larvae. Neither the ovaries nor the abdominal body walls (fat body) seem to be a major source of hormone, and they are only able to convert minute quantities of ecdysone to the biologically active form, 20-hydroxyecdysone, in vitro. The amounts of 20-hydroxyecdysone present were measured using high performance liquid chromatography and radioimmunoassay. We tentatively suggest that the differential experession of the yolk-protein-genes in the fat bodies of males and females does not result from differences in hormone titres between them.  相似文献   

11.
We previously reported preferential expression of genes for ecdysteroid signaling in the mushroom bodies of honeybee workers, suggesting a role of ecdysteroid signaling in regulating honeybee behaviors. The organs that produce ecdysteroids in worker honeybees, however, remain unknown. We show here that the expression of neverland and Non-molting glossy/shroud, which are involved in early steps of ecdysteroid synthesis, was enhanced in the ovary, while the expression of CYP306A1 and CYP302A1, which are involved in later steps of ecdysone synthesis, was enhanced in the brain, and the expression of CYP314A1, which is involved in converting ecdysone into active 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E), was enhanced in the brain, fat body, and ovary. In in vitro organ culture, a significant amount of ecdysteroids was detected in the culture medium of the brain, fat body, and hypopharyngeal glands. The ecdysteroids detected in the culture medium of the fat body were identified as ecdysone and 20E. These findings suggest that, in worker honeybees, cholesterol is converted into intermediate ecdysteroids in the ovary, whereas ecdysone is synthesized and secreted mainly by the brain and converted into 20E in the brain and fat body.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Summary

Ecdysteroid synthesis is regulated in insects by prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) and in crustaceans by molt-inhibiting hormone (MIH). These neurohormones exert opposite effects on their respective target tissues, PTTH stimulating the prothoracic glands and MIH inhibiting the Y-organs. The present work reviews recent progress in the neurohormonal regulation of prothoracic gland and Y-organ function. The steroid products of these glands are briefly discussed, as is current information on the structures of PTTH and MIH. Focus is placed on the mechanism of action of these hormones at the cellular level, as well as developmental changes in cellular sensitivity to PTTH. Though exerting different effects on ecdysteroid secretion, both PTTH and MIH increase cyclic nucleotide second messengers, are influenced by alterations in cellular calcium, and are likely to activate protein kinases. The contrasting steroidogenic effects of PTTH and MIH probably arise from differences in the cellular kinase substrates. In insects, such substrates enhance ecdysteroid secretion, possibly by increasing the translation of glandular proteins. In crustaceans, MIH-stimulated changes lead to the inhibition of both protein synthesis and steroidogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
The endocrine regulation of larval-pupal metamorphosis was studied in the silkworm, Bombyx mori, by measuring the following changes: hemolymph ecdysteroid titer, the secretory activity of prothoracic glands and the responsiveness of larvae to ecdysteroids and prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH), with regard to developmental events such as the occurrence of spinneret pigmentation, initiation of cocoon spinning and onset of wandering stage as indicated by gut purge. These measurements were concentrated especially on the time before and after the head critical period (HCP) which falls 3-4 days before the gut purge ([Sakurai, 1984]). A small increase in the hemolymph ecdysteroid titer was first found during the HCP, and then the titer increased with daily fluctuations. Small but significant titer peaks were found prior to the occurrence of both spinneret pigmentation and gut purge, indicating that an individual titer peak could possess a specific role in development. Responsiveness of larvae to exogenous 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) after the HCP was markedly higher than that before the HCP. The sensitivity of the prothoracic gland to PTTH also changed during the HCP. The results thus showed that the HCP is not the period after which an additional PTTH release is not required for the developmental events occurring on schedule, but rather it is the period during which complex events occur not only in the endocrine glands but also in the peripheral tissues. In addition, various developmental phenomena before gut purge are brought about by the hemolymph ecdysteroid whose concentration gradually increased with daily fluctuations, and these precise changes in the titer appeared to be important for the sequential occurrence of developmental events in the larval-pupal metamorphosis.  相似文献   

15.
This review presents a new perspective on the circadian regulation and functions of insect developmental hormones. In Rhodnius prolixus (Hemiptera), the brain neuropeptide prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) is released with a circadian rhythm that is controlled by paired photosensitive clocks in the brain. These clocks comprise the dorsal and lateral PER/TIM clock neurons known to regulate behavioral rhythms in Drosophila. Axons of PTTH and clock cells make close contact. Photosensitive PER/TIM clocks also reside in the paired prothoracic glands (PGs), which generate rhythmic synthesis and release of the ecdysteroid molting hormones. The PG clocks are entrained by both light and PTTH. These four clocks are coupled together by both nerves and hormones into a timing system whose primary regulated output is the circadian rhythm of ecdysteroids in the hemolymph. This complex timing system appears necessary to ensure circadian organization of the gene expression that is induced in target cells by ecdysteroids via circadian cycling of the nuclear ecdysteroid receptor (EcR). This multioscillator system serves to transduce 'the day outside' into endocrine rhythms that orchestrate 'the day inside'. It has many functional similarities with vertebrate circadian systems.  相似文献   

16.
Male accessory gland proteins (Acps) act as key modulators of reproductive success in insects by influencing the female reproductive physiology and behavior. We used custom microarrays and identified 112 genes that were highly expressed in male accessory glands (MAG) in the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum. Out of these 112 identified genes, 59 of them contained sequences coding for signal peptide and cleavage site and the remaining 53 contained transmembrane domains. The expression of 14 of these genes in the MAG but not in other tissues of male or female was confirmed by quantitative real-time PCR. In virgin males, juvenile hormone (JH) levels increased from second day post adult emergence (PAE), remained high on third day PAE and declined on fourth day PAE. The ecdysteroid titers were high soon after adult emergence but declined to minimal levels from 1 to 5 days PAE. Feeding of juvenile hormone analog, hydroprene, but not the ecdysteroid analog, RH-2485, showed an increase in size of MAGs, as well as an increase in total RNA and protein content of MAG. Hydroprene treatment also increased the expression of Acp genes in the MAG. RNAi-mediated knock-down in the expression of JHAMT gene decreased the size of MAGs and expression of Acps. JH deficiency influenced male reproductive fitness as evidenced by a less vigor in mating behavior, poor sperm transfer, low egg and the progeny production by females mated with the JH deficient males. These data suggest a critical role for JH in the regulation of male reproduction especially through MAG secretions.  相似文献   

17.
Radioimmunoassay was used to determine ecdysteroid titers in mated or unmated Drosophila melanogaster females. Whole-body ecdysteroid titers increase after mating and this response is more pronounced after 12-24 hours than it is immediately after mating. In one experiment, females were mated to transgenic males deficient in accessory gland proteins to test whether these peptides mediate the observed increase in female whole-body ecdysteroid titers. Females mated to such transgenic males do not show a pronounced increase in whole-body ecdysteroid titers. The effect of mating on female hemolymph ecdysteroid titers was also investigated. Hemolymph ecdysteroid titers decrease after mating. The ecdysteroid titer change in the hemolymph may result from yolk protein uptake of ecdysteroids into developing vitellogenic oocytes as a consequence of male accessory gland protein stimulation of female oocyte maturation and yolk protein synthesis following mating.  相似文献   

18.
Ecdysteroids, primarily 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and ecdysone (E), are steroid hormones that regulate various developmental and physiological processes in insects. Commonly, immunoassays are used to quantify ecdysteroid titers of insects. However, the antibodies used in these assays react not only with 20E and E but often also with their inactive reserves and metabolites, and thus require purification before they can be quantified precisely. Here, we developed a simple cell-based method to quantify only the hormonally active ecdysteroids using newly established cells harboring the firefly luciferase gene under the control of the ecdysteroid-inducible promoter of the E75A gene of the silkworm Bombyx mori L. These cells also constitutively expressed the Renilla luciferase gene using the baculovirus ie2 promoter for internal reference. This cell-based method detected hormonally active ecdysteroids with significantly higher sensitivity than their inactive metabolites. Hemolymph ecdysteroid titers, determined using a dual luciferase assay after exposing these cells to crude extracts of B. mori larval and pupal hemolymph, agreed well with the sum of the 20E and E titers, which were quantified individually using a radioimmunoassay after they had been separated by HPLC. Thus, this method is very useful for quantifying the ecdysteroid titers of insects, particularly when the samples contain large amounts of ecdysteroid reserves and metabolites.  相似文献   

19.
Prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) is a homodimeric brain peptide hormone that positively regulates the production of ecdysteroids by the prothoracic gland of Lepidoptera and probably other insects. PTTH was first purified from heads of adult domestic silkworms, Bombyx mori. Prothoracic glands of Bombyx and Manduca sexta undergo apoptosis well before the adult stage is reached, raising the recurring question of PTTH function at these later stages. Because Bombyx has been domesticated for thousands of years, the possibility exists that the presence of PTTH in adult animals is an accidental result of domestication for silk production. In contrast, Manduca has been raised in the laboratory for only five or six decades. The present study found that Manduca brains contain PTTH at all stages examined post‐prothoracic gland apoptosis, i.e., pharate adult and adult life, and that PTTH‐dependent changes in protein phosphorylation and protein synthesis were observed in several reproductive and reproduction‐associated organs. The data indicate that PTTH indeed plays a role in non‐steroidogenic tissues and suggest possible future avenues for determining which cellular processes are being so regulated. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
The prothoracic glands of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, have been an advantageous model for investigating the cellular mechanisms underlying hormone-stimulated ecdysteroid secretion in insects. The cerebral neuropeptide prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) is currently thought to activate the prothoracic glands via a calcium-dependent increase in cAMP synthesis, activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and protein phosphorylation (Gilbert et al.: Bioessays, 8:153-158, '88). The present paper discusses current research regarding early changes in cell function elicited by PTTH, with emphasis on the regulation of cAMP synthesis and degradation and the involvement of translational events in PTTH action.  相似文献   

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