Abstract

When an extract of the corpora cardiaca/corpora allata from two species of wingless stick insects, Carausius morosus and Cuniculina impigra, which cause no adipokinetic or hyperglycaemic effect when injected into the donor insects themselves, is injected into adult Locusta migratoria it resulted in an increase in the haemolymph lipid concentration. The lipid elevation was time dependent, with a maximum effect about 90–180 min after injection, and was also dose-dependent. About 0.001–0.002 ( C. morosus) and 0.01 ( C. impigra) gland equivalents were needed to produce a significant increase; a maximal effect was reached with approx. 0.075 ( C. morosus) and 0.25 ( C. impigra) gland equivalents. Carausius extract was also able to elevate carbohydrate concentration in the haemolymph of Periplaneta americana. However, the effect was weak and no maximal response was reached even with a dose of 0.5 gland equivalents. Adipokinetic hormone activity was present in CC/CA extracts of larval Carausius; the activity was about 30 times lower in 1-day-old 2nd instar individuals, and approx. 5 times less at the beginning of the 6th instar than that found in adults. In both stages the hormone levels increased gradually from the beginning to the end of the instar. No age-related changes were observed during the adult stage. Further studies on the lipid-mobilising factor of C. morosus revealed that it was stored entirely in the CC and not in other nervous tissue, e.g. brain, CA, suboesophageal ganglion, thoracic and abdominal cord. The factor was heat stable for at least 1 hr at 100°C and retained its adipokinetic activity after incubation with trypsin and the exopeptidases such as carboxypeptidase A and leucine aminopeptidase. However, activity was abolished when incubated with thermolysin and α-chymotrypsin. From these experiments a close resemblance to the locust AKH, a blocked decapeptide, is suggested.

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