To investigate the role of juvenile hormone (JH) in the control of Drosophila reproduction under stress, JH degradation and reproduction were studied under nutritional stress and JH treatment in Drosophila virilis females of wild type (wt) and a heat stress (hs) mutant: this mutant does not respond to heat stress by alterations in JH metabolism and has decreased JH level and fertility under normal conditions. One day of starvation results in a decrease of JH degradation, a delay in oocyte maturation, degradation of early vitellogenic egg chambers, accumulation of mature oocytes and a 24 h oviposition arrest in both wt and hs females. A fertility decrease was observed in both wt and hs females 24 h following the end of starvation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe link between reproduction and environmental signals is poorly understood at the physiological, genetic and molecular levels. We describe a mutant strain of Drosophila virilis that has altered responses to heat stress. Heat stress in wild-type females results in oocyte maturation delays, degradation of early vitellogenic egg chambers, inhibition of yolk protein gene expression in follicle cells and accumulation of mature oocytes.
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