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1.
The juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) activity in Galleria mellonella larvae was measured after exposure to different experimental conditions that affect larval-pupal transformation. The data show that stimulation of production of JHE is closely coupled with the developmental signals that intiate larval-pupal metamorphosis. Injury, which delays pupation, delays the appearance of JHE activity if the larvae are injured within 48 hr after the last larval moult. Chilling of day-0 larvae induces a supernumerary larval moult and inhibits the appearance of JHE. However, JHE activity increases in chilled larvae when their commitment for an extra larval moult is reversed by starvation. Starvation is effective in reversing the commitment for an extra larval moult if commenced within 48 hr after chilling, thereby suggesting a critical period for that commitment. These data suggest that the stimulus for JHE synthesis and/or release occurs approximately within 48 hr after the last larval ecdysis. A series of studies involving implantation of brain, suboesophageal ganglion and fat body into chilled, as well as chilled and ligated larvae suggest that a factor from the brain is involved in stimulation or production of JHE in Galleria larvae.JH, which suppresses JHE activity in day-3, -5 and early day-6 Galleria larvae, stimulates the production of JHE in late day-6 larvae, suggesting that reprogramming in larval fat body may occur on day 6 of the last larval stadium.  相似文献   

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Juvenile hormone (JH) plays a crucial role in preventing precocious metamorphosis and stimulating reproduction. Thus, its hemolymph titer should be under a tight control. As a negative controller, juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) performs a rapid breakdown of residual JH in the hemolymph during last instar to induce a larval-to-pupal metamorphosis. A whole genome of the diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella, has been annotated and proposed 11 JHE candidates. Sequence analysis using conserved motifs commonly found in other JHEs proposed a putative JHE (Px004817). Px004817 (64.61 kDa, pI = 5.28) exhibited a characteristic JHE expression pattern by showing high peak at the early last instar, at which JHE enzyme activity was also at a maximal level. RNA interference of Px004817 reduced JHE activity and interrupted pupal development with a significant increase of larval period. This study identifies Px004817 as a JHE-like gene of P. xylostella.  相似文献   

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The increase in the juvenile hormone (JH) III titer in the hemolymph of Lymantria dispar larvae that were parasitized by the endoparasitoid braconid, Glyptapanteles liparidis, during the host's premolt to third instar, coincided with the molt of the parasitoid larvae to the second instar between day 5 and 7 of the fourth host instar. It reached a maximum mean value of 89 pmol/ml on day 7 of the fifth instar while it remained below 1 pmol/ml in unparasitized larvae. Only newly molted fifth instar hosts showed a low JH III titer similar to that of the unparasitized larvae. JH II, which is the predominant JH homologue in unparasitized gypsy moth larvae, also increased relative to controls in the last two samples (days 7 and 9) from parasitized fourth and fifth instars. Compared to unparasitized larvae, a generally reduced activity of JH esterase (JHE) was found in parasitized larvae throughout both larval stages. The reduction in enzyme activity at the beginning and at the end of each instar, when the JHE activity in unparasitized larvae was high, may be in part responsible for the increased JH II and JH III titers in parasitized larvae. Ester hydrolysis was the only pathway of JH metabolism in the hemolymph of unparasitized and parasitized gypsy moth larvae as detected by chromatographic assays. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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Juvenile hormones (JHs) and ecdysteroids are critical insect developmental hormones. JH esterase (JHE) and JH epoxide hydrolase (JHEH) are JH-selective enzymes that metabolize JH and thus regulate the titer of JH. Baculoviruses are known to alter host endocrine regulation. The nucleopolyhedroviruses, AdhoNPV and AdorNPV, are known to have slow and fast killing activity against Adoxophyes honmai (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), respectively. Here we found that when penultimate (4th) instar A. honmai are inoculated with AdhoNPV or AdorNPV, the mean survival time is 9.7 and 8.2 days, respectively. The larvae molted once but did not pupate. The AdhoNPV- or AdorNPV-infected larvae did not show a dramatic increase in JHE activity as was found in mock-infected larvae, instead they showed a marked decrease in JHE activity. In contrast, both viral infections had no effect on JHEH activity. In order to further characterize the JHE activity, the JHE-coding sequence of A. honmai (ahjhe) was cloned and confirmed to encode a biologically active JHE. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis of ahjhe expression in 4th and 5th instar A. honmai revealed that AdhoNPV and AdorNPV are able to reduce ahjhe expression levels.  相似文献   

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Glyptapanteles liparidis is a gregarious, polydnavirus (PDV)-carrying braconid wasp that parasitizes larval stages of Lymantria dispar. In previous studies we showed that parasitized hosts dramatically increase juvenile hormone (JH) titers, whereas JH degradation is significantly inhibited in the hemolymph. Here we (i) quantified the effects of parasitism on JH esterase (JHE) activity in hemolymph and fat body of penultimate and final instars of L. dispar hosts and (ii) assessed the relative contribution of individual and combined wasp factors (PDV/venom, teratocytes, and wasp larvae) to the inhibition of host JHE activity. The effects of PDV/venom was investigated through the use of gamma-irradiated wasps, which lay non-viable eggs (leading to pseudoparasitization), while the effects of teratocytes and wasp larvae were examined by injection or insertion of these two components in either control or pseudoparasitized L. dispar larvae. Parasitism strongly suppressed host JHE activity in both hemolymph and fat body irrespective of whether the host was parasitized early (premolt-third instar) or late (mid-fourth instar). Down-regulation of JHE activity is primarily due to the injection of PDV/venom at the time of oviposition, with only very small additive effects of teratocytes and wasp larvae under certain experimental conditions. We compare the results with those reported earlier for L. dispar larvae parasitized by G. liparidis and discuss the possible role of JH alterations in host development disruption.  相似文献   

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The development of the Mediterranean corn borer, Sesamia nonagrioides, under long-day (LD) photoperiod is associated with juvenile hormone (JH) decline and pupation in the 5th or 6th larval instar. The larvae grown under short-day (SD) conditions maintain a moderate JH titer and enter diapause during which they undergo several extra larval molts. Both types of larvae exhibit similar levels of juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) activity that increases in each instar during the period of low ecdysteroid titer and drops when the titer rises to a molt-inducing peak. A suppression of JHE activity within 24h after application of an ecdysteroid agonist suggests that the drop of activity is a rapid and possibly direct response to ecdysteroids or their agonist. Esterase inhibitor 3-octylthio-1,1,1-trifluoro-2-propanone (OTFP) suppressed more than 98% of the JHE activity without affecting pupation timing and adult development. The data indicate that JHE is not crucial for the switch between larval development, diapause, and metamorphosis in S. nonagrioides.  相似文献   

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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   

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Two major hormones, juvenile hormone (JH) and 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E), regulate insect growth and development according to their precisely coordinated titres, which are controlled by both biosynthesis and degradation pathways. Juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) is the primary JH-specific degradation enzyme that plays a key role in regulating JH titers, along with JH epoxide hydrolase (JHEH) and JH diol kinase (JHDK). In the current study, a loss-of-function analysis of JHE in the silkworm, Bombyx mori, was performed by targeted gene disruption using the transgenic CRISPR/Cas9 (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/RNA-guided Cas9 nucleases) system. Depletion of B. mori JHE (BmJHE) resulted in the extension of larval stages, especially the penultimate and ultimate larval stages, without deleterious effects to silkworm physiology. The expression of JHEH and JHDK was upregulated in mutant animals, indicating the existence of complementary routes in the JH metabolism pathway in which inactivation of one enzyme will activate other enzymes. RNA-Seq analysis of mutant animals revealed that genes involved in protein processing in the endoplasmic reticulum and in amino acid metabolism were affected by BmJHE depletion. Depletion of JHE and subsequent delayed JH metabolism activated genes in the TOR pathway, which are ultimately responsible for extending larval growth. The transgenic Cas9 system used in the current study provides a promising approach for analysing the actions of JH, especially in nondrosophilid insects. Furthermore, prolonging larval stages produced larger larvae and cocoons, which is greatly beneficial to silk production.  相似文献   

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The tissue distribution, developmental control, and induction of juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) mRNA was examined in Heliothis virescens using an 800-base pair fragment of a JHE cDNA clone. Northern hybridization analysis of poly(A)+RNA from fat body and integument of fifth stadium larvae indicated the presence of a single JHE mRNA species having an estimated length of 3 kilobases. On Day 2 of the fifth stadium (L5D2), basal JHE mRNA levels were 3-fold higher in the integument than the fat body, which correlated with the higher specific activity of the enzyme in the integument at this time. However, JHE mRNA levels in the fat body on Day 4 of the fifth stadium were 9-fold higher than on Day 2, while mRNA levels in the integument remained the same. This endogenous increase in JHE mRNA and activity in the fat body occurred at the time of peak hemolymph JHE activity. JHE mRNA was not detected in third stadium larvae which have very low levels of JHE activity. Treatment of L5D2 larvae with the juvenile hormone mimic epofenonane resulted in a 7- and 14-fold increase in the level of JHE mRNA in the integument and fat body, respectively. The mRNA induced in both tissues was of the same estimated length as the constitutively expressed message. The data indicate that the developmental regulation and induction of JHE can occur at the level of mRNA. There is evidence that the fat body secretes more JHE than does the integument and could be the major source of hemolymph JHE.  相似文献   

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Juvenile hormone esterase (JHE), a member of the carboxylesterase family (EC 3.1.1.1), metabolizes JH that is found in juvenile insects. A highly conserved amphipathic alpha helix is found on the surface of known JHEs. This helix is implicated in receptor-mediated binding and endocytosis of JHE by the pericardial cells resulting in the clearance of JHE activity from the hemolymph. In this study, Lys-204 and Arg-208 of the amphipathic alpha helix of the JHE of Manduca sexta (MsJHE) were mutated to histidine residues generating MsJHE-HH. Pharmacokinetic studies following the injection of MsJHE-HH into the hemocoel of larval M. sexta, Heliothis virescens, and Agrotis ipsilon indicated that MsJHE-HH and wild type MsJHE are cleared at similar rates. The infectivity (lethal concentration and lethal time) of a recombinant baculovirus, AcMsJHE-HH, expressing MsJHE-HH was not significantly different than that of a recombinant baculovirus, AcMsJHE, expressing MsJHE in first instars of H. virescens and A. ipsilon. However, the mass of AcMsJHE-HH-infected larvae was 40–50% lower than that of larvae infected with AcMsJHE, and 70–90% lower than that of wild type AcMNPV-infected larvae.  相似文献   

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Juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) is a catabolic enzyme that specifically degrades juvenile hormone (JH) and has been identified in hemolymph and tissues in both larvae and adults of numerous insect species. This study investigates the presence of JHE in ovaries of the viviparous cockroach, Diploptera punctata, and the in vitro release of JHE from these ovaries during the first gonadotrophic cycle. JHE is released in vitro from maturing basal (most posterior) follicles and from follicle cells isolated from oocytes during the short period of time between spermatophore release and chorion formation. Enzyme release is dependent upon the presence of calcium in the medium. This released ovarian JHE appears to be larger than and to display ionic characteristics that are different from the isolated hemolymph and fat body JHEs. In addition, JHE activity measured in homogenates of whole ovaries and subsequently oviposited basal oocytes increases dramatically following spermatophore release, coincident with a previously described decline in JH titer in the ovary. A likely role for ovarian JHE is the site-specific degradation of JH in and around the oocyte prior to fertilization and embryonic development.  相似文献   

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《Insect Biochemistry》1989,19(6):557-571
Topical application of the juvenoid, epofenonane, to last stadium postwandering larvae of Trichoplusia ni caused a precocious elevation of juvenile hormone esterase (JHE) activity that was tissue speific and time dependent. This increase in enzyme activity over controls was most dramatic in the hemolymph, whereas increases in the fat body were lower. Antibodies raised against JHE reacted on Western blots with a fat body and hemolymph protein present in epofenonane treated and untreated last stadium day 3 larvae. The abundance of this protein, which comigrated with JHE, closely coincided with the temporal increases in JHE catalytic activity that occurred in response to treatment in vivo with epofenonane.The presence of epofenonane (5–10,000 nM) in the medium at the start of fat body incubations failed to shift the temporal appearance of JHE activity or boost activity levels significantly over those of controls. If larvae were treated in vivo with epofenonane before fat body tissue was removed, only a small, but significant increase in JHE activity was found in vitro. The rate of enzyme secretion was insufficient to account for the rapid increases in enzyme activity that occur in the hemolymph in response to epofenonane, even though tissue held in vitro was deemed viable by monitoring lactate dehydrogenase activity in the medium, fat body intracellular ATP, and the incorporation of [35S]methionine into fat body protein. Fat body tissue removed from various aged last stadium larvae released enzyme at different rates in vitro.  相似文献   

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