Abstract

Biosynthetic processes related to the production of vitellogenin (yolk precursor protein) have been examined in the fat body of adult female Locusta migratoria. Vitellogenin-producing capacity was assayed by incubation of fat body with [ 3H]leucine, followed by precipitation from the medium with specific antiserum. In normal development, vitellogenin synthesis began at about Day 7 after emergence and became maximal at about Day 13, when this protein accounted for 60% of the total fat body protein output. The production of other proteins increased to a lesser extent, becoming maximal at about Day 6. The incorporation of uridine into fat body RNA rose to a maximum at Day 8, which coincided with a marked increase in tissue RNA content. The DNA content in adult female fat body approximately doubled between Days 3 and 8. Vitellogenin synthesis, and the increases in RNA and DNA, were prevented by removal of the corpora allata (the source of juvenile hormone). In allatectomized locusts, vitellogenin synthesis was induced by JH or an analog, ZR-515. Applied topically in acetone, these gave steep dose-response curves, half-maximal at 75 and 150 μg, respectively. After a single treatment with ZR-515, fat body vitellogenin production rose slowly during 48 hr, then steeply to a maximum at 72 hr, but after decay of this effect during 10 days, a second application of ZR-515 induced renewed synthesis with little initial lag. Hormone treatment produced a smaller increase in the output of other proteins, and an increase in incorporation into RNA which preceded the major rise in vitellogenin synthesis. Male fat body produced little or no vitellogenin. These results are consistent with action of JH at the gene level.

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