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Artifactual stimulation of vitellogenesis in Aedes aegypti by 20-hydroxyecdysone
Authors:Arden O Lea
Institution:Department of Entomology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, U.S.A.
Abstract:Single or repeated, non-physiological, high doses (0.5–5.0 μg/female) of 20-hydroxyecdysone or ecdysone injected into sugar-fed female Aedes aegypti stimulated follicular growth and deposition of yolk, but suppressed accumulation of protein yolk to approximately one-third, and lipid yolk to one-half that in an equal number of follicles with equivalent yolk length taken from blood-fed controls. Physiological doses (500 pg/female) of ecdysone or 20-hydroxyecdysone or the implantation of ecdysone-secreting ovaries (verified by bioassay), into sugar-fed females failed to induce any yolk deposition. In these experiments, yolk precursors were not the limiting factor, because in decapitated females, digesting a blood meal, the injection of a physiological dose of 20-hydroxyecdysone or the implantation of ecdysone-secreting ovaries still did not stimulate vitellogenesis. Finally, continuous infusion of 500 pg or even 50 ng 20-hydroxyecdysone/hr for 22 hr was as ineffective as single or multiple injections of equivalent doses of hormone. Consequently, rapid excretion or catabolism of 20-hydroxyecdysone by the sugar-fed female does not explain the need for high doses to induce vitellogenesis, or the failure of oöcytes to mature with normal protein and lipid content. Apparently, ovarian ecdysone is not the factor by which normal vitellogenesis is initiated and maintained in this mosquito.
Keywords:20-Hydroxyecdysone  ecdysone  vitellogenesis  mosquito  abnormal oögenesis  hormone infusion
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