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1.
《Insect Biochemistry》1987,17(7):933-937
Corpora allata (CA) of last instar larvae of Manduca sexta switch from juvenile hormone (JH) to JH acid secretion just before the onset of wandering behavior. JH acid secretion peaked during the prepupal period and ceased prior to pupal ecdysis. HMG-CoA reductase activity also peaked during the prepupal period and then declined. However, substantial enzyme activity was present in pupal and pharate adult glands. Removal of the brain at the wandering stage caused a reduction in JH acid secretion by prepupal CA. The profile of HMG-CoA activity in CA of debrained larvae resembled that of sham-operated larvae except that the prepupal peak was smaller than in control larvae. Addition of brain extracts to CA maintained in vitro neither stimulated not inhibited JH acid secretion and HMG-CoA reductase activity. It is suggested that the brain regulates CA activity in post-wandering stages via intact nerves.  相似文献   

2.
During the period of adult emergence in the Eri silkworm, Samia cynthia ricini, the corpora allata (CA) are apparently reactivated in females, but not males. This creates a significant sexual dimorphism in juvenile hormone (JH) synthesis by CA. To determine the underlying molecular mechanisms in this process, we cloned cDNAs of two enzymes involved in the JH synthesis pathway: 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA reductase (HMGR) and juvenile hormone acid methyl transferase (JHAMT). Both Samcri-HMGR and -JHAMT mRNAs were detected in CA almost exclusively. However, their expression patterns were different from each other. During the period of adult emergence, Samcri-HMGR was expressed in CA at a constantly high level suggesting it plays little role for the regulation of JH synthesis. In contrast, the patterns of both Samcri-JHAMT mRNA level and enzyme activity were closely correlated with the patterns of JH synthesis, CA reactivation, and sexual dimorphism of JH synthesis. In addition, JHAMT mRNA levels were paralleled JH synthesis in the fifth-instar larvae of S. cynthia ricini and the pharate adults of the silkworm Bombyx mori. We infer from these results that JHAMT is a key regulatory enzyme for JH synthesis in the Eri silkworm.  相似文献   

3.
Juvenile hormones (JHs) are synthesized by the corpora allata (CA) and play a key role in insect development. A decrease of JH titer in the last instar larvae allows pupation and metamorphosis to proceed. As the anti-metamorphic role of JH comes to an end, the CA of the late pupa (or pharate adult) becomes again “competent” to synthesize JH, which would play an essential role orchestrating reproductive maturation. In the present study, we provide evidence that ecdysis triggering hormone (ETH), a key endocrine factor involved in ecdysis control, acts as an allatotropic regulator of JH biosynthesis, controlling the exact timing of CA activation in the pharate adult mosquito. Analysis of the expression of Aedes aegypti ETH receptors (AeaETHRs) revealed that they are present in the CA and the corpora cardiaca (CC), and their expression peaks 4 h before eclosion. In vitro stimulation of the pupal CA glands with ETH resulted in an increase in JH synthesis. Consistent with this finding, silencing AeaETHRs by RNA interference (RNAi) in pupa resulted in reduced JH synthesis by the CA of one day-old adult females. Stimulation with ETH resulted in increases in the activity of juvenile hormone acid methyltransferase (JHAMT), a key JH biosynthetic enzyme. Furthermore, inhibition of IP3R-operated mobilization of endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ stores prevented the ETH-dependent increases of JH biosynthesis and JHAMT activity. All together these findings provide compelling evidence that ETH acts as a regulatory peptide that ensures proper developmental timing of JH synthesis in pharate adult mosquitoes.  相似文献   

4.
The occurrence of a peak of juvenile hormone (JH) during the prepupal period has been noted in several lepidopterans. In Manduca sexta and Hyalophora cecropia this peak is known to prevent the precocious onset of adult differentiation in imaginal tissues. However, it has previously been observed in our laboratory that corpora allata (CA) of this age are incapable of making JH owing to a lack of the terminal synthetic enzyme, juvenile hormone acid methyltransferase (JHAMT). Since the CA are required for normal pupation, it is likely that JH acid is the product released by the prepupal CA. Therefore, we analyzed whether JH acid treatment would prevent precocious adultoid differentiation in allatectomized M. sexta larvae. JH acid injections were found to be as effective as JH in normalizing pupation, and acted in a time- and dose-dependent manner. This finding led to a question of whether injected or endogenous JH acid could be methylated to JH. Homogenates of several tissues from prepupae were assayed for the presence of JHAMT. Of the tissues assayed, only imaginal discs possessed significant levels of the enzyme. These results support our previously proposed mechanism for production of the prepupal JH peak in M. sexta.  相似文献   

5.
Juvenile hormone III (JH) is synthesized by the corpora allata (CA) and plays a key role in mosquito development and reproduction. JH titer decreases in the last instar larvae allowing pupation and metamorphosis to progress. As the anti-metamorphic role of JH comes to an end, the CA of the late pupa (or pharate adult) becomes again “competent” to synthesize JH, which plays an essential role orchestrating reproductive maturation. 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) prepares the pupae for ecdysis, and would be an ideal candidate to direct a developmental program in the CA of the pharate adult mosquito. In this study, we provide evidence that 20E acts as an age-linked hormonal signal, directing CA activation in the mosquito pupae. Stimulation of the inactive brain-corpora allata-corpora cardiaca complex (Br-CA-CC) of the early pupa (24 h before adult eclosion or −24 h) in vitro with 20E resulted in a remarkable increase in JH biosynthesis, as well as increase in the activity of juvenile hormone acid methyltransferase (JHAMT). Addition of methyl farnesoate but not farnesoic acid also stimulated JH synthesis by the Br-CA-CC of the −24 h pupae, proving that epoxidase activity is present, but not JHAMT activity. Separation of the CA-CC complex from the brain (denervation) in the −24 h pupae also activated JH synthesis. Our results suggest that an increase in 20E titer might override an inhibitory effect of the brain on JH synthesis, phenocopying denervation. All together these findings provide compelling evidence that 20E acts as a developmental signal that ensures proper reactivation of JH synthesis in the mosquito pupae.  相似文献   

6.
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8.
Juvenile hormone (JH) acid O-methyltransferase (JHAMT) is the enzyme that transfers a methyl group from S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) to the carboxyl group of JH acids to produce active JHs in the corpora allata. While the JHAMT gene was originally identified and characterized in the silkworm Bombyx mori, no orthologs from other insects have been studied until now. Here we report on the functional characterization of the CG17330/DmJHAMT gene in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Recombinant DmJHAMT protein expressed in Escherichia coli catalyzes the conversion of farnesoic acid and JH III acid to their cognate methyl esters in the presence of SAM. DmJHAMT is predominantly expressed in corpora allata, and its developmental expression profile correlates with changes in the JH titer. While a transgenic RNA interference against DmJHAMT has no visible effect, overexpression of DmJHAMT results in a pharate adult lethal phenotype, similar to that obtained with application of JH analogs, suggesting that the temporal regulation of DmJHAMT is critical for Drosophila development.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Juvenile hormone (JH), a sesquiterpenoid synthetized by the insect corpora allata (CA), plays critical roles in metamorphosis and reproduction. Penultimate or last step of JH synthesis is catalyzed by juvenile hormone acid O‐methyltransferase (JHAMT). Here we report the cloning and expression analysis of the JHAMT orthologue in the cockroach, Blattella germanica (L.) (BgJHAMT). BgJHAMT is mainly expressed in CA, with only expression traces in ovary. Three different isoforms, differing in the 3′‐UTR sequence, were identified. Isoform A shows between 35 and 65 times higher expression than B and C in CA from penultimate nymphal instar and adult females. RNAi‐triggered knock down of BgJHAMT produces a dramatic reduction of JH synthesis, concomitant with a decrease of fat body vitellogenin expression and basal follicle length. BgJHAMT mRNA levels in CA of females along the gonadotrophic cycle parallel, with a slight advancement, JH synthesis profile. BgJHAMT mRNA levels were reduced in starved females and in females in which we reduced nutritional signaling by knocking down insulin receptor and target of rapamycin (TOR). Results show that conditions that modify JH synthesis in adult B. germanica females show parallel changes of BgJHAMT mRNA levels and that the JH‐specific branch of the JH synthesis pathway is regulated in the same way as the mevalonate branch. Furthermore, we demonstrate that nutrition and its signaling through the insulin receptor and TOR pathways are essential for activating BgJHAMT expression, which suggests that this enzyme can be a checkpoint for the regulation of JH production in relation to nutritional status.  相似文献   

11.
Juvenile Hormone (JH) has a prominent role in the regulation of insect development. Much less is known about its roles in adults, although functions in reproductive maturation have been described. In adult females, JH has been shown to regulate egg maturation and mating. To examine a role for JH in male reproductive behavior we created males with reduced levels of Juvenile Hormone Acid O-Methyl Transferase (JHAMT) and tested them for courtship. JHAMT regulates the last step of JH biosynthesis in the Corpora Allata (CA), the organ of JH synthesis. Males with reduced levels of JHAMT showed a reduction in courtship that could be rescued by application of Methoprene, a JH analog, shortly before the courtship assays were performed. In agreement with this, reducing JHAMT conditionally in mature flies led to courtship defects that were rescuable by Methoprene. The same result was also observed when the CA were conditionally ablated by the expression of a cellular toxin. Our findings demonstrate that JH plays an important physiological role in the regulation of male mating behavior.  相似文献   

12.
Two genes coding for enzymes previously reported to be involved in the final steps of juvenile hormone (JH) biosynthesis in different insect species, were characterised in the desert locust, Schistocerca gregaria. Juvenile hormone acid O-methyltransferase (JHAMT) was previously described to catalyse the conversion of farnesoic acid (FA) and JH acid to their methyl esters, methyl farnesoate (MF) and JH respectively. A second gene, CYP15A1 was reported to encode a cytochrome P450 enzyme responsible for the epoxidation of MF to JH. Additionally, a third gene, FAMeT (originally reported to encode a farnesoic acid methyltransferase) was included in this study. Using q-RT-PCR, all three genes (JHAMT, CYP15A1 and FAMeT) were found to be primarily expressed in the CA of the desert locust, the main biosynthetic tissue of JH. An RNA interference approach was used to verify the orthologous function of these genes in S. gregaria. Knockdown of the three genes in adult animals followed by the radiochemical assay (RCA) for JH biosynthesis and release showed that SgJHAMT and SgCYP15A1 are responsible for synthesis of MF and JH respectively. Our experiments did not show any involvement of SgFAMeT in JH biosynthesis in the desert locust. Effective and selective inhibitors of SgJHAMT and SgCYP15A1 would likely represent selective biorational locust control agents.  相似文献   

13.
The maturation of corpora allata (CA) and the competence of pheromone glands in the adult moth Helicoverpa armigera, are both age-related and appear to be correlated. Sex pheromone glands of pharate adults do not produce sex pheromone independently, nor do they respond to exogenous PBAN. Newly emerged moths produce significantly less pheromone than day one moths. JH (juvenile hormone) II was found to be the main JH form produced by CA in vitro. JH II primed pheromone glands of pharate adults to respond to PBAN. In addition, injection or topical application of JH II to newly-emerged females induced pheromone production in the presence of PBAN. Our findings suggest that JH is involved in the initiation of pheromone production of Helicoverpa armigera.  相似文献   

14.
Workers of Reticulitermes flavipes were isolated in groups of increasing numbers to determine the in vitro rates of juvenile hormone (JH) synthesis by individual pairs of corpora allata (CA) as other castes differentiated. Only neotenic reproductives developed in groups of 12. Mean JH synthesis rates increased after 5 weeks but only a few individuals had significantly higher rates, about 0.4 pmol/pair/h, which occurred at about 3 weeks before neotenics developed. Soldiers and neotenics developed in groups of 50. Mean rates increased to a peak at week 6 after isolation, but only a few individuals had rates approaching 1 pmol/pair/h, which occurred at the same time after isolation as the development of pre-soldiers. JH synthesis by CA of pharate pre-soldiers and soldiers was low compared to that of pharate workers and neotenics. CA of pre-soldiers attained a peak mean rate of JH synthesis of 0.9 pmol/pair/h at 6 days of age, whereas CA of soldiers attained only a peak mean rate of 0.3 pmol/pair/h. These measurements of JH synthesis by individual pairs of CA suggest that the few workers destined to become pre-soldiers have 2.5-fold higher JH synthesis than the few that would develop into neotenic reproductives, and show that a cycle of synthesis accompanies the development of pre-soldiers into soldiers.  相似文献   

15.
The developmental expressions of the mRNA of JH synthetic enzymes have been studied using homogenates of the corpora cardiaca-corpora allata (CC-CA) complexes in Bombyx mori [Kinjoh, T., Kaneko, Y., Itoyama, K., Mita, K., Hiruma, K., Shinoda, T., 2007. Control of juvenile hormone biosynthesis in Bombyx mori: cloning of the enzymes in the mevalonate pathway and assessment of their developmental expression in the corpora allata. Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 37, 808-818]. The in situ hybridization analyses in the CC-CA complex showed that the distribution of the mRNAs of all the mevalonate enzymes and juvenile hormone (JH) acid O-methyltransferase occurred only in the CA cells, indicating that the fluctuations of the enzyme mRNA amounts in the CC-CA complexes were derived solely from the CA. In addition, the size of the CA and their nuclei was not associated with the JH synthetic activity by the CA until the pharate adult. Only female adult CA synthesized JH in B. mori, and the CA and the nuclei were significantly larger than those of male CA which do not synthesize JH.  相似文献   

16.
《Insect Biochemistry》1987,17(7):989-996
Juvenile hormone (JH), JH acid, and ecdysteroid titer, and JH esterase activity, were measured in hemolymph from synchronous last stadium larvae of Manduca sexta. JH and JH acids were identified and quantified by GC-MS: JH I and II (and the corresponding acids) were the predominant JH homologs detected in males or females. Maximum levels of JHs and JH acids were observed just following ecdysis to the fifth (last) stadium (day 0, 0 hr) and at the prepupal stage (day 6–day 7). JH titer (≥ 1 ng JH I or II/ml) was higher than JH acid titer (∼0.7 ng JH I acid or JH II acid/ml) in very early fifth stadium larvae. However, this was reversed at the prepupal stage when higher titers of JH acids than JH were observed. JH acid titer began to rise prior to JH titer at the prepupal stage. JH esterase activity rose significantly only after JH or JH acid titers had begun to decline; maximum JH esterase activity was observed at day 3 and day 8. Ecdysteroid titer (measured by RIA) decreased during the last larval molt to a low level by day 0 (0 hr) and to undetectable levels at day 0 (12 hr) of the fifth stadium, by which time JH and JH acid levels had also declined substantially. Just prior to wandering, a small ecdysteroid peak was noted and a slightly elevated level of ecdysteroid was maintained for a further 2 days before a surge in ecdysteroid titer occurred at the prepupal stage, in synchrony with JH and JH acid titer maxima. There was no sexual dimorphism in timing or magnitude of JH, JH acid, and ecdysteroid titer or JH esterase activity.  相似文献   

17.
1. A study of the activity of cysteamine in relation to juvenile hormone (JH) production in adult females of Blattella germanica was carried out. 2. In vivo assays showed that cysteamine stimulates protein synthesis in the left colleterial gland and, in some instances, enhances oocyte growth. 3. In vitro assays demonstrated that cysteamine enhances JH release by incubated corpora allata (CA), and that this effect is more pronounced when using CA from 10-day-old females (period of ootheca transport), either connected to the corpora cardiaca (CC) or to the CC and to the brain. 4. Possible antiallatostatic effects of cysteamine are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The morphogenetic effects of t,t-farnesol, Law-Williams juvenile hormone analogue, dichlorofarnesenic acid ethyl ester (DFAEE), and a syntetic racemic or isomeric mixture of C18 juvenile hormone (JH), when applied topically to pharate pupae and adults of D. melanogaster have been studied. Of these various agents tested, only DFAEE and JH affected adult development and eclosion and the pharate pupae were the most sensitive to these agents. The racemic mixture of JH induced the secretion, in the abdomen, of a supernumerary cuticle indistinguishable from that of the pupa; it, in addition, retarded the synthesis of brown eye pigments, general body pigmentation, and affected the differentiation of various internal organs and cuticular structures of the abdomen. By comparing the effects of JH with those of Minute (M) and bobbed (bb) mutations on the adult development, it is suggested that JH, by retarding genetic translation mimics M or bb.  相似文献   

19.
Juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) activity released by the corpora allata (CA) into incubation media (CA-JHE) was titered daily during the course of the last (fifth [V]) larval stadium of Manduca sexta. This CA-JHE activity was relatively low during the early last stadium up to the time of commitment (V4), then rose rapidly to a peak on V6. Activity declined sharply almost to precommitment levels by V8, before rising to a second peak on the first day of the pupal phase (P0). This pattern of activity is distinct from that of hemolymph JHE activity, which peaks just prior to wandering on V4 and again just prior to pupation (V9). Although the CA-JHE and hemolymph-JHE possess different temporal patterns of activity, isoelectric focusing, gel electrophoresis, and initial studies with selected inhibitors suggest that the enzymes responsible for the CA-JHE and hemolymph-JHE activities are similar, but not identical, in nature. Exposure of the V6 CA in vitro to JH II (0.1 μM) or fluoromevalonolactone (FMev; 0.1 mM) produced an approximate fivefold increase and 60% decrease in JH acid synthesis, respectively. Conversely, the same treatments resulted in an inhibition (JH II) and stimulation (FMev) of CA-JHE activity. These observations suggest that JH may be involved in the direct positive feedback regulation of postwandering larval CA and that the CA-JHE may also be integrally related to this positive feedback mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Both allatotropic and allatostatic activities were found in crude extracts of brain from adult and larval Eri silkworm, Samia cynthia ricini, but it seems that allatotropic activity dominates in each stage. There was a high level of allatotropic activity in the crude extract of brain from newly emerged female adults, but allatostatic activity appeared in the bioassay when excessive amounts of crude extracts of brain were added. Crude extracts of brain from premoulting fourth‐instar larvae and from newly ecdysed fifth‐instar larvae exhibited allatotropic activities, whereas extracts of brain from the second and third day of the fifth‐instar larvae inhibited juvenile hormone (JH) release slightly. Allatotropic activity from the brains of adults and larvae stimulated both adult and larval corpora allata (CA) to synthesize JH. Manduca sexta allatotropin (AT) (Mas‐AT) and M. sexta allatostatin (AST) (Mas‐AST) also stimulated and inhibited both adult and larval S. cynthia ricini CA to synthesize JH, respectively. Higher concentrations of Mas‐AT (10?4 or 10?3 M) showed an inhibitory effect on adult CA. CA from newly emerged female adults were the most sensitive to inhibition by Mas‐AST, whereas CA from female pharate adults at about 6 h before adult emergence were the most sensitive to stimulation by Mas‐AT and S. cynthia ricini brain allatotropic activity. An extract of brain and Mas‐AT induced some of the non‐active female pharate adult CA at 12 h before emergence to synthesize a small amount of JH.  相似文献   

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