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Ecdysteroids in helminths and annelids
Authors:G. C. BARKER  D. J. CHITWOOD  H. H. REES
Affiliation:1. Department of Parasitology , Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine , Pembroke Place, Liverpool, L3 5QA, U.K. Phone: 051 708 9393 Fax: 051 708 9393Telex 627095 UNILPLG;2. Nematolog Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture , Building 467, BARC-East, Beltsville, Maryland, 20705, USA Phone: 301 344 3634 Fax: 301 344 3634;3. Department of Biochemistry , University of Liverpool , P.O. Box 147, Liverpool, L69 3BX, U.K. Phone: 051 794 4352 Fax: 051 794 4352Telex 627095 UNILPLG
Abstract:Summary

This review focuses on recent research developments in the past three years concerning ecdysteroid biochemistry in helminths and annelids, with emphasis on results reported at the IXth Ecdysone Workshop in Paris, France, in September 1989. During the past three years, most of the research in this area has been concentrated on nematodes, in several species of which the occurrence of ecdysteroids has been demonstrated. Interesting biological effects of exogenously applied ecdysteroids have been discovered on meiotic reinitiation in oocytes of the dog heartworm, Dirofilaria immitis, and on microfilarial production by Brugia pahangi. These effects, together with previous discoveries, demonstrate the feasibility of affecting nematode physiology with exogenously applied ecdysteroids. However, experiments with four species of nematodes in three separate laboratories have failed to demonstrate that nematodes biosynthesize ecdysteroids from cholesterol. Therefore, it remains to be proven whether ecdysteroids are truly endogenous nematode hormones or are merely compounds with strong biological activity. Research with cestodes and trematodes has similarly revealed that ecdysteroids occur in these organisms and that the compounds have possible regulatory roles, but experiments demonstrating endogenous biosynthesis have yet to be performed. Annelids, which are more closely related to insects than helminths, also contain ecdysteroids; recent research has demonstrated the C-20 hydroxylation of ecdysone to 20-hydroxyecdysone, the active moulting hormone of most insects. Experiments to demonstrate this metabolic step in helminths have failed.
Keywords:Ecdysteroids  helminths  annelids  nematodes  cestodes  trematodes
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