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1.
Metabolites of radioactive ecdysone or 20-hydroxyecdysone in larvae and pharate pupae of Sarcophaga peregrina were separated and identified by using thin-layer chromatography, high-performance liquid chromatography, and chemical methods. At the larval stage ecdysone was metabolized to biologically less active ecdysteroids predominantly through 20-hydroxyecydsone, at the pharate pupal stage, to other ecdysteroids which were tentatively identified as 26-hydroxyecdysone, 3-epi-26-hydroxyecdysone, and 3-epi-20,26-dihydroxyecdysone. Ecdysteroid acids were found in the polar metabolites during pharate pupal-pupal transformation, but scarcely detected in the larval metabolites. These acids were presumed to be ecdysonoic acid, 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid, and their epimers. The conjugates of ecdysteroid that released the free ecdysteroids by enzymatic hydrolysis were produced more in larvae than in pupae, whereas the very polar ecdysteroids that were not affected by the enzyme were found more in pupae. Therefore, there are different metabolic pathways of ecdysone between these two successive developmental stages, and the alteration of the metabolic pathway may serve as one of the important factors in a regulatory mechanism of molting hormone activity which is responsible for normal development of this insect.  相似文献   

2.
[14C]Cholesterol was injected into fifth-instar larvae of Manduca sexta, and the metabolites were isolated and identified from 8-day-old male and female pupae. A major portion of the metabolized cholesterol was esterified either with a sulfate group or with fatty acids. The predominant ecdysteroid metabolites were 20-hydroxyecdysone, 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone, 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid, and 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid. Smaller amounts of ecdysteroids were identified as conjugates of 26-hydroxyecdysone, 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysone, 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone, and its 3α-epimer. The metabolic profiles were similar for both male and female pupae. The two ecdysteroid acids were identified by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and chemical ionization mass spectrometry and by mass spectral analyses of their methyl esters. Detection of 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid as a major metabolite is significant, as its occurrence has been scarcely reported. 3-Epiecdysteroid acid formation is discussed as a possible ecdysteroid-inactivating pathway that may be operating specifically in lepidopterous insects or in particular developmental stages such as eggs or pupae.  相似文献   

3.
Injection of labelled ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone into Pieris pupae showed that their catabolism proceeds through 26-hydroxylation followed by conversion into acidic steroids assumed to be 26-oic compounds. This biological system is characterized by the lack of conjugation reactions and by rather long-lived hormones.In vivo biosynthesis of ecdysteroids was investigated by 24 hr [3H]cholesterol labelling, followed by HPLC analysis of the resulting [3H]ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone. Active conversion (up to 0.07% in 24 hours) was observed between 48 hr and 120 hr following pupal ecdysis, a result in good agreement with the variations observed in hormone contentLong-term [3H]cholesterol incorporation experiments made it possible to monitor ecdysteroid dynamics during pupal development. Three periods were observed, corresponding to the successive accumulation of ecdysone, 20-hydroxyecdysone and an acidic metabolite. Comparison of these results with those of the experiments involving labelled ecdysone injection shows that the catabolism of injected hormones is not the same as that of endogenous hormones.  相似文献   

4.
《Insect Biochemistry》1988,18(7):729-734
Ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone metabolism was investigated in third instar Drosophila larvae both in vivo by injecting radiolabelled ecdysteroids and in vitro by incubating various tissues with labelled ecdysteroids.Ecdysone metabolism proceeds through different pathways: (1) C-20 hydroxylation; (2) C-26 hydroxylation and C-26 oxidation leading to the formation of 26-hydroxyecdysteroids (26-hydroxyecdysone and 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone) and acidic compounds (ecdysonoic acid and 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid); C-3 oxidation and C-3 epimerization then conjugation leading to the formation of 3-dehydrocompounds (3-dehydroecdysone and 3-dehydro-20-hydroxyecdysone), 3-epimers (3-epiecdysone and 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysone) and conjugates (only one conjugate was tentatively characterized as 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysone-3-phosphate). 3-Dehydrocompounds are the major metabolites formed in third instar Drosophila larvae and C-3 oxidation occurs in various tissues. Experiments using tritiated cholesterol provided evidence that 3-dehydroecdysone and 3-dehydro-20-hydroxyecdysone are true endogenous ecdysteroids in Drosophila larvae.  相似文献   

5.
Ecdysone metabolism in Pieris brassicae during the feeding last larval stage was investigated by using 3H-labeled ecdysteroid injections followed by high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC
  • 1 Abbreviations: 3DE = 3-dehydroecdysone; 3D20E = 3-dehydro-20-hydroxyecdysone; 2026E = 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone; E = ecdysone; Eoic = ecdysonoic acid; 2026E′ = 3-epi-20,26-dihydroxyecdysone; E′ = 3-epiecdysone; E′oic = 3-epiecdysonoic acid; E′8P = 3-epiecdysone 3-phosphate; 20E′ = 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysone; 20E′3P = 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysone 3-phosphate; FT = Fourier transform; HPLC = high-performance liquid chromatography; 20E = 20-hydroxyecdysone; 20Eoic = 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid; NMR = nuclear magnetic resonance; NP-HPLC = normal phase HPLC; RP-HPLC = reverse phase HPLC; TFA = trifluoroacetic acid; Tris = tris(hydroxymethyl)-aminomethane.
  • ) analysis of metabolites. Metabolites were generally identified by comigration with available references in different HPLC systems. Analysis of compounds for which no reference was available required a large-scale preparation and purification for their identification by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry. The metabolic reactions affect the ecdysone molecule at C-3, C-20, and C-26, leading to molecules which are modified at one, two, or three of these positions. At C-20, hydroxylation leads to 20-hydroxyecdysteroids. At C-26, hydroxylation leads to 26-hydroxyecdysteroids which can be further converted into 26-oic derivatives (ecdysonoic acids) by oxidation. At C-3, there are several possibilities: there may be oxidation into 3-dehydroecdysteroids, or epimerization possibly followed by phosphate conjugation. Thus, injected 20-hydroxyecdysone was converted principally into 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid, 3-dehydro-20-hydroxyecdysone, and 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysone 3-phosphate. Labelled ecdysone mainly gave the same metabolites doubled by a homologous series lacking the 20-hydroxyl group.  相似文献   

    6.
    Summary

    The metabolism of [3H]ecdysone was examined in 3 species of annelids: the bloodworm, Tubifex vulgaris (a freshwater oligochaete), the earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris (a terrestrial oligochaete) and the ragworm, Nereis divtrsicolor (a marine polychaete). One of these species, N. diversicolor, metabolised injected [3H]ecdysone into compounds which co-chromatographed on both reversed-phase and adsorption HPLC with authentic 20-hydroxyecdysone, 26-hydroxyecdysone and 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone, thus demonstrating the occurrence of 20-hydroxylation and 26-hydroxylation capability in the Annelida. Furthermore, [3H]ecdysonoic acid was also formed and excreted by N. diversicolor, suggesting that 26-oic acid formation is involved in ecdysteroid inactivation in this species. Other, as yet unidentified, radioactive metabolites were also excreted by N. diversicolor. Several metabolites of [3H]ecdysone were also detected in the other 2 species examined, T. vulgaris and L. terrestris.  相似文献   

    7.
    Following injection into female Manduca sexta pupae, [14C]cholesterol is converted to a radiolabeled C21 nonecdysteroid conjugate as well as ecdysteroid conjugates, which in ovaries and newly-laid eggs consist mainly of labeled 26-hydroxyecdysone 26-phosphate. During embryogenesis, as the level of 26-hydroxyecdysone 26-phosphate decreases there is a concurrent increase in the amount of a new, labeled ecdysteroid conjugate. This conjugate, which is the major ecdysteroid conjugate (9.4 μg/g) in 0- to 1-hour-old larvae was identified as 26-hydroxyecdysone 22-glucoside by nuclear magnetic resonance and chemical ionization mass spectrometry. This is the first ecdysteroid glucoside to be identified from an insect. The disappearance of 26-hydroxyecdysone 26-phosphate in 0- to 1-hour-old larvae indicates that the 26-hydroxyecdysone 22-glucoside is derived from 26-hydroxyecdysone 26-phosphate. 3-Epi-26-hydroxyecdysone was the major free ecdysteroid isolated from these larvae and 3-epi-20,26-dihydroxyecdysone was the next most abundant ecdysteroid isolated. Interestingly, the 0- to 1-hour-old larvae contained the highest levels of 3α-ecdysteroids per gram of insect tissue (8.7 μg/g) to be isolated from an insect, yet there was a complete absence of the corresponding free 3β-epimers. The ecdysteroid conjugate profiles of ovaries and 0- to 1-hour-old larvae are discussed. Methodology is presented that permits the efficient separation of free and conjugated ecdysteroids and nonecdysteroid conjugates (C21-steroid conjugates).  相似文献   

    8.
    Most pupae of H. punctiger enter diapause when reared at 19°C, 12L:12D. When pharate pupae were treated for only 12 hr at 28°C about 50% developed at 19°C. The proportion of non-diapausing pupae increased as the temperature at which the pharate pupal stage was spent increased.The quantity of injected 20-hydroxyecdysone necessary to promote development in diapausing pupae varied from about 1 μg g?1 soon after pupation to about 4 μg g?1 after 50 days. It fell somewhat after 150 days.Removing brains from non-diapausing pupae showed that the brain secreted its hormone at the time of pupation (or just before). However, if the pupae were kept at 19°C development did not occur unless the brain remained in situ for at least 20 hr at 28°C. Implanting brains from non-diapausing pupae into diapausing ones had no measurable effect.These results may be explained by postulating that the prothoracic gland is ‘activated’ by exposure to high temperature, but that it reverts to inactivity over a period at 19°C. The ‘active’ gland must then be stimulated by brain hormone for a long period to trigger secretion of its hormone, which results in development. Diapause is thus the result of the failure of the prothoracic gland to secrete.  相似文献   

    9.
    《Insect Biochemistry》1986,16(1):65-82
    The metabolism and distribution of endogenous ecdysone and injected [3H]ecdysone were studied during the pupal-adult development of Manduca sexta. Well-characterized antisera were used to detect and quantify endogenous metabolites by radioimmunoassay (RIA) following their separation by ion-suppressed reverse phase, and normal phase, high performance liquid chromatography. Identical chromatographic procedures were employed to determine the metabolic fate of the [3H]ecdysone in the haemolymph pool. These studies revealed the sequential appearance in the haemolymph and gut of progressively oxidized metabolites of ecdysone—hydroxylation at C-20 was followed by hydroxylation at C-26. The data are suggestive of both the induction of the steroid hydroxylases (oxidases) by substrate or other effector substances and the possible coordination of developmental events by ecdysteroids other than 20-hydroxyecdysone.In the haemolymph, two highly-polar conjugates of ecdysone were observed together with conjugates of the other free ecdysteroids, especially those hydroxylated at C-26. In contrast, relatively little 20-hydroxycdysone conjugate was detected in the insect. As adult development proceeded, both endogenous and radiolabelled ecdysteroids were increasingly localized in the gut, so that just prior to eclosion most ecdysteroids were present in the meconium of the high gut (rectal pouch). The peak titres and the kinetics of appearance of ecdysone, 20-hydroxyecdysone, and 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone were similar for both haemolymph and gut (and for males and females), but considerably higher levels of C-26 oxidized (acid) metabolites of ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone were localized in the gut. Although levels of highly-polar ecdysteroid conjugates found in the haemolymph and gut were similar, considerable amounts of three less polar ecdysone conjugates, of 3-α-epimers of ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone, and of a substance tentatively identified as 2-deoxyecdysone were found only in the gut. Whether ionized, conjugated, or free, the gut ecdysteroids did not appear to equilibrate with the haemolymph compartment.Differences were observed in the metabolism kinetics of exogenously administered radiolabelled ecdysone when compared to the endogenous ecdysteroids; and some RIA positive gut metabolites did not become significantly radiolabelled. This suggests that injection of ecdysone may not simulate the endogenous secretion of ecdysone or its subsequent metabolism and distribution completely accurately.  相似文献   

    10.
    Summary From adults ofPycnogonum litorale (Ström) eight ecdysteroids were isolated by HPLC and identified by mass spectrometry and NMR. One of the compounds is 20-hydroxyecdysone, two further ecdysteroids show no OH-group at C-22 (22-deoxy-20,26-dihydroxyecdysone, 22-deoxy-20-hydroxyecdysone=taxisterone). The five other compounds are esters of ecdysteroids with acetic acid (25R and 25S isomers of 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone 22-acetate, 20-hydroxyecdysone 22-acetate) or with glycolic acid (20-hydroxyecdysone 22-glycolate, ecydsone 22-glycolate). The latter are new among zoo- and phytoecdysteroids. No significant amounts of ecdysone could be detected. The origin of the ecdysteroids inPycnogonum litorale and their biological activity are discussed.Abbreviations RP-HPLC Reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography - NP normal phase - RIA radioimmunoassay - NMR nuclear magnetic resonance - FT Fourier transform - CI/D chemical ionization/desorption - TFA trifluoroacetic acid - E ecdysone - 20E 20-hydroxyecdysone - 2026E 20 26-dihydroxyecdysone  相似文献   

    11.
    12.
    The metabolism of [3H]-ecdysone has been investigated at times of low and high endogenous ecdysteroid tit re, in early and late fifth-instar Schistocerca gregaria larvae, respectively. Ecdysone-3-acetate, 20-hydroxyecdysone, and 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone were identified as metabolites in both the free form and as polar conjugates. Comparison of the intact polar conjugates of the ecdysteroid acetates on two HPLC systems with the corresponding authentic compounds indicated that they were 3-acetylecdysone-2-phosphate and 3-acetyl-20-hydroxyecdysone-2-phosphate. Other major polar metabolites were identified as ecdysonoic acid and 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid. Ecdysone metabolism in fifth-instar S. gregaria is apparently an age-dependent process. Early in the instar, excretion of both free and conjugated ecdysteroids, as well as ecdysteroid 26-acids, occurs. At this stage the level of ecdysteroid acetates in the conjugated (phosphate) form is high, in contrast to the free ecdysteroids, where ecdysone predominates. When the endogenous hormone titre is high, the formation of ecdysteroid acetates is less, the major excreted matabolites at that stage being conjugated 20-hydroxyecdysone together with ecdysteroid-26-acids, but little free ecdysteroids. Acetylation of ecdysone occurs primarily in the gastric caecae. Ecdysone-3-acetate (mainly as polar conjugate) is also a major product of ingested ecdysone in early fifth-instar Locusta migratoria.  相似文献   

    13.
    Ecdysteroid levels in larvae and pupae of Anastrepha suspensa (Diptera: Tephritidae) were measured by radioimmunoassay. These levels were correlated with histological changes throughout the development of the post-embryonic stages. Ecdysteroid levels increase rapidly throughout the last-larval instar and on the last day of this stage are 283 pg equivalents of 20-hydroxyecdysone per insect (14.5 ng/g) when wandering behaviour is initiated. At the end of this period the puparium is formed and within 24 h, the ecdysteroid rises to its highest peak (625 pg equivalents of 20-hydroxyecdysone/insect). Larval-pupal apolysis is initiated within 24 h later and the pupal cuticle is then secreted. Two days later, the ecdysteroids reach their lowest levels (75 pg equivalents of 20-hydroxyecdysone/insect or 0.6 ng/g) and most of the larval fat body and other tissues have been histolysed. In 5- to 10-day old pupae ecdysteroid levels again increase and remain relatively high throughout. During this period the larval epidermis is replaced by imaginal epidermis, imaginal discs begin to proliferate and the adult cuticle is secreted. Ecdysteroid levels finally fall 2 days prior to adult emergence. HPLC determinations indicate that 20-hydroxyecdysone is the predominant free ecdysteroid, and along with ecdysone, is readily detectable in all postembryonic stages of this species. An unusually high and unexplained peak of 20-hydroxyecdysone occurs in the pharate adult. This peak probably consists of ecdysone metabolites with retentions similar to that of 20-hydroxyecdysone and to which the antiserum is sensitive.  相似文献   

    14.
    In unparasitized 4th and 5th-instar larvae of Trichoplusia ni and in 4th-instar larvae parasitized by Chelonus sp. 20-hydroxyecdysone, 20,26-dihydroxyec-dysone, and 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid were the predominant metabolites formed 2 h after injection of [3H]ecdysone. Other unidentified metabolites were seen, but none seemed to be specific for either parasitized or unparasitized larvae. The major difference between parasitized and unparasitized larvae was seen with respect to the quantity of apolar (unidentified) and polar metabolites (20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid and unidentified ones), which were produced to a greater extent in parasitized larvae. Ecdysone was rapidly converted into 20-hydroxyecdysone and the other polar metabolites in all stages investigated, and the parasitoid seemed not to affect the conversion of ecdysone into 20-hydroxyecdysone. When analyzing the fate of [3H]ecdysone in host and parasite separately, at a stage when the parasite drinks hemolymph of its host, we observed that 10–20% of the radioactivity was recovered from the parasitoid. Analysis of the parasitoid's ecdysteroids revealed that ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone represented only a small proportion of the recovered labeled ecdysteroids, the majority being apolar and polar metabolites. Our data suggest that the parasitoid takes up ecdysteroids from its host, converts them, and to some extent releases apolar metabolites into the host.  相似文献   

    15.
    Peaks of ecdysteroids were observed during the different phases of embryonic development of intact Carausius eggs or eggs precociously deprived of their exochorion and cultivated under paraffin oil. Several groups of ecdysteroids were separated and analyzed by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) combined with radioimmunoassay. Ecdysteroids were similar in the two categories of eggs, including high-polarity products (essentially conjugates hydrolyzable by Helix pomatia digestive juice, or alkaline phosphatase), possible ecdysonoic acids (unhydrolyzable polar substances), free hormones, and nonpolar ecdysteroids. Four ecdysteroids were identified by co-elution during HPLC with reference compounds of 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone, 20-hydroxyecdysone, ecdysone, and 2-deoxy-20-hydroxyecdysone. Concentrations of these substances (free and conjugated forms) were studied during the different stages of embryonic development: 20-hydroxyecdysone and 2-deoxy-20-hydroxyecdysone were the major free ecdysteroids. They showed parallel variations with large peaks at stages VI8 and VII6 whereas ecdysone titers were consistently low. Injected labelled ecdysone was converted efficiently into 20-hydroxyecdysone, and both compounds underwent 26-hydroxylation and/or conjugation to polar or apolar metabolites.  相似文献   

    16.
    Radioactive β-ecdysone injected into mature larvae or pharate pupae of Sarcophaga peregrina was rapidly metabolized, but the decrease in moulting hormone activity in whole animal extracts was much faster than the decrease of radioactivity. The metabolites were extracted, examined by TLC and HPLC and shown to be conjugates of β-ecdysone in larvae (as shown by enzymatic hydrolysis) but 3-epi-β-ecdysone in pupae. These compounds did not exhibit appreciable activity. The process of inactivation by epimerization may be a mechanism of feed back control of ecdysone, since epimerization is induced by ecdysone itself.  相似文献   

    17.
    The levels of both free and conjugated ecdysteroids, maternally labeled from [14C]cholesterol, of six different age groups of Manduca sexta eggs were quantitatively determined. Eggs 0–1-h old contain about 2.5 and 35 μ/g of the 2- and 26-phosphates of 26-hydroxyecdysone, respectively, and 1 μg/g of 26-hydroxyecdysone. During embryogenesis of 26-hydroxyedcdysone 26-phosphate is hydrolyzed to 26-hydroxyecdysone, which reaches a peak titer in 1–18-h-old eggs; the level of 26-hydroxyecdysone 2-phosphate remains rather constant. Additionally, other metabolic modifications such as hydroxylation, conjugation, epimerization, and oxidation are occurring; and as the level of the 26-hydroxyecdysone 26-phosphate decreases there is a progression of other ecdysteroids. C-20 hydroxylation first appears in 24–40-h-old eggs and reaches peak activity in 48–64-h-old eggs, where 20-hydroxyecdysone and 20, 26-dihydroxyecdysone are both present at peak titer but the latter is the major free ecdysteroid. Ecdysone is observed at measurable levels only in the three age groups of eggs between 1 and 64 h-old. C-3 epimerase activity also appears at 24–40 h and continually increases throughout embryogenesis to the point that 3-epi-26-hydroxyecdysone and 3-epi-20, 26-dihydroxyecdysone are the major free ecdysteroids in 96-h-old eggs. A new ecdysteroid conjugate, 26-hydroxyecdysone 22-glucoside, first appears at 24–40h and becomes the major conjugate in 72–80-h-old eggs; it represents an apparent end-product as its peak titer is reached and maintained throughout the final embryonic stages. 20-Hydroxyecdysonoic acid occurs in 48–64-h-old eggs, and along with 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysonoic and ecdysonoic acids in 72–88-h-old eggs. 20-Hydroxyecdysonoic acid peaks during the latter time interval, and as its titer subsequently falls, there is a concurrent increase in the level of 3-epi-20-hydroxyecdysonoic which was identified as the second major component of the ecdysteroid conjugate fraction of 0–1-h-old larvae. Our results indicate that there is little or no biosynthesis of ecdysteroids during embryogenesis; that the materal ecdysteroid conjugate 26-hydroxyecdysone 26-phosphate serves as source for 26-hydroxyecdysone and the numerous metabolites; that 26-hydroxyecdysone and 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone may be the active hormones during embryonic development; and that glucosylation, epimerization, and formation of acids cosntitute inactivation processes. A scheme of the proposed pathways involved in the metabolism of 26–hydroxyecdysone 26-phosphate in the developing eggs of m. sexta is presented.  相似文献   

    18.
    Insects convert ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone into their corresponding 26-oic derivatives, named ecdysonoic acid and 20-hydroxyecdysonoic acid respectively. The conversion takes piace in several tissues and can either be the only pathway for converting ecdysone into highly polar ecdysteroids, or coexist with various conjugating mechanisms. 20-Hydroxyecdysonoic acid was isolated from Pieris brassicae pupae as its methyl ester derivative. Its chemical structure was identified by Cl/D mass spectrometry and compared with a synthetic compound (20-hydroxy-25-deoxyecdysonoic acid) chemically prepared by oxidation of inokosterone (20,26-dihydroxy-25-deoxyecdysone). Natural ecdysonoic acids appear to exist as a mixture of 25R and 25S isomers. The significance of this pathway is discussed in comparison with similar reactions occuring in the metabolism of steroid hormones in vertebrates.  相似文献   

    19.
    A microsomal cytochrome P450 from a cell line of the insect Chironomus tentans has been shown to hydroxylate the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone at C(26) to yield 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone, P1, which is further metabolized to P2 and P3. Based on (1)H NMR studies, acetonide formation and quantum chemical calculations, P2 and P3 represent novel slowly interconvertible geometrical isomers, occurring at a 3:1 ratio, presumably arising from hemiacetal formation between the 26-aldehyde group and the 22R-hydroxyl group to build a tetrahydropyran ring in the side chain. The stereochemistry at C(26) was S in P2 (trans-diol) and R in P3 (cis-diol), respectively. Both metabolites showed S configuration at C(25). With Chironomus cells, P2/P3 was inactive as both a hormonal agonist and antagonist, whereas 20,26-dihydroxyecdysone (P1) showed weak agonist activity. Thus, cytochrome P450-mediated inactivation of 20-hydroxyecdysone may be responsible for the hormonal insensitivity observed in some subclones of this cell line.  相似文献   

    20.
    《Insect Biochemistry》1991,21(6):573-581
    Unlike some moths, pheromone production in Trichoplusia ni is not regulated by a pheromone activating neuropeptide. Rather, competency to produce pheromone apparently is linked with changes in the ecdysteroid titer that occur late in metamorphosis. In contrast to adult pheromone glands, glands from pharate adults 2 days before eclosion were non-competent, and (1) had undetectable levels of the pheromone, (Z)-7-dodecenyl acetate, and pheromone-specific intermediates, (2) showed little or no conversion of radiolabeled substrate to product in enzyme assays of fatty acid synthetase, Δ11 desaturase, and acetyltransferase, and (3) failed to incorporate radiolabeled acetate into pheromone in gland culture. Glands 1 day before adult eclosion exhibited low titers of pheromone and the intermediate, (Z)-11-hexadecenoate, and showed low levels of radiolabeled acetate incorporation into pheromone in gland culture. By the time of adult eclosion, the gland was fully competent. Precocious development of pheromone gland competency was induced by removing the head and thorax from pupae 2 days before adult eclosion. This effect appears to result from the reduction of ecdysteroid, since it was blocked by the administration of 20-hydroxyecdysone. This ability to manipulate the development of the pheromone gland was restricted to a critical period, since removal of head and thorax from younger pupae did not induce pheromone gland competency, and administration of 20-hydroxyecdysone to older pupae did not block its onset. In addition to differences in competency, early pharate and adult glands exhibited dissimilarities with respect to (1) the types of proteins synthesized in gland culture, and (2) the types of proteins translated from mRNA in vitro.  相似文献   

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