The Silkworm Coming of Age—Early
Author(s) -
René Feyereisen,
Marek Jindra
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.587
H-Index - 233
eISSN - 1553-7404
pISSN - 1553-7390
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pgen.1002591
Subject(s) - ecdysis , metamorphosis , biology , juvenile hormone , moulting , corpus allatum , larva , instar , insect , endocrinology , medicine , ecdysteroid , zoology , endocrine system , hormone , ecology
In order to grow, immature insects must periodically synthesize a new cuticle and shed the old one (a process of molting and ecdysis) until they have reached a stage permitting metamorphosis to the reproductive adult. Each molt is induced by a pulse of ecdysteroids, but the nature of the molt is determined by the juvenile hormones (JHs) [1]. These are sesquiterpenoids, synthesized from three isoprene units via the mevalonate pathway and decorated by an epoxide group on one end and a methyl ester on the other [1]. The JHs maintain larval characters, a status quo effect that is lifted when the level of JH drops. A threshold size must be attained for each molt and for metamorphosis to occur, and this size may relate to the limit of oxygen supply by the tracheal system [2], [3]. The number of molts varies among and sometimes within species; it is influenced by nutrition and by environmental and genetic signals. Yet, the mechanisms that “measure size” or “count the larval instars” are overridden by the experimental depletion of JHs. It has long been a tenet of insect endocrinology that removal of the corpora allata (CA), the endocrine glands that produce the JHs, causes precocious metamorphosis [1]. However, bringing the JH titer down experimentally is not as trivial as it may seem.
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