Abstract

AbstractUsing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) under denaturing conditions, two major polypeptides of 200,000 and 170,000 daltons were detected in the hemolymph of mature female Oncopeltus fasciatus, but they were not found in the hemolymph of males or newly emerged females. Those polypeptides constituted the two major bands of early vitellogenic oocytes; however, they were absent from the yolk of mature eggs. The slower‐migrating band (200,000 daltons) appears to correspond to a vitellogenic protein already identified in O. fasciatus, whose synthesis has been suggested to be independent of juvenile hormone (JH). Treatment of newly emerged adult females with the corpus allatum cytotoxin precocene II prevented the appearance of the female‐specific bands and induced an important accumulation of other proteins in the hemolymph. Yolk deposition was also inhibited in those animals. Topical application of JH to precocene‐treated females restored the appearance of the 200,000 and 170,000 dalton polypeptides in the hemolymph. These results suggest that JH is required for the synthesis of female‐specific polypeptides in O. fasciatus.

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