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1.
Haemolymph levels of juvenile hormone esterase, 1-naphthyl acetate esterase, and juvenile hormone were measured in synchronously staged diapause and nondiapause larvae of the European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis. Juvenile hormone esterase levels were monitored using juvenile hormone I as a substrate while juvenile hormone titres were measured with the Galleria bioassay. Haemolymph of nondiapause larvae showed two peaks of juvenile hormone hydrolytic activity: one near the end of the feeding phase and a smaller one just prior to pupal ecdysis. These peaks of enzyme activity correlated well with the low levels of haemolymph juvenile hormone. Juvenile hormone titres were high early in the stadium then showed a second peak during the prepupal stage coinciding with low esterase activity. Diapause haemolymph had peak juvenile hormone esterase activity nearly 4 times the nondiapause level, reaching a peak near the end of the feeding phase. Diapause-destined larvae retained high juvenile hormone titres even during the rise of the high esterase levels. 1-naphthyl acetate esterase levels did not correlate with the juvenile hormone esterase levels in either the diapause or nondiapause haemolymph. High levels of 1-naphthyl acetate esterase activity were associated with moulting periods.  相似文献   

2.
Juvenile hormone esterase titres were monitored in gate I and gate II last instar larvae of Trichoplusia ni using JH III as substrate. Two peaks of activity were observed for both gate I and gate II larvae, although the first and second juvenile hormone esterase peaks for the gate II larvae are extended and delayed one day, respectively. Head or thoracic ligations before the prepupal stage lower or block the appearance of both esterase peaks. Juvenile hormone I and II, as well as homo and dihomo juvenoids can induce the second juvenile hormone esterase peak in both normal and ligated larvae, and increase the esterase titre during the first peak in nonligated larvae. Induction of the juvenile hormone esterases is possible in non-ligated larvae as soon as the moult to the last instar has occurred and in ligated larvae as soon as the first esterase peak has started to decline. Distinct mechanisms of regulation are present for the first and second juvenile hormone esterase peaks. Juvenile hormone does not appear to be involved in regulating its own metabolism by directly inducing the first esterase peak; however, evidence is consistent with a brief burst of juvenile hormone which occurs prior to pupation inducing the production of the second peak of juvenile hormone esterase activity.  相似文献   

3.
《Insect Biochemistry》1988,18(1):53-61
Juvenile hormone (JH) esterase was characterized from the plasma of adult females of the cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni, and compared with that present in 4th and 5th instar larvae. Ester hydrolysis was the principal route of JH metabolism. Gel filtration of plasma resolved a single peak of JH esterase which was distinct from that of the α-naphthyl acetate (α-NA) esterase activity. The JH esterase apparent molecular weight was 62,000 in prepupae and virgin, female adults and 69,000 in 2-day-old 4th instar larvae. Broad range isoelectric focusing of plasma of prepupae and adults resolved a major peak of activity at pH 5.5 with a minor peak of activity at pH 6.1 and in 4th instar larvae at pH 5.45 and 5.8, respectively. By this method JH esterase was resolved from the α-NA esterase activity. The plasma of prepupae and adults metabolized JH I at about twice the rate of JH III. JH esterase activity from adult plasma was more stable than the α-NA esterase activity. Adult JH esterase activity was insensitive to inhibition by O,O-diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate in contrast to that of the α-NA esterase activity. Mated females oviposited 8 times more eggs than virgin females to 10 days after emergence. The total haemolymph protein content of virgin females remained high throughout the period of study whereas mated females showed a significant decline beginning on day 4. JH esterase activity remained unchanged in virgins whereas it declined drastically in mated females. The α-NA esterase activity declined to low levels shortly after emergence in both groups. JH and α-NA esterase activity was not affected by the application of the juvenoid, (RS)-methoprene. The present study provides evidence of a functional role for JH esterase in JH metabolism and reproduction in adult T. ni. JH esterases in the adult were identical to that of prepupae by the methods described above.  相似文献   

4.
The summer fruit tortrix moth is very susceptible to compounds with juvenile hormone activity. Ro 13-5223, a non-terpenoid carbamate, is 3–4 orders of magnitude more active in inhibiting metamorphosis in the last-instar larvae than juvenile hormone I. Larvae reared in permanent contact with this substance are characterised by higher juvenile hormone esterase activity but lower α-naphthyl esterase activity when compared to the untreated controls. In vitro Ro 13-5223 inhibits juvenile hormone hydrolysis but only in dosages which are far above the concentrations found in haemolymph of larvae exposed to the 14C-labelled compound. It does not serve as a substrate for juvenile hormone esterase in vitro even though it induces the enzyme activity in vivo. All these characteristics may account for the very high biological activity of Ro 13-5223 which disrupts humoral coordination of insect development.  相似文献   

5.
《Journal of Asia》2002,5(2):175-180
Diflubenzuron (DFB) has been known to prevent metamorphosis of silkworm, Bombyx mori, from larval to pupal stage at low dose exposure. To explain this inhibitory action of DFB, a hypothesis was raised that DFB acts like juvenile hormone (JH) or DFB inhibits JH esterase to increase endogenous JH titer. A JH bioassay using isolated abdomen clearly indicates that DFB does not act as JH analog because DFB did not induce vitellogenesis in the isolated female abdomen, while endogenous JHs did significantly. General esterase activities in hemolymph were lower in DFB-treated fifth instar larvae than in the control larvae, but there was no difference between fat body esterase activities in both groups. Two hemolymph esterases (‘E1’ and ‘E2’) of the fifth instar larvae were separated and visualized by α-and β-naphthyl acetate. From in vitro incubation experiment, the cathodal esterase (‘E1’) was sensitive to DFB at its nanomolar range. Considering the fact that early fifth instar larvae have high level of JH esterase in the hemolymph, these results suggest that DFB inhibit larval to pupal metamorphosis by blocking JH degradation, which increases endogenous JH titer especially at the critical period when the larvae determine metamorphic development at the following molt.  相似文献   

6.
Juvenile hormone (JH) III esterase and JH III epoxide hydrolase activity was found in the integument, midgut, fat body, and brain during last instar development of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta. JH esterase activity was primarily located in the cytosol in these tissues while the majority of the JH epoxide hydrolase activity was found in the microsomes. A prewandering (on day 3) and postwandering (on day 8) peak in plasma JH III esterase activity occurs in the last instar of gate I M. sexta. The JH esterase activity profile in integument, midgut, fat body, and brain followed a similar pattern to that of the plasma. The only exception to this was the absence of the postwandering, prepupal (on day 8) JH esterase peak in the fat body. The topical application of the juvenoid, (RS)-methoprene, failed to induce fat body JH esterase activity but increased activity in the plasma, integument, midgut, and brain in M. sexta prepupae. These results indicate that the source of plasma JH esterase activity is not always the fat body as previously hypothesized. The developmental profile of tissue JH epoxide hydrolase activity was also similar to that of JH esterase suggesting that both enzymes may be regulated partly by the same factors and that JH epoxide hydrolase may also have an important, previously unrecognized functional role in JH regulation and insect metamorphosis. Multiple isoelectric forms of tissue-specific JH esterases and JH epoxide hydrolases were found in integument, midgut, fat body, and brain. The JH esterases in these tissues had isoelectric points more acidic than that for plasma. Tissue α-naphthyl acetate esterase, developmental profiles, and inhibitor sensitivity to 3-(octylthio)-1,1,1-trifluoropropan-2-one differed significantly from that for JH esterase, suggesting that they represent different enzymes. ©1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Treatment of post-feeding (early day 3; wandering phase) last-stadium larvae of the cabbage looper, Trichoplusia ni, with the anti-juvenile hormone, fluoromevalonolactone, prevented the normal ecdysis to the pupa. It caused the formation of larval-pupal intermediates, a dose-dependent delay in the time of tanning, and a decrease in juvenile hormone esterase activity at the time of the prepupal juvenile hormone esterase peak. Fluoromevalonolactone was inactive as juvenile hormone esterase inhibitor in vitro. Conversely, juvenile hormone I accelerated the time of tanning, induced the early appearance of juvenile hormone esterase activity, and prevented adult eclosion. Although most of the larvae that were treated with fluoromevalonolactone immediately after the prepupal burst of juvenile hormone (late on day 3; post-spinning phase) still became larval-pupal intermediates, the time of tanning and juvenile hormone esterase activity were close to normal. Topical treatment of day-3 larvae with radiolabelled juvenile hormone I resulted in the rapid appearance and decline of radiolabelled juvenile hormone I in the haemolymph which was associated with the increased production of juvenile hormone I acid and the induced appearance of juvenile hormone esterase activity. Thus, in post-feeding last-stadium larvae of T. ni, juvenile hormone seems to be necessary for the proper formation of the pupa. Juvenile hormone is also involved in determining the time of pupation, and it appears to induce its own degradation.  相似文献   

8.
Using an in vitro method, juvenile hormone III degradation was studied in the plasma of adult female and male crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus. The primary route of juvenile hormone III metabolism in cricket haemolymph is ester hydrolysis to juvenile hormone III acid by juvenile hormone III esterase. Juvenile hormone III esterase activity in females' haemolymph is low just after imaginal moulting. A sharp peak of enzyme activity is observed on day 3 after emergence, and two subsequent peak values occur in older animals. Plasma juvenile hormone III esterase activity in freshly ecdysed males is also low, but increases rapidly thereafter. Another increase in enzyme activity is observed in older males. The fluctuations in juvenile hormone III esterase activity are discussed in correlation with changes in haemolymph volume, haemolymph protein content, haemolymph juvenile hormone III titer, and the rates of juvenile hormone III biosynthesis in vitro of the corpora allata.  相似文献   

9.
The presence of juvenile hormone in the haemolymph of larvae of Locusta has been detected by a modified Galleria bioassay and these results are compared with indirect methods of estimating corpus allatum activity. Juvenile hormone is present in the haemolymph during the fourth larval instar except on the last day of the instar, and is absent from the haemolymph of the fifth and final larval instar except on the last day of the instar. Changes in the volumes of the corpora allata simply reflect changes in the growth of the whole insect and are of no value in predicting endocrine activity. Changes in the size of the cells of the corpora allata can be correlated with the presence of juvenile hormone in the haemolymph in the fourth larval instar, but similar changes in cell size occur in the fifth larval instar when no juvenile hormone is present in the haemolymph. The effects of the implantation of corpora allata are unreliable as estimates of corpus allatum activity as isolated corpora allata from fifth instar larvae release juvenile hormone. Indirect methods of measuring corpus allatum activity are thus shown to be unreliable. The Rf value of Locusta juvenile hormone as determined by thin-layer chromatography differs from that of Roeller's juvenile hormone, suggesting that the two hormones might be chemically distinct.  相似文献   

10.
《Insect Biochemistry》1990,20(6):593-604
Juvenile hormone (JH) esterase activity was found in the plasma of larvae, pupae and adults of wild-type tobacco hornworms, Manduca sexta. There was a single peak of plasma JH esterase activity approx. 28 h prior to ecdysis in each instar from the second through the fourth instar and a peak of activity prior to both wandering and pupation in the fifth (last) instar. JH esterase activity was high in newly formed male and female pupae but declined to minimal levels by day 1 of the pupal stage. For the remainder of the pupal period, activity was at background levels. JH esterase activity increased again in newly emerged, virgin male and female adults but declined and remained at a low level 1 day after emergence through death. Gel filtration analysis of larval, pupal and adult plasma resolved a single peak of JH esterase activity with an apparent molecular weight of 66,000. However, isoelectric focusing revealed three forms with isoelectric points of 5.5, 5.8 and 6.1. These isoelectric forms were also found in black and white mutants of last instar M. sexta and in purified JH esterase from wild-type larvae. The plasma JH esterase activity metabolized JH I 2–3 times faster than JH III and was sensitive to inhibition by octylthio-1,1,1-trifluoro-2-propanone and insensitive to O,O-diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate. Gel filtration, isoelectric focusing, substrate specificity and developmental studies suggest that the same JH esterases are found in the plasma of larvae, pupae and adults and appear to be different from general (α-NA) esterase.  相似文献   

11.
Four esterase isozymes hydrolyzing α-naphthyl acetate (α-NA) were detected screening whole body homogenates of larvae and adults of Ips typographus by electrophoresis. Two of the four isozymes (isozymes 3 and 4) were not detected by α-NA staining in the pupal stage, but topical application of juvenile hormone III (JH III) on the pupa induced these isozymes. The JH esterase (JHE) activity on the gel was associated with the proteins of isozyme 2. The compounds OTFP, PTFP, and DFP inhibited this catalytic activity of isozyme 2 on the gel at low concentrations, whereas the proteins of isozyme 3 and 4 were affected only at higher concentrations. A quantitative developmental study was performed to characterize which of the esterases hydrolyzed JH III, using a putative surrogate substrate for JH (HEXTAT) and α-NA. The I50 of several esterase inhibitors and the JH metabolites were also defined. All findings supported the results that a protein associated with isozyme 2 is catabolizing JH and that isozymes 3 and 4 are the main contributors to the general esterase activity on α-NA. The JHE from Tenebrio molitor was purified by affinity chromatography. Although the recovery was low, an analytical isoelectric focusing gel showed that the JHE activity of the purified enzyme. T. molitor cochromatographed at the same pl as the JHE activity of I. typographus. Arch. Insect Biochem. Physiol. 34:203–221, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
The application of juvenile hormone I or ZR 512 to neck-ligated, day-5 fifth instar (V5) larvae reduced the time to pupation in a dose-dependent manner when compared to neck-ligated controls treated with methyl epoxy stearate. Haemolymph ecdysteroid titres determined by radioimmunoassay (RIA) reflected the ability of juvenile hormone I and ZR 512 to stimulate larval-pupal development, i.e. the ecdysteroid titres were similar to those of normally developing larvae although the ecdysteroid peak elicited by ZR 512 lagged that in the normal titre by 1 day, while that elicited by juvenile hormone I lagged the ecdysteroid peak in normal larvae by 2 days. Neck-ligated V5 larvae that were untreated ultimately pupated and the haemolymph ecdysteroid peak eliciting pupation in these animals was 7 μg/ml haemolymph, almost double that of normal animals and ZR 512- and juvenile hormone I-treated, ligated larvae. The data indicated that juvenile hormone I does stimulate the prothoracic glands but to determine whether this stimulation was direct or indirect, an in vitro approach was taken. Prothoracic glands from V5, V6 and V7 larvae were incubated in vitro under conditions in which they could be stimulated by prothoracicotropic hormone, and were exposed to concentration of free juvenile hormones I, II, III or ZR 512 ranging from 10?5M to 10?10M. In no case were the prothoracic glands stimulated in a dose-dependent manner that would be indicative of hormone activation. Similar results were obtained when juvenile hormone bound to binding protein was incubated with the prothoracic glands. Studies with the acids of the three juvenile hormone homologues revealed them to be ineffective in activating prothoracic glands, although juvenile hormone III acid does appear to inhibit the synthesis of ecdysone by day-0 pupal prothoracic glands. The significance of the latter effect is unknown. It is concluded from these data that juvenile hormone can, indeed, activate late larval prothoracic glands in situ, but does so indirectly.  相似文献   

13.
In vitro analysis of juvenile hormone esterase activity of haemolymph of T. molitor was performed during the end of post-embryonic development. Weak activity was found in penultimate stage larvae as in the major part (except the last day) of last-larval instar, while very high activity was monitored in the early pupae (female or male).This pupal peak was the only one detected during development in the insect, coinciding with the pupal juvenile hormone sensitive period. The first juvenile hormone sensitive period, during the lastlarval instar, does not seem to be protected by any juvenile hormone esterase activity in contrast to other species. These results suggest a central control for the drop in juvenile hormone level ceasing synthesis by the corpora allata after integration of external stimuli. This hypothesis could explain the natural occurrence of prothetelic larvae, the absence of pupal adult intermediates and the variable number of instars in Tenebrio.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of juvenile hormone, antiallatotropins, selected surgical procedures and starvation on the juvenile hormone esterase levels in Galleria larvae and pupae were investigated. JH reduced JH esterase activity in larvae but induced the enzyme in 1-day-old pupae. In vitro studies confirmed that the peak of synthesis and/or release of JH esterase from the fat body of last instar larvae occurred 4 days after ecdysis. These studies also showed that fat body from JH-treated larvae released much less enzyme than controls. Antiallatotropins, precocene 2 and ZR 2646 also reduced JH esterase levels in larvae, but ZR 2646 induced JH esterase in pupae. In starved larvae, JH esterase did not increase during the first five days. A minimum of 36 hr of feeding was necessary for the larval esterase activity to increase on schedule on day 4 of the last larval stadium. When day-l larvae were ligated behind the head or the prothorax, they had lower JH esterase levels and yet showed a slight increase in the enzyme when the larvae reached the age of 4 days. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to the possible control of esterase activity during metamorphosis.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Juvenile hormone III was identified in whole-body extracts of larval and adult Aedes aegypti. No juvenile hormone I or II was detected. The activity of juvenile hormones I, II and III, as well as two juvenile hormone analogues (methoprene, or ZR-515 and ZR-371) was examined in adults, whereas the activity of only the three naturally occurring hormones was studied in larvae. In the larval assay fourth-instar larvae were exposed to the juvenile hormones and their ability to eclose normally was measured. In the adult assay, abdomens were removed shortly after eclosion and the juvenile hormones or analogues were applied topically. Growth of the oöcytes to the resting stage was measured. In larval and adult bioassays juvenile hormone I was 10 × and 25 × more active, respectively, than juvenile hormone III. The bioassay and titre data taken together suggest that juvenile hormone III is the sole physiologically necessary juvenile hormone in Aedes.  相似文献   

17.
Juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) is the primary juvenile hormone (JH) metabolic enzyme in insects and plays important roles in the regulation of molt and metamorphosis. We investigated its mRNA expression profiles and hormonal control in Bombyx mori larvae. JHE mRNA was expressed at the end of the 4th and 5th (last) larval instars in the midgut and in all the three (anterior, middle, posterior) parts of the silk gland. In the fat body, JHE expression peaked twice in the 5th instar, at wandering and before pupation, while it gradually decreased through the 4th instar. When 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) was injected into mid-5th instar larvae, JHE mRNA expression was induced in the anterior silk gland but suppressed in the fat body. Topical application of a juvenile hormone analog fenoxycarb to early-5th instar larvae induced JHE expression in both tissues. In the anterior silk gland, JHE expression was accelerated and strengthened by 20E plus fenoxycarb treatments compared with 20E or fenoxycarb single treatment, indicating positive interaction of 20E and JH. JHE mRNA is thus expressed in tissue-specific manners under the control of ecdysteroids and JH.  相似文献   

18.
  • 1.1. The development of Gallena mellonella is strongly affected by a low temperature of 18°C (the last instar persists for more than one year, instead of about 9 days at 30°C). At 18°C the last instar Galleria mellonella larvae respond to juvenilizing treatment—chilling stress or juvenile hormone analogue—with a very low percentage or no supernumerary moults, respectively.
  • 2.3. Experiments in which larvae subjected to such treatments were transferred from 18°C to 30°C and vice versa showed that for the realization of the larval programme after chilling stress application the higher (30°C) temperature is needed.
  • 3.4. In last instar larvae reared at 18°C there coexist very high juvenile hormone titre and high juvenile hormone esterase activity.
  • 4.5. This phenomenon which is found in both, chilled and unchilled larvae, is discussed.
  相似文献   

19.
《Insect Biochemistry》1990,20(5):451-459
Juvenile hormone esterase, purified by affinity chromatography from the larval hemolymph of Manduca sexta in the fifth stadium, was injected into larvae of the same species in the earlier stadia resulting in a blackening of the cuticle following ecdysis to the next larval stadium. This anti-juvenile hormone response was dose-dependent for an injection in the second, third or fourth stadium. Cuticular blackening was prevented by treating larvae with the juvenoid epofenonane. Larval response to injected juvenile hormone esterase also varied with the time of injection within a single stadium, having a maximum effect for injections at the time of head capsule slippage. Juvenile hormone esterase activity measured from the hemolymph after injection of larvae in the second stadium decreased over an 11 h time-course. Because the anti-juvenile hormone effects resulting from a single injection of juvenile hormone esterase were dependent on the time of injection, it appears that when juvenile hormone biosynthesis is active in the insect, the duration of enzyme activity limits the anti-juvenile effects that can be induced.  相似文献   

20.
Phase characters of the common cutworm, Spodoptera litura, were influenced by different rearing densities from the 4th-larval instar. Primarily the final feeding period of isolated larvae was 1 day longer than that of crowded larvae causing an increase in pupal weight. Applications of juvenile hormone I, II, or methoprene to crowded larvae caused an increased feeding period similar to that of isolated larvae when the juvenile hormones were applied within 1 day after the last-larval ecdysis. Allatectomy of isolated Spodoptera during the moult to the final-larval instar decreased the duration of the final feeding period to that of intact crowded larvae. These results suggested that one of the characters of phase variation, pupal weight, is influenced by the differences in the regulation and activity of the corpora allata during the last-larval instar. Other characteristics of phase variation such as behaviour (feigned death) and colour were not affected by alteration in juvenile hormone levels after the last larva ecdysis.  相似文献   

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