Hormone stimulated lipolysis and proline synthesis in the fat body of the adult tsetse fly, Glossina morsitans |
| |
Authors: | RW Pimley PA Langley |
| |
Institution: | Tsetse Research Laboratory, University of Bristol, School of Veterinary Science, Langford, Bristol BS18 7DU, U.K. |
| |
Abstract: | G. morsitans fat cells incubated in vitro with l-U-14C]-leucine incorporated the radiolabel, mainly into triglycerides. Aqueous extracts of corpora cardiaca, midbrain, or thoracic ganglion stimulated the release of radiolabelled material from prelabelled fat cells in vitro. Corpora cardiaca extracts were the most active, approx. 1 × 10?3 gland pairs/μl elicited the maximal response. At concentrations above 1 × 10?3 gland pairs/μl the activity of corpora cardiaca extracts was inhibited by a substance which could be removed by gel filtration. The stimulatory factor in nervous-tissue extracts was destroyed by proteolytic enzymes and was recoverable in a single peak by Sephadex G15 gel filtration. Results suggest that it is a peptide hormone produced mainly by the median neurosecretory cells of the midbrain with the corpora cardiaca being the site of storage and release. No hormone was detectable in fresh haemolymph, but it was found at high concentration in boiled haemolymph, implying the presence of a heat labile inhibitor.Under the in vitro conditions used the hormone stimulated the synthesis of proline from alanine and the hydrolysis of triglycerides to free fatty acids. The probable functions of the hormone are to stimulate proline synthesis in response to demand for flight and/or to mobilise lipid for larval nutrition. The relative importance of these apparent functions in vivo could not be determined. |
| |
Keywords: | fat body proline synthesis lipid release corpora cardiaca peptide hormone |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|