Abstract

The ketone bodies acetoacetate and d-3-hydroxybutyrate are found in the haemolymph, the fat body, and the flight muscles of the adult desert locust. Acetoacetate is the major ketone body in the haemolymph and the flight muscles, but in the fat body d-3-hydroxybutyrate usually predominates. The concentration of acetoacetate in the haemolymph varies with age, and increases during starvation and flight and also after the injection of corpus cardiacum homogenate; it is little affected by stress and there are no differences between the sexes. Ketone bodies appear to be formed in the fat body and are oxidized by the fat body, the flight muscles, and the testes. All the tissues oxidize acetoacetate much more readily than d-3-hydroxybutyrate, and the flight muscles of fed locusts oxidize acetoacetate much more readily than the fat body or the testes. In starved locusts the ability of the fat body and the flight muscles to oxidize ketone bodies is greatly reduced, but utilization by the testes remains normal. Thus the flight muscles appear to be the major consumers of ketone bodies in fed locusts, and the testes the major consumers in starved locusts. It is suggested that ketone bodies are formed in the fat body during the mobilization of the triglyceride lipid reserves, and are either oxidized by the fat body or transported by the haemolymph to the flight muscles and other tissues to be used as a respiratory fuel.

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