Abstract

The presence of ecdysteroid receptor (EcR) in various tissues was studied throughout larval-adult development of the blood-sucking bug, Rhodnius prolixus, using an antibody to EcR that recognizes all isoforms. On Western blots, the antibody recognizes three peptides of approximate molecular masses of 70, 68 and 64 kDa, from epidermis and fat body of developing larvae, which contain high levels of haemolymph ecdysteroids. These peptides are absent from both unfed larvae and adults, which are devoid of ecdysteroids. In vitro treatment of epidermis and fat body from unfed larvae with 20E induces the appearance of all three EcR immunoreactive peptides. The stage-specific appearance and 20E inducibility of the peptides implies that they represent the native EcR(s) of Rhodnius. Confocal fluorescence analysis using this antibody revealed a great diversity of temporal profiles of EcR in various tissues during development. Developmental profiles of EcR were examined in abdominal epidermis, fat body, spermatocytes, brain (including the medial neurosecretory cells), prothoracic glands (PGs), rectal epithelium and Malpighian tubules. EcR fluorescence was confined to the nuclei in close association with chromatin. EcR was absent from tissues of unfed larvae or adults, supporting the results from Western blots. Different tissues develop EcR at different developmental times and in the presence of radically different concentrations of haemolymph ecdysteroids, retain EcR for different lengths of time and lose EcR at different concentrations of ecdysteroids. These results suggest that each tissue possesses a distinctive response mechanism to ecdysteroids. An exception to this, are the PGs, which exhibited no EcR fluorescence at any time during development.

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