Uncoupling of sequential heteromorphic developmental programs.

Arch Insect Biochem Physiol

Graduate Center for Toxicology, Chandler Medical Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40536-0305, USA.

Published: March 1999

The regulatory basis for differences among species in the developmental rate at which successive life stages are reached ("heterochrony") is a subject of much controversy among vertebrate and invertebrate developmental biologists. The heterochrony in development of different insect species is characterized in part by the intercalcation between the embryo and adult of a (varied) number of heteromorphic larval instars. These heteromorphic larval instars exhibit changes of body form from one larval instar to the next, prior to the final metamorphic molt to the pupal form. The intractability of larval heteromorphosis to experimental dissection is due in part to the lack of suitable experimental probes that can test the nature of the coupling of each heterochronically expressed instar-specific program. The epistatic basis of expression of heteromorphic developmental programs was assessed by two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis of hemolymph proteins during the normal and experimentally manipulated feeding stages of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th (final) instar larvae, and during the prepupal stage, of Trichoplusia ni. Of the several hundred protein spots tracked, some were identified that were uniquely detected during a single stage, while others were observed during combinations of certain stages. The nature of coupling of sequential heterochronic expression of these proteins during successive instars or stages was tested by use of a parasite (Chelonus sp.) that injects regulatory material into the host embryo that later causes the subsequent precocious expression of the final instar larval program. Following the expression of a normal 3rd instar pattern, such larvae were observed to omit expression of the 4th instar program, including omission of the proteins heteromorphically specific to that instar, and instead then express an essentially normal final instar pattern. Thus, normal expression of the final instar feeding stage pattern was not invariantly coupled to prior expression of the penultimate instar-specific proteins or pattern. Also, expression of the full program of the final instar feeding stage was epistatic to teh penultimate instar program, i.e., the protein pattern unique to the penultimate larval instar was not co-expressed with the precociously expressed final instar pattern. Larvae developmentally redirected in this manner failed to fully express the final instar prepupal stage pattern of protein expression, due at least in part to failed expression of prepupal ecdysteroids, but this was shown not to arise from omission of any of the first 4 larval instars per se. The nature of the redirections in host development caused by this parasite finally provides means of probing the coupling of successive expression on heteromorphic programs during larval development.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1520-6327(1999)40:1<1::AID-ARCH2>3.0.CO;2-SDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

final instar
28
instar
13
larval instars
12
instar pattern
12
expression
11
heteromorphic developmental
8
developmental programs
8
larval
8
heteromorphic larval
8
larval instar
8

Similar Publications

Scorpion insect neurotoxin LqhIT2 is a promising oral biopesticide: high-level preparation in Pichia pastoris and bioactivity assays.

Pest Manag Sci

December 2024

Postdoctoral Mobile Station of Biology, Genetic Engineering Research Center, College of Life Sciences, Chongqing University, Chongqing, China.

Background: Discovering insecticidal proteins with high activity and strict insect specificity and applying them to the biological control of insect pests is of great significance. Oral LqhIT2 has insecticidal activity, which most other insecticidal neurotoxin proteins do not have, but the large-scale preparation of the toxin is difficult and one of the obstacles to determining its anti-insect potential for biological control.

Results: In this study, the expression level of recombinant LqhIT2 (rLqhIT2) in Pichia pastoris was as high as 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The final instar larva of the rare species Hämäläinen, 2003 is described and illustrated here for the first time, including a new distribution record from Vietnam. The larva of differs from that of congeneric species by distinct morphological features, including the presence of four setae on the palpal lobe of the labium, the presence of lateral spines on abdominal S5-9, and a long terminal filament on the caudal lamella. We also provide a key to species for the known larvae of the subfamily Platycnemidinae in the Sino-Japanese and Oriental regions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In December 2017 the Venetian Region (local Authority), financed the creation of the Operational Group (OG) 'Serinnovation', within the framework of the Rural Development Plan supported by the European Community. The OG aims at coordinating and spreading innovation in sericulture through mechanisation of processes and centralisation of some rearing steps, the use of waste as by-products and traceability to promote local productions. The project acts on perceived quality by increasing the added value, through production cost efficiency, and on the recovery of the waste material for further applications (circular economy).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We provide illustrated dichotomous keys for the identification of final (4th) instar larvae of south-east Asian genera of Chironomidae (Diptera), predominantly from aquatic (freshwater and maritime) habitats. The region considered comprises oriental China, Burma, Thailand, Malaysia (west and east), Brunei, Singapore and Indonesia. Eight subfamilies are represented and phylogenetically validated tribes are keyed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heliozela pitangavora Moreira & Fochezato sp. nov. (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae): a leaf miner micromoth associated with Eugenia uniflora L. (Myrtaceae) in southern Brazil.

Zootaxa

August 2024

PPG Biologia Animal; Departamento de Zoologia; Instituto de Biociências; Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Av. Bento Gonçalves 9500; 91501-970 Porto Alegre; RS; Brazil; Instituto Uiraçú; Reserva Serra Bonita; Camacan; BA; Brazil.

Heliozela pitangavora Moreira & Fochezato sp. nov. (Lepidoptera: Adeloidea: Heliozelidae), a leaf miner of Eugenia uniflora L.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!