Abstract

Blood-fed, decapitated female Aedes aegypti mosquitoes matured eggs when injected with an extract of heads, but non-blood-fed females did not. The response to head extract was optimal when the head was allowed to remain for 2 hr after feeding. A dose response to injected egg development neurosecretory hormone (EDNH) was observed in vivo that was similar to in vitro dose responses previously reported. Blood-fed decapitated females responded equally well to boiled or unboiled head extract. When blood-fed decapitated females were injected with head extract, ecdysteroid levels increased. Partial purification of head extract using high-pressure liquid chromatography yielded a fraction at 34% acetonitrile that showed egg maturation activity in vivo when injected into blood-fed decapitated females, and ecdysiotropic activity when incubated in vitro with ovaries. In addition, a fraction at 30% acetonitrile was found that showed activity in vivo but not in vitro and may be a precursor. Occasionally, the fraction at 37% acetonitrile showed activity in the in vitro assay but had little activity in vivo and may be a metabolite. These results suggest that the same hormone was being assayed in vivo and in vitro and is EDNH.

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