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Manduca sexta prothoracicotropic hormone: evidence for a role beyond steroidogenesis
Authors:Robert Rybczynski  Chelsea A. Snyder  John Hartmann  Sho Sakurai  Lawrence I. Gilbert
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, CB 3280, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina;2. Department of Biology, Kanazawa University, Kanazawa, Japan
Abstract:Prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) is a homodimeric brain peptide hormone that positively regulates the production of ecdysteroids by the prothoracic gland of Lepidoptera and probably other insects. PTTH was first purified from heads of adult domestic silkworms, Bombyx mori. Prothoracic glands of Bombyx and Manduca sexta undergo apoptosis well before the adult stage is reached, raising the recurring question of PTTH function at these later stages. Because Bombyx has been domesticated for thousands of years, the possibility exists that the presence of PTTH in adult animals is an accidental result of domestication for silk production. In contrast, Manduca has been raised in the laboratory for only five or six decades. The present study found that Manduca brains contain PTTH at all stages examined post‐prothoracic gland apoptosis, i.e., pharate adult and adult life, and that PTTH‐dependent changes in protein phosphorylation and protein synthesis were observed in several reproductive and reproduction‐associated organs. The data indicate that PTTH indeed plays a role in non‐steroidogenic tissues and suggest possible future avenues for determining which cellular processes are being so regulated. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:PTTH  phosphorylation  translation  reproduction  accessory glands  neuropepeptide
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