Abstract

In the last-larval instar of the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, a switch from excretion of uric acid to storage in the fat body occurs during transition from the feeding to the wandering stage. Neuroendocrine control of this change from excretion to storage was demonstrated by neck-ligation experiments with synchronously reared larvae. Results indicate that a neurohormone is released from the head 24–30 hr before the initiation of wandering and coincident with the first release of ecdysone that initiates metamorphosis. Direct involvement of the moulting hormone was shown by the effects of multiple injections of 20-hydroxyecdysone into the abdomen of larvae that had been ligated before the release of hormone. Urate levels in the fat body were 20- to 100-fold higher from hormone-injected larvae as from saline inject controls. Topically applied juvenile hormone or methoprene reversed the 20-hydroxyecdysone-induced storage of urate. Increased levels of uric acid in the haemolymph during pupal development result from the presence of juvenile hormone, and the abrupt decrease in uric acid concentration in the haemolymph just prior to pupal ecdysis results from a decreased titre of juvenile hormone. Applications of methoprene prevented the decrease in uric acid levels in the haemolymph.

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