Abstract
The winter moth, Nyssiodes lefuarius, exhibits striking sexual dimorphism in wing form; males have functional wings of normal size, whereas females lack wings. We previously found that the steroid hormone 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) triggered massive programmed cell death (PCD) only in the female pupal wing epithelium; however, when and how early sexual trait development of the pupal wings is initiated during pupal-adult metamorphosis remains obscure. To clarify the detailed morphological changes and mechanisms underlying early sexual trait development and cell death, we examined the effects of 20E on early ultrastructural and histological changes in the pupal wing epithelium of both sexes. Before the onset of adult differentiation, no morphological differences were observed in the epithelial cells of both sexes at an ultrastructural level. When 5.4µg of 20E was injected into pupae of both sexes at 15days after the onset of pupation, retraction of the wing epithelium from the pupal cuticle was initiated at day 2 after 20E injection in both sexes. Although overt degeneration of wing tissue was not still obvious, apoptotic body-like structures and auto-phagosomes were visible at day 3 after 20E injection in females, whereas development of scale precursor cells started on day 4 after injection in males. Our results suggest that (1) the injection of 20E induced sexually dimorphic changes in the pattern of organelle distribution in wing epithelial cells, and (2) abnormally shaped mitochondria in the cytoplasm of the female wing epithelium might be involved in the PCD that occurs during wing tissue degeneration.
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