The regulation of post-eclosion and post-feeding diuresis in the Monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus |
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Authors: | Robert M Dores Stephen H Dallmann William S Herman |
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Institution: | Department of Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Both post-eclosion and post-feeding diuresis can be demonstrated in adult Monarch butterflies; and both these processes are significantly inhibited by neck-ligature. The post-eclosion response is restored in neck-ligatured animals by injection of whole head, brain, ventral nerve cord, and corpora cardiaca-corpora allata extracts, and the effect is dose dependent. The active substance appears to be a water soluble, heat stable, trypsin and protease sensitive, polypeptide, with a molecular weight estimated from gel filtration of approx. 3000, that is localized principally in the brain. The amount of active substance present in the head decreases during post-eclosion diuresis, when activity seems to be present in the haemolymph. However, diuretic activity can be demonstrated from heads obtained from Monarchs that are several days or weeks old. In the Monarch, post-eclosion diuresis appears to be under hormonal regulation. By contrast, extracts of whole heads and/or known endocrine organs do not significantly alter post-feeding diuresis in intact or neck-ligatured Monarchs. In addition, although diuresis in response to injections of large volumes of insect saline can be demonstrated in Monarchs, extracts of known endocrine organs do not affect the rate of post-injection diuresis in either neck-ligatured or intact animals. Such experiments, and others involving surgical interruption of the ventral nerve cord, indicate that the eclosion diuretic hormone does not play a major role in the regulation of post-feeding diuresis in this species. |
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Keywords: | Lepidopteran diuretic hormone post-eclosion diuresis post-feeding diuresis neurosecretion water balance arthropod polypeptide hormones |
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