Control of ovarian steroidogenesis by insulin-like peptides in the blowfly (Phormia regina).

J Endocrinol

Université Bordeaux I, Laboratoire de Neuroendocrinologie des Insectes, Avenue des Facultés, F-33405 Talence Cedex, France.

Published: April 2004

This study investigated the ability of insulin and of insect insulin-like peptides (ILPs) to stimulate ovarian steroidogenesis in the blowfly Phormia regina. Bovine insulin was active on ovaries isolated in vitro, which showed an age-dependent sensitivity; this peptide progressively stimulated steroidogenesis in ovaries isolated from the third day after adult molt, but not in younger ones, and had maximal activity after the fifth day. This stimulatory effect was observed equally from females reared in the presence or in the absence of males, excluding a regulatory effect of mating. The mode of action of insulin in blowflies did not involve cAMP, but triggered a specific and well-conserved transduction cascade. In particular, a peroxovanadium compound, known to activate specifically the insulin receptor in mammals, also stimulated blowfly ovarian steroidogenesis in vitro. Conversely, chemicals known to inhibit the mammalian insulin receptor or downstream elements of its signaling pathway, such as LY294002, an inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), were able to prevent the steroidogenic action of bovine insulin on fly ovaries. Extracts from the median neurosecretory cells (MNCs) of blowfly brains, which are known to contain endogenous ILPs, stimulated ovarian steroidogenesis very efficiently and were also sensitive to inhibition by LY294002. These experiments indicated the involvement of PI3K in the mode of action of MNC extracts and substantiated that their endogenous ILPs are involved in the regulation of ovarian steroidogenesis. This conclusion was corroborated by the effects of synthetic bombyxin II, an ILP originating from silkworm MNCs, which also stimulated steroidogenesis in isolated blowfly ovaries. Altogether, these data suggest that insulinlike neurohormones from MNCs play a crucial role as steroidogenic gonadotropins in female flies.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.1810147DOI Listing

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