Abstract

By using thin-layer chromatography and high-pressure liquid chromatography combined with radioimmunoassay as well as gas chromatography-mass spectrometry we have identified and quantified ecdysteroids in ovaries and haemolymph of adult female Nauphoeta cinerea. Our analyses demonstrate the presence of ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone, the latter being clearly predominant in all stages investigated. Titre determinations of free ecdysteroids in ovaries show that the 20-hydroxyecdysone concentration is highest (approximately 400 ng/g) at the beginning of chorion formation, suggesting an involvement in this process. Towards ovulation, the titre of free ecdysteroid drops and is low in the newly ovulated egg case. Measurement of immunoreactive highly polar products demonstrates that their concentration remains on a low level throughout the oöcyte maturation period; hydrolysis experiments with Helix pomatia enzymes reveal that, compared to the free ecdysteroids in the ovary, only small quantities of ecdysteroids are present as Helix hydrolysable conjugates. If one compares the quantities of free ecdysteroids in the ovary with those in the haemolymph it becomes apparent that the concentration in the haemolymph is about 10 times lower than that in the ovary. In vitro incubation of follicle cells from oöcytes at stages around chorion formation reveals that these cells are able to produce ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone, and incubation with [ 3H]-ecdysone demonstrates that ecdysone is efficiently converted to 20-hydroxyecdysone in a stage-dependent manner. These observations strongly suggest that the follicle cells are the site of ecdysteroid biosynthesis and of C-20-ecdysone hydroxylation. A comparison of these findings with observations made of other insects such as locusts and mosquitoes demonstrates significant differences in quality, composition, titre fluctuation and distribution of ecdysteroids in adult females from different species and suggests that these ecdysteroids might fulfil multiple and various biological functions.

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