Abstract

AbstractChanges in activity of the corpora allata (CA) during larval‐pupal‐adult development of the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta were studied by transplantation assays, measurements of in vitro juvenile hormone (JH) and JH acid synthesis, and determination of JH acid methyltransferase (JHAMT) and 3‐hydroxy‐3‐methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG‐CoA) reductase activities. The data from these assays demonstrate that the CA cease to secrete JH by day 4 of the last larval instar (wandering stage). With regard to JH synthesis, they remain inactive throughout the prepupal, pupal, and most of the pharate adult periods. CA of females, but not of males, resume JH synthesis shortly before eclosion. The biochemical basis of the inactivation process is the loss of JHAMT activity. However, prepupal CA produce JH acids, as shown by enzyme and in vitro assays. Pupal and pharate adult CA do not synthesize JH acids although levels of HMG‐CoA reductase activity seem to remain relatively high. Radiolabeled JH was recovered from hemolymph of allatectomized prepupae that had been injected with radiolabeled JH acid. These results provide further evidence that certain peripheral tissues (eg, imaginal discs) convert JH acid secreted by the prepupal CA to JH and, thus, that JH acid is a prohormone in the prepupal period. The CA change from hormone secretion to prohormone secretion during larval‐prepupal transformation, a unique functional alteration in an endocrine gland.

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