Abstract

The cDNA encoding eclosion hormone (EH), which plays an integral role in triggering ecdysis behavior at the end of each molt, was cloned from the cotton bollworm, Helicoverpa armigera (Har) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). The EH polyprotein precursor contains a 26-amino acid signal peptide and a single 62-amino acid mature EH. Compared the mature Har-EH with other known EHs, it shows 94%, 84%, and 59% identities to Manduca sexta, Bombyx mori, and Drosophila melanogaster, respectively. Har-EH mRNA is expressed only in the brain by Northern blot and RT-PCR, but not in other tissues. By in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry, both Har-EH mRNA and protein are localized in two pairs of neurosecretory cells of the brain. Prior to a molt, expression level of Har-EH gene reaches the highest point, and then drops after molt. EH release is detected both centrally, within the ganglia, and peripherally, into the hemolymph. A peak of the EH titer in hemolymph measured by ELISA presents at ecdysis. These results are consistent with the biological function of Har-EH associated with ecdysis. Furthermore, Har-EH gene is expressed throughout all of the developmental stages examined, implicating that the EH gene may possess other biological functions in post-embryonic development other than triggering ecdysis behavior.

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