Abstract
The pupae of Papilio xuthus show green, brown, and orange color polymorphism. The color of the pupal body is determined by a hormone that produces brown coloration, a hormone called pupal-cuticlemelanizing hormone (PCMH) which is secreted from brain-suboesophageal ganglion and prothoracic ganglion (Br-SG-PG) complexes during the pharate pupal stage. PCMH was extracted with 2% NaCl from Br-SG-PG complexes of P. xuthus green pupae. When pharate pupae producing brown pupae (brown-pupa-producers) were ligatured between the thorax and abdomen with cotton thread, the head-thorax complex developed into the brown type and the abdomens into the green type. Ligatured abdomens treated with crude PCMH produced intermediates of green- and brown-pupae (melanization degree of grades 0–3), which was used to assay PCMH-activity. Extracts of Br-SG complexes from Bombyx mori adults also shifted the color of the pupal cuticle toward the brown type in ligatured P. xuthus abdomens of brown-pupa-producers. The molecular weight of the B. mori factor showing PCMH activity (PCMH-active factor) was estimated to be 3,000–4,000 Da by gel filtration. The PCMH-active factor is a hydrophobic peptide(s) that binds to a cation exchange resin at pH 6.9.
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