Abstract

Ecdysteroids, primarily 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and ecdysone (E), are steroid hormones that regulate various developmental and physiological processes in insects. Commonly, immunoassays are used to quantify ecdysteroid titers of insects. However, the antibodies used in these assays react not only with 20E and E but often also with their inactive reserves and metabolites, and thus require purification before they can be quantified precisely. Here, we developed a simple cell-based method to quantify only the hormonally active ecdysteroids using newly established cells harboring the firefly luciferase gene under the control of the ecdysteroid-inducible promoter of the E75A gene of the silkworm Bombyx mori L. These cells also constitutively expressed the Renilla luciferase gene using the baculovirus ie2 promoter for internal reference. This cell-based method detected hormonally active ecdysteroids with significantly higher sensitivity than their inactive metabolites. Hemolymph ecdysteroid titers, determined using a dual luciferase assay after exposing these cells to crude extracts of B. mori larval and pupal hemolymph, agreed well with the sum of the 20E and E titers, which were quantified individually using a radioimmunoassay after they had been separated by HPLC. Thus, this method is very useful for quantifying the ecdysteroid titers of insects, particularly when the samples contain large amounts of ecdysteroid reserves and metabolites.

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