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1.
The occurrence of neuropeptides in the retrocerebral complexes of adult male and females of the tobacco hawkmoth, Manduca sexta, was investigated using matrix-assisted laser desorption time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry (MS), post source decay (PSD) and collision-induced dissociation (CID) MS/MS. From fractions of methanol extracts of corpora cardiaca (CC)/corpora allata (CA), separated by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), a total of 11 mass ions were assigned to known peptides from M. sexta. These peptides were adipokinetic hormone (AKH), FLRFamides I, II and III, crustacean cardioactive peptide (CCAP), cardioactive peptide 2b (CAP(2b)), three myoinhibitory peptides, corazonin, and M. sexta allatostatin (Manse-AS). A further six masses were in agreement with Y/FXFGLamide allatostatins identified from other Lepidoptera. The sequence identities of FLRFamide I and AKH were confirmed using post source decay analysis. Fragmentation by collision-induced dissociation MS/MS identified an extended AKH peptide. The apparent differences in the peptides present in male and female retrocerebral complexes are most likely quantitative rather than sex specific.  相似文献   

2.
Audsley N  Weaver RJ 《Peptides》2003,24(10):1465-1474
The occurrence of neuropeptides in the brain of larvae of the tobacco hawkmoth, Manduca sexta, and tomato moth, Lacanobia oleracea, was investigated using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionisation-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) and post-source decay (PSD). Methanolic extracts of 100 brains separated by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography yielded numerous ion peaks, some of which were common to both species. In M. sexta six [M+H](+) ions were in agreement with peptides previously structurally characterised from M. sexta (FLRF-amides I, II and III, M. sexta allatostatin, CAP(2b) and myoinhibitory peptide VI), whereas a further five corresponded to other known lepidopteran peptides (cydiastatins 3 and 4, helicostatins 1 and 6 and helicokinin II). Of these the identities of FLRF-amide I, cydiastatins 3 and 4 and CAP(2b) were confirmed by PSD analysis. Fourteen [M+H](+) ions corresponding to known lepidopteran peptides (FLRF-amide I, cydiastatins 2, 3 and 4, helicostatins 1, 5, 6, 7 and 9, CCAP, CAP(2b), M. sexta allatostatin and myoinhibitory peptide VI) were measured in L. oleracea brain extracts. From this insect, cydiastatins 3 and 4, helicostatin 5 and FLRF-amide I were identified by PSD. These peptides had not previously been structurally characterised from L. oleracea.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract.  Insect myoinhibitory peptides were discovered through their inhibitory activity on visceral muscle contraction. The present study tests the antimyotropic gut properties of three galanin-related myoinhibitory peptides (Mas-MIP II: GWQDLNSAW-NH2; Grb-AST-B1: GWQDLNGGW-NH2; and Grb-AST-B3: AWRDLSGGW-NH2) in adult females of the cockroach Blattella germanica (L.) (Dictyoptera, Blattellidae). The three peptides elicit a strong inhibitory effect on both foregut and hindgut contractions, with ID50 values in all the cases within the nanomolar range. In addition, the modulatory effects of these three peptides on food intake are studied on previously starved female cockroaches. The results show that Grb-AST-B3 is the most active peptide, inhibiting food intake by 60–80% at doses between 15 and 50 µg, followed by Grb-AST-B1 (45% inhibition of food intake at the 50 µg dose), whereas Mas-MIP II is inactive even at the 50 µg dose. The differences between the three peptides may be due to a differential effect of their structure on activity or to a differential degradation. These results show that myomodulatory gut activity in vitro and antifeeding effects do not always correlate.  相似文献   

4.
The paired antennal lobes are the first integration centers for odor information in the insect brain. In the sphinx moth Manduca sexta, like in other holometabolous insects, they are formed during metamorphosis. To further understand mechanisms involved in the formation of this particularly well investigated brain area, we performed a direct peptide profiling of a well defined cell group (the lateral cell group) of the antennal lobe throughout development by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Although the majority of the about 100 obtained ion signals represent still unknown substances, this first peptidomic characterization of this cell group indicated the occurrence of 12 structurally known neuropeptides. Among these peptides are helicostatin 1, cydiastatins 2, 3, and 4, M. sexta-allatotropin (Mas-AT), M. sexta-FLRFamide (Mas-FLRFamide) I, II, and III, nonblocked Mas-FLRFamide I, and M. sexta-myoinhibitory peptides (Mas-MIPs) III, V, and VI. The identity of two of the allatostatins (cydiastatins 3 and 4) and Mas-AT were confirmed by tandem mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF/TOF). During development of the antennal lobe, number and frequency of ion signals including those representing known peptides generally increased at the onset of glomeruli formation at pupal Stage P7/8, with cydiastatin 2, helicostatin 1, and Mas-MIP V being the exceptions. Cydiastatin 2 showed transient occurrence mainly during the period of glomerulus formation, helicostatin 1 was restricted to late pupae and adults, while Mas-MIP V occurred exclusively in adult antennal lobes. The power of the applied direct mass spectrometric profiling lies in the possibility of chemically identifying neuropeptides of a given cell population in a fast and reliable manner, at any developmental stage in single specimens. The identification of neuropeptides in the antennal lobes now allows to specifically address the function of these signaling molecules during the formation of the antennal lobe network.  相似文献   

5.
Neuropeptides from five different neuropeptide families [Manduca sexta allatostatin (Manse-AS), and Manse-AS deletion analogue(5-15), M. sexta allatotropin (Manse-AT), leucomyosuppressin, perisulfakinin, and myoinhibitory peptide I (MIP I)] were assayed for their ability to affect the development and food consumption of penultimate and last larval instars of two lepidopteran species, L. oleracea and S. littoralis. Injections of Manse-AS deletion analogue(5-15), Manse-AT, perisulfakinin, and MIP I had no observable effects on development, food consumption, or mortality compared to controls. Single injections of Manse-AS significantly reduced the weight gain and increased mortality of L. oleracea and S. littoralis larvae compared to controls. By contrast, feeding Manse-AS to L. oleracea had no such effects. These differences were probably due to the degradation of the peptide by digestive enzymes in the foregut of L. oleracea. In studies in vitro, perisulfakinin, and MIP I had no effect on the spontaneous foregut contractions of L. oleracea larvae. Leucomyosuppressin, however, had myoinhibitory effects on the foregut. Single injections of leucomyosuppressin significantly reduced the weight gain and food consumption of L. oleracea and S. littoralis larvae and increased mortality. These data suggest that the deleterious effects observed in vivo were due to the myoinhibition by Manse-AS and leucomyosuppressin of the normal peristaltic movements of the gut either by the intact peptide or by its cleavage products resulting from degradation in the haemolymph.  相似文献   

6.
Measurements of Ca(2+) influx in Fura-2/AM loaded prothoracic glands (PGs) of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, after application of forskolin or the cAMP analogue, 8-bromo-cAMP, showed a steady increase in [Ca(2+)](i), which was of extracellular origin and was inhibited, in both cases, by the dihydropyridine (DHP) derivative, nitrendipine. Nitrendipine also inhibited the abrupt S(-).Bay K 8644-mediated increase in [Ca(2+)](i) and its effects were mimicked by a myoinhibitory/prothoracicostatic peptide (Mas-MIP I/PTSP), which was isolated from Manduca sexta and was found to possess ecdysteroidostatic activity in Bombyx mori PGs. This peptide blocked both the forskolin and S(-).Bay K 8644-mediated increase in [Ca(2+)](i) of PG cells. It was ineffective, however, in blocking the recombinant prothoracicotropic hormone (rPTTH)-stimulated high increase in [Ca(2+)](i) of PG cells suggesting that distinct and independently regulated Ca(2+) influx mechanisms operate in the PG cells of Bombyx mori. The dependence of DHP-sensitive Ca(2+) channels on the cAMP-signalling cascade was further corroborated by the inabilitity of nitrendipine to block the thapsigargin-stimulated high increase in [Ca(2+)](i) after depletion of Ca(2+) from the intracellular stores. This, together with the inability of thapsigargin to stimulate the cAMP levels of PG cells suggest that there is a tightly regulated cross-talk mechanism between the two signalling cascades of Ca(2+) and cAMP. The combined results suggest a cAMP-mediated regulation of the opening-state of DHP-sensitive Ca(2+) channels and stimulation of [Ca(2+)](i) increases and ecdysteroid secretion by a positive feedback mechanism. Mas-MIP I/PTSP interferes with this mechanism by blocking DHP-sensitive Ca(2+) channels. This regulatory mechanism appears to be autonomously stimulating ecdysteroidogenesis by the PGs, it is regulated by Mas-MIP I/PTSPS, and it is not involved in other Ca(2+) influx mechanisms that operate within the PG cells of Bombyx mori.  相似文献   

7.
The adipokinetic hormones (AKHs) from the corpora cardiaca (CC) of representative species from all three subfamilies of the Sphingidae (hawkmoths) were investigated using matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) and liquid chromatography electrospray ion trap mass spectrometry (LC-ESI MS), including a re-examination of the AKH complement of the tobacco hawkmoth, Manduca sexta. In addition to larvae and adults of M. sexta (subfamily: Sphinginae), adults from the following subfamilies were examined: Macroglossinae (large elephant hawkmoth, Deilephila elpenor), Smerinthinae (poplar hawkmoth, Laothoe populi and eyed hawkmoth, Smerinthus ocellata), and Sphinginae (death's head hawkmoth, Acherontia atropos). All moths are shown to have the nonapeptide Manse-AKH (pELTFTSSGWamide) in their CC, together with a second AKH, which, on the basis of mass ions ([M+Na](+), [M+K](+)) and partial sequence analysis is identical in all species examined. The structure of this AKH was elucidated from peptides leached out of the CC of adult M. sexta and shown, by ESI-collision-induced dissociation (CID) tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), to be a novel decapeptide AKH with a sequence of pELTFSSGWGQamide. The new peptide has been code named Manse-AKH-II. Sequence confirmation was obtained from identical MS studies with synthetic Manse-AKH-II and with the native peptide. Manse-AKH-II has significant lipid-mobilizing activity when injected at low dose (5pmol) into newly emerged adult M. sexta. The potential implications of a second AKH, in M. sexta in particular, are discussed in relation to putative receptor(s).  相似文献   

8.
Seven paralytic peptides were isolated and identified from lepidopteran hemolymph. All of these peptides cause rapid, rigid paralysis when injected into Manduca sexta and some other lepidopteran larvae. Each peptide contains 23 amino acid residues including 2 cysteines and the carboxyl termini are acidic. Synthetic peptides in the disulfide or reduced forms, and as carboxyl-terminal acids or amides were equally paralytic. The most potent paralytic peptide, Mas PP I, has the following sequence: H-Glu-Asn-Phe-Ala-Gly-Gly-Cys-Ala-Thr-Gly-Tyr-Leu- Arg-Thr-Ala-Asp-Gly-Arg-Cys-Lys-Pro-Thr-Phe-OH. The two peptides from M. sexta hemolymph are remarkable in that they are autoparalytic (i.e. factors in collected hemolymph that are paralytic when injected into the same larvae).  相似文献   

9.
In the sphinghid moth Manduca sexta, two allatoactive neuropeptides appear to be responsible for regulating juvenile hormone (JH) production by the corpora allata (CA). These peptides (M. sexta allatostatin, Mas-AS, and M. sexta allatotropin, Mas-AT) respectively inhibit and stimulate in vitro JH biosynthesis by CA in this insect. However, although Mas-AS inhibits CA in both larval and adult insects, Mas-AT is active only in adult M. sexta. The situation in other lepidopteran species is less clear-cut and, although both peptides have been detected (usually by immunologic and/or molecular techniques) in several other moths (including noctuids), their function as regulators of JH production remains uncertain. In the tomato moth Lacanobia oleracea (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), we have previously demonstrated the occurrence of Mas-AS and/or Mas-AT in extracts of CA, brain and other organs, and have shown that both peptides are present in larval and adult forms. However, in L. oleracea, although Mas-AS inhibits larval and adult CA in vitro, it does so only at relatively high concentrations, and to a maximum of only approximately 70%. By contrast, Mas-AT (which is also present in larval and adult L. oleracea) stimulates larval and adult CA, but is substantially more potent ( approximately 100 fold) than the allatostatin. In this paper we present the results of paired, concurrent measurements (using ELISA) of levels of Mas-AS and Mas-AT in brains, CA and hemolymph (plasma and hemocytes) of L. oleracea at times when there are marked changes in JH titers. We also present data on the in vitro rates of JH biosynthesis by isolated CA, and on hemolymph JH esterase activity measured at the same critical developmental times, and discuss all of these data in relation to the putative allatoregulatory roles of the M. sexta allatotropic and allatostatic neuropeptides in L. oleracea.  相似文献   

10.
Neuropeptides associated with the frontal ganglion of larval Lepidoptera   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The occurrence of neuropeptides in the frontal ganglia of larvae of the tobacco hawkmoth, Manduca sexta, the tomato moth, Lacanobia oleracea and the cotton leafworm, Spodoptera littoralis was investigated using reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), matrix-assisted laser desorption time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Only three types of peptides could be identified or assigned from frontal ganglion extracts; M. sexta allatostatin (Manse-AS), M. sexta allatotropin (Manse-AT), and F/YXFGL-NH2 allatostatins. The peptide profiles of frontal ganglion of L. oleracea and S. littoralis were similar, with ten identical [M+H]+ ions, seven of which could be assigned to known lepidopteran peptides (Manse-AT, cydiastatin 2, 3, 4 and helicostatin 1, 5, 9). In addition, mass ions corresponding to helicostatin 7 (which was confirmed by MALDI-post source decay analysis) and Manse-AS were present in frontal ganglia of L. oleracea and helicostatin 6 in frontal ganglia of S. littoralis. Only four mass ions from M. sexta frontal ganglia corresponded to known peptides, cydiastatin 3 and 4, helicostatin 1, and Manse-AT. The only difference between the profiles of frontal ganglia from different stages of L. oleracea were mass ions which could not be assigned, and no differences were observed in the allatoregulatory peptides present. In HPLC fractions of M. sexta frontal ganglia, F/YXFGL-NH2 allatostatin-like immunoreactivity was widespread suggesting that more allatostatins were present than were identified.  相似文献   

11.
Prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) stimulates ecdysteroid biosynthesis in the prothoracic gland (PG) of insects. A peptide inhibiting ecdysteroid biosynthesis in the PG was isolated from the extracts of 2,000 larval brains of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, using a protocol that included four reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography procedures. The primary structure of this prothoracicostatic peptide (Bom-PTSP) was determined to be H-Ala-Trp-Gln-Asp-Leu-Asn-Ser-Ala-Trp-NH(2). This neuropeptide has the same sequence as Mas-MIP-I, a myoinhibitory peptide previously isolated from the ventral nerve cord of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, and is highly homologous with the N-terminal portion of vertebrate peptides of the galanin family. This peptide inhibited PTTH-stimulated ecdysteroidogenesis in the PG at both the spinning and feeding stages, which indicates that Bom-PTSP interferes with PTTH-stimulated ecdysteroidogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
Structure-activity studies were performed for adipokinetic hormone (AKH) in Manduca sexta. Seven naturally occurring and four synthetic peptides of the red pigment concentrating hormone (RPCH)/AKH family were tested in larvae of M. sexta for activation of glycogen phosphorylase in fat body. pGlu at the N-terminal was found to be important for activity of peptides; however, Manduca AcGly1AKH is partially active. The amino acids at all positions appear to be of importance for activity, with the possible exception of the two serine residues in positions six and seven. Generally, the more amino acids are exchanged, the less the peptide will bind to the receptor. In M. sexta a beta-bend appears not to be important for the binding of peptides. Peptides ten amino acids long appear to be more active than shorter ones.  相似文献   

13.
The peptidome of the central nervous system of adult cabbage root fly, Delia radicum (L) was investigated using matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Over twenty neuropeptides were identified from three different tissue sources, the combined brain/suboesophageal ganglion (SOG), the retrocerebral complex, and the thoracic-abdominal ganglion (TAG). A number of peptides were identified in all three tissues, including allatostatins, short neuropeptide F-like peptides, corazonin, a pyrokinin, and a myosuppressin. Adipokinetic hormone was restricted to the retrocerebral complex. Other peptides, including FMRFamides and sulfakinins were detected only in the brain/SOG and TAG. Some peptides, notably myoinhibitory peptides and tachykinins, which have been identified in other fly species, were not detected in any tissue sample. This study has structurally characterized for the first time, the neuropeptides from adult D. radicum.  相似文献   

14.
Eclosion hormone was isolated from trimmed pharate adult heads of Manduca sexta by an eight step purification procedure using a Heliothis virescens in vivo bioassay. The neuropeptide was active in second stadium M. sexta. The primary structure was determined by sequence analyses of the intact peptide and fragment peptides generated by lysyl endopeptidase, endoproteinase Glu-C, and proline-specific endopeptidase. The nature of the carboxyl terminus as a free acid was elucidated by analysis of amino acids from digestion of the intact peptide with lysyl endopeptidase, which liberated leucine, but no leucine amide. The complete primary structure of M. sexta closion hormone is H-Asn-Pro-Ala-Ile-Ala-Thr-Gly-Tyr-Asp-Pro-Met-Glu-Ile-Cys-Ile-Glu-Asn-Cy s-Ala- Gln-Cys-Lys-Lys-Met-Leu-Gly-Ala-Trp-Phe-Glu-Gly-Pro-Leu-Cys-Ala-Glu-Ser- Cys-Ile Lys-Phe-Lys-Gly-Lys-Leu-Ile-Pro-Glu-Cys-Glu-Asp-Phe-Ala-Ser-Ile-Ala-Pro- Phe-Leu-Asn-Lys-Leu-OH.  相似文献   

15.
NMR and electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry were used to show for the first time the presence of sphingomyelins in extracts of the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta (Lepidoptera). The sphingosine in the ceramide was identified as tetradecasphing-4-enine, and the fatty acids were C18:0, C20:0, C22:0, and C24:0 (compound 1). Heterogeneity in the ceramide was observed in sphingomyelins from M. sexta. All of the sphingomyelins were associated with their doubly unsaturated sphingosine, tetradecasphing-4,6-dienine (compound 2), which contained the same set of fatty acids as compound 1 and represents a novel set of sphingomyelins not previously reported in Lepidoptera. Lipid rafts were isolated from brains of M. sexta, and the association of these novel sphingomyelins with rafts was confirmed. The existence of the additional double bond was also observed in ceramide and ceramide phosphoethanolamine isolated from M. sexta. The levels of the doubly unsaturated ceramide showed modest changes during metamorphosis of M. sexta. These results suggest that Manduca sphingomyelins may participate in the formation of lipid rafts, in keeping with their function in vertebrates.  相似文献   

16.
Manduca sexta allatotropin (Manse-AT) is a multifunctional neuropeptide whose actions include the stimulation of juvenile hormone biosynthesis, myotropic stimulation, cardioacceleratory functions, and inhibition of active ion transport. Manse-AT is a member of a structurally related peptide family that is widely found in insects and also in other invertebrates. Its precise role depends on the insect species and developmental stage. In some lepidopteran insects including M. sexta, structurally-related AT-like (ATL) peptides can be derived from alternatively spliced mRNAs transcribed from the AT gene. We have isolated a cDNA for an AT receptor (ATR) from M. sexta by a PCR-based approach using the sequence of the ATR from Bombyx mori. The sequence of the M. sexta ATR is similar to several G protein-coupled receptors from other insect species and to the mammalian orexin receptor. We demonstrate that the M. sexta ATR expressed in vertebrate cell lines is activated in a dose-responsive manner by Manse-AT and each Manse-ATL peptide in the rank order ATL-I > ATL-II > ATL-III > AT, and functional analysis in multiple cell lines suggest that the receptor is coupled through elevated levels of Ca(2+) and cAMP. In feeding larvae, Manse-ATR mRNA is present at highest levels in the Malpighian tubules, followed by the midgut, hindgut, testes, and corpora allata, consistent with its action on multiple target tissues. In the adult corpora cardiaca--corpora allata complex, Manse-ATR mRNA is present at relatively low levels in both sexes.  相似文献   

17.
A 30-amino acid diuretic peptide was isolated from the corpora cardiaca-corpora allata complexes and, separately, from medial neurosecretory cells of the Sphingid moth, Manduca sexta. The peptide was found to have the following sequence, determined by automated Edman degradation and mass spectrometry: SFSVNPAVDILQHRYMEKV AQNNRNFLNRV-NH2. We have named the peptide Mas-DP II. The peptide was synthesized and shown to possess diuretic activity in decapitated moths. Mas-DP II is related by sequence homology to a 41-amino acid diuretic peptide identified previously from M. sexta, and it belongs to the family of corticotropin releasing factor-like peptides.  相似文献   

18.
The triple co-localisation of peptidergic material immunoreactive to antisera raised against allatostatins of the Y/FXFGL-NH2 type, Manduca sexta allatostatin (Mas-AS), and allatotropin has been demonstrated in a single pair of anterodorsal neurones in the frontal ganglion of the tomato moth, Lacanobia oleracea (Noctuidae). Another pair of posterior neurones contain only Y/FXFGL-NH2-type allatostatin immunoreactivity. The neurites of all four cells trifurcate, and axons project to the brain in the frontal connectives and to the foregut in the recurrent nerve. Axons from the anterior neurones, within the recurrent nerve, have prominent lateral branches supplying muscles of the crop, and axons from both anterior and posterior cells show profuse branching and terminal arborisations in the region of the stomodeal valve. The brain contributes Y/FXFGL-NH2-immunoreactive material, but not allatotropin or Mas-AS, to the recurrent nerve via NCC 1+2 and NCC 3. All three peptides have a reversible effect on the spontaneous (peristaltic) contractions of the foregut (crop) in vitro. Thus, both types of allatostatin are inhibitory at 10(-12) to 10(-7) M, whereas allatotropin is strongly myostimulatory at 10(-14) M. This is the first demonstration of the gut myoinhibitory effects of Mas-AS and, taken together with the effects of Y/FXFGL-NH2-type allatostatins and allatotropin, reveals a different functional aspect to that normally attributed to these three peptides, i.e. control of juvenile hormone synthesis by the corpus allatum.  相似文献   

19.
Insect allatotropin upregulates the biosynthesis of juvenile hormones by the corpus allatum. We raised two rabbit antisera against the allatotropin of Manduca sexta (Mas AT) using a synthetic, multiple-antigenic-peptide that contains a branching heptalysine core and eight Mas AT molecules. Both antisera recognized specifically the same neurons in the larval brain, frontal ganglion and terminal abdominal ganglion of M. sexta as previously reported by others. Immunoassay showed reactivity specific to the Mas AT. Very low or nearly no cross-reactivity was found for two Mas AT-like peptides, a myotropin from Locusta migratoria and a Mas AT-like peptide deduced from the DNA sequence of Aedes aegypti, respectively. Immunopositive neurons also were identified in adult Phormia regina, Dacus dorsalis, Oncopeltus fasciatus, and Mythimna loreyi, and in larval M. loreyi, Bombyx mori, and Andraca bipunctata. At 20 pmol per 25 μl incubation medium (i.e. 8x10(-7) M), synthetic Mas AT significantly stimulated in vitro juvenile hormone biosynthesis by the corpus allatum of adult, sugar-fed females of P. regina to 2.64-fold that of controls. Thus, this study provides the first demonstration that at the higher end of the physiological concentration range, the Mas AT has allatotropic effect in vitro to CA of non-lepidopterans. However, in vivo functions of Mas AT and/or Mas AT-like peptide in P. regina remain to be defined.  相似文献   

20.
In a previous study, allatotropic and allatostatic activities were observed in brain extract from the Eri silkworm, Samia cynthia ricini (Samcri) [Li, S., Jiang, R.-J., Cao, M.-X., 2002b. Allatotropic and allatostatic activities in brain extracts of the Eri silkworm, S. cynthia ricini, and the effects of Manduca sexta allatotropin and M. sexta allatostatin on juvenile hormone in vitro. Physiol. Entomol. 27, 322-329]. In the present study, the HPLC purified Samcri-allatotropin (AT) and -allatostatin (AST) factors were shown to have the same retention time as those of M. sexta (Manse)-AT and -AST, respectively. Moreover, the amino acid sequences of mature Samcri-AT and -AST deduced from their encoding cDNAs are identical to the Manse-AT and -AST amino acid sequences. Both Samcri-AT and -AST genes were expressed in brain, nerve cord, and midgut, with Samcri-AT also detected in gonads and epidermis, suggesting their pleiotropic physiological functions. The expression levels of Samcri-AT and -AST genes correlated well with the allatoregulatory activities during the period of adult emergence indicating the two peptides tightly control JH synthesis, in a contradictive and cooperative manner. Our biochemical and molecular data of Samcri-AT and -AST and other studies demonstrate that these two peptides regulate JH synthesis by corpora allata in Lepidoptera and have pleiotropic physiological effects.  相似文献   

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