Abstract

The distribution and titre of the diapause-associated protein (DAP), which accumulates in the fat body of diapausing larvae of the southwestern corn borer, Diatraea grandiosella, were determined using an antibody raised to the purified protein. Immunoblotting and immunodiffusion showed that the highest concentration of DAP was present in the fat body. Small amounts of the protein were present in the haemolymph and even lower levels were detected in other tissues. Rocket immunoelectrophoresis showed that DAP accumulated in the fat body at the beginning of diapause, reached a plateau, and gradually declined towards the end of diapause. Similarly, the titre of DAP in last instar non-diapausing larvae treated with a JH analogue increased, reached a plateau and then declined. Double immunodiffusion and immunoblotting using the DAP-antibody and extracts of the fat body of D. grandiosella and the southern cornstalk borer, Diatraea crambidoides, and the sugarcane borer, Diatraea saccharalis, revealed the partial immunochemical identity of the DAP of D. grandiosella and a protein present in these two species. Denaturing electrophoresis with immunoblotting showed that the DAP-related proteins of D. crambidoides and D. saccharalis have apparent molecular weights of 33,000 and 36,000, respectively, as compared to a molecular weight of 35,000 for DAP of D. grandiosella. A dot blot analysis showed that no cross reaction occurred between the “diapause proteins” present in the haemolymph of adults of the Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata, and the DAP of D. grandiosella.

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