When insect larvae have fully grown, prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) is released from the brain, triggering the initiation of metamorphic development through stimulation of ecdysteroid secretion by the prothoracic glands. The present study analyzes the mechanism that regulates the occurrence of this PTTH surge. In the silkworm Bombyx mori, the PTTH surge occurs on day 6 of the fifth instar and is preceded by a small rise in hemolymph ecdysteroid titer, which occurs late on day 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJuvenile hormone (JH) has an ability to repress the precocious metamorphosis of insects during their larval development. Krüppel homolog 1 (Kr-h1) is an early JH-inducible gene that mediates this action of JH; however, the fine hormonal regulation of Kr-h1 and the molecular mechanism underlying its antimetamorphic effect are little understood. In this study, we attempted to elucidate the hormonal regulation and developmental role of Kr-h1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe analyzed PCR-amplified carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase 2, aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase (CAD) gene fragments from 146 Bombyx mori native strains and found extremely low levels of DNA polymorphism. Two haplotypes were identified, one of which was predominant. CAD haplotype analysis of 42 samples of Japanese B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Krüppel homolog 1 gene (Kr-h1) has been proposed to play a key role in the repression of insect metamorphosis. Kr-h1 is assumed to be induced by juvenile hormone (JH) via a JH receptor, methoprene-tolerant (Met), but the mechanism of induction is unclear. To elucidate the molecular mechanism of Kr-h1 induction, we first cloned cDNAs encoding Kr-h1 (BmKr-h1) and Met (BmMet1 and BmMet2) homologs from Bombyx mori.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSteroid hormones ecdysteroids regulate varieties of developmental processes in insects. Although the ecdysteroid titer can be increased experimentally with ease, its artificial reduction, although desirable, is very difficult to achieve. Here we characterized the ecdysteroid-inactivating enzyme ecdysteroid-22-oxidase (E22O) from the entomopathogenic fungus Nomuraea rileyi and used it to develop methods for reducing ecdysteroid titer and thereby controlling insect development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe characterized the nucleotide sequences of PCR-amplified mitochondrial COI fragments of 147 silkworm (Bombyx mori) strains that have been maintained in the National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences. Coding sequences (714 bp) of the 147 COI fragments were classified into eight haplotypes based on nucleotide differences at eight segregating sites. No length variation was identified in this region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsect Biochem Mol Biol
May 2011
We previously reported preferential expression of genes for ecdysteroid signaling in the mushroom bodies of honeybee workers, suggesting a role of ecdysteroid signaling in regulating honeybee behaviors. The organs that produce ecdysteroids in worker honeybees, however, remain unknown. We show here that the expression of neverland and Non-molting glossy/shroud, which are involved in early steps of ecdysteroid synthesis, was enhanced in the ovary, while the expression of CYP306A1 and CYP302A1, which are involved in later steps of ecdysone synthesis, was enhanced in the brain, and the expression of CYP314A1, which is involved in converting ecdysone into active 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E), was enhanced in the brain, fat body, and ovary.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the penultimate (4th) instar larvae of Bombyx mori, juvenile hormone (JH) synthesis by corpora allata (CA) fluctuates. When diet containing 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) was fed, JH synthetic activity of the CA was first stimulated as the ecdysteroid titer increased, then suppressed slightly by the higher molting concentration of ecdysteroids (>250 ng/ml). The overall JH biosynthetic activity was modulated by the expression of JH biosynthetic enzymes in the CA: primarily JH acid O-methyltransferase (JHAMT), isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase, and farnesyl diphosphate synthase 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEukaryotic mRNAs are generally considered monocistronic and encode only one protein. Although dicistronic mRNAs encoding two proteins were found in fungi, plants, and animals, polycistronic mRNAs encoding more than two proteins have remained elusive so far in any eukaryote. Here we demonstrate that a single mRNA from silkworm encodes the precursor of an insect cytokine paralytic peptide (PP) and two new cytokine precursor-like proteins, uENF1 and uENF2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Insects have multiple hemocyte morphotypes with different functions as do vertebrates, however, their hematopoietic lineages are largely unexplored with the exception of Drosophila melanogaster.
Methodology/principal Findings: To study the hematopoietic lineage of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, we investigated in vivo and in vitro differentiation of hemocyte precursors in the hematopoietic organ (HPO) into the four mature hemocyte subsets, namely, plasmatocytes, granulocytes, oenocytoids, and spherulocytes. Five days after implantation of enzymatically-dispersed HPO cells from a GFP-expressing transgenic line into the hemocoel of normal larvae, differentiation into plasmatocytes, granulocytes and oenocytoids, but not spherulocytes, was observed.
In insects, the precise timing of molting and metamorphosis is strictly guided by a principal steroid hormone, ecdysone. Among the multiple conversion steps for synthesizing ecdysone from dietary cholesterol, the conversion of 7-dehydrocholesterol to 5beta-ketodiol, the so-called 'Black Box', is thought to be the important rate-limiting step. Although a number of genes essential for ecdysone synthesis have recently been revealed, much less is known about the genes that are crucial for functioning in the Black Box.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHemocyte functions are well-investigated in the silkworm, Bombyx mori, however, detailed analysis of each hemocyte subset has been hampered by the lack of appropriate separation method. Here we use an array of flow cytometric analyses to characterize silkworm hemocytes with various molecular probes, such as propidium iodide, green fluorescence protein, monoclonal antibodies, and fluorescent lectins. Of these, separation using propidium iodide was the simplest and provided most reliable results for the isolation of the hemocyte subsets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEthyl 4-[2-(6-methyl-3-pyridyloxy)hexyloxy]benzoate (1) and ethyl 4-(2-phenoxyhexyloxy)benzoate (2), which induce precocious metamorphosis in larvae of Bombyx mori, a clear sign of juvenile hormone (JH) deficiency, showed JH activity when topically applied to allatectomized 4th instar larvae of B. mori. Compounds 1 and 2 induced precocious metamorphosis with doses at which they were effective as JH agonists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJuvenile hormone esterase (JHE) is the primary juvenile hormone (JH) metabolic enzyme in insects and plays important roles in the regulation of molt and metamorphosis. We investigated its mRNA expression profiles and hormonal control in Bombyx mori larvae. JHE mRNA was expressed at the end of the 4th and 5th (last) larval instars in the midgut and in all the three (anterior, middle, posterior) parts of the silk gland.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOnly a few extracellular hematopoietic factors have been identified in insects. We previously developed an in vitro culture system for the larval hematopoietic organ (HPO) of the silkworm Bombyx mori, and found that cell proliferation is linked to hemocyte discharge from the HPO. In this study, we tested hematopoietic activity of bombyxin, a peptide in the insulin family.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe suboesophageal body of insects was identified over a century ago in the silkworm embryo, but its biological function is still unknown. We discovered that this tissue is differentiated in the earliest embryonic stages of the cabbage armyworm and secretes the insect cytokine, growth-blocking peptide (GBP), transiently from 24 to 60 h after oviposition when gastrulation is in progress. Over-expression of GBP, achieved by microinjection of the GBP gene driven by a cytomegalovirus (CMV) constitutive promoter, resulted in complex deformities of the procephalon (embryonic head).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
October 2004
The cabbage butterfly (Pieris rapae) produces pierisin-1, an apoptosis-inducing protein against mammalian cells. In order to clarify the biological role of pierisin-1 in P. rapae, its expression during developmental stages was examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe lepidopteran hematopoietic process is poorly understood. We therefore examined the fundamental properties of hematopoiesis in the silkworm Bombyx mori using hematopoietic organ culture. In a medium containing larval plasma taken from the fourth day of the final larval stadium, over 50,000 hemocytes per hematopoietic organ were discharged within 48 h, with the number of cells comprising the hematopoietic organ simultaneously increasing from approximately 20,000 to 40,000.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol
July 2003
To analyze the molecular mechanisms underlying hormone-regulated gene expression during molt and metamorphosis, we developed a transient reporter gene assay system using the silkworm anterior silk gland. Reporter plasmids were delivered into dissected anterior silk glands by particle bombardment and bombarded glands transplanted into other larvae, to which hormones were then administered. When the green fluorescent protein gene, coupled with the constitutive cytoplasmic actin gene A3 promoter, was introduced into the anterior silk gland, strong green fluorescence was observed a few days later.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Insect Biochem Physiol
April 2003
Bombyx mori paralytic peptide (BmPP), a multifunctional cytokine-like molecule, is expressed in the hematopoietic organ-wing imaginal disc complex, suggesting that BmPP is involved in both immune response and the hematopoietic process. We studied the effects of BmPP on plasmatocytes and hematopoietic organs of the silkworm. BmPP (1 microM) stimulated spreading of circulating plasmatocytes, but the percentage of spread plasmatocytes was only 20%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParalytic peptide of Bombyx mori (BmPP) is one of the multifunctional ENF-peptides; the name of "ENF" is the consensus N-terminal amino acid sequence of the family peptides. We revealed that BmPP significantly possesses growth-blocking activity and plasmatocyte-spreading activity and that its activity profiles are different from those of another ENF-family peptide, namely, the growth-blocking peptide of Pseudaletia separata (PsGBP). We also determined the NMR structures of BmPP and PsGBP under the same conditions, which revealed the structural differences of the first and second beta-turn regions between the two peptides.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Insect Biochem Physiol
January 2003
The entomogenous fungus Nomuraea rileyi reportedly secretes a proteinaceous substance inhibiting larval molt and metamorphosis in the silkworm Bombyx mori. We studied the possibility that N. rileyi controls B.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFcDNA for ultraspiracle (USP) from the lepidopteran rice stem borer Chilo suppressalis was cloned using PCR techniques. The deduced amino acid sequence of C. suppressalis USP (CsUSP) was very similar to those of other lepidopteran USPs, especially to the Manduca sexta USP-2 isoform.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen the juvenile hormone analog fenoxycarb was topically applied to the silkworm Bombyx mori at the beginning of the 3rd or 4th (penultimate) instar, an extra larval molt was induced. The 5th instar period was shortened to about 5 days and the extra 6th instar ranged from 8 to more than 20 days, depending on the dose applied. Starvation before fenoxycarb treatment strongly enhanced the incidence of extra molting up to 100%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel ecdysteroid-inducible gene was isolated from the anterior silk gland of the silkworm by mRNA differential display and named Bombyx mori chitinase-related gene 1 (BmChiR1). cDNA for BmChiR1 is 3.7 kbp encoding 1080 amino acids.
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