Abstract

DNA synthesis and mitosis in the corpora allata (CA) of adult Diploptera punctata males were investigated with total cell count after 5′-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine immunodetection and colchicine arrestment both in vivo and in vitro. The CA exhibited a single wave of DNA synthesis followed by cell division during the first 4 days after the imaginal ecdysis. A second mitotic wave was experimentally induced after the nervous connections between the CA and the brain were severed on day 4. Spontaneous mitosis was abolished in cockroaches treated with a juvenile hormone (JH) analog. This inhibitory regulation in vivo appeared to act through brain neurosecretory cells since in the denervated CA mitotic activity was unaffected by JH treatment. An in vitro system supporting growth of the corpus allatum was established to study direct hormonal effects. By using continuous bromod-eoxyuridine labeling in vitro for 6 days, we showed that DNA synthesis of corpus allatum cells was unaffected by direct contact with JH. In contrast, 20-hydroxyecdysone excrted direct mitogenic action on allatal cells. These and previous results suggest that CA cells alternate between JH synthesis and a proliferative state in which they divide in a self-renewing fashion to yield differentiated progeny. We propose that in newly enclosed adult Diploptera punctata males, low JH titer and high ecdysteroid titer promote mitosis in CA cells. As the ecdysteroid titer declines, JH produced by the CA acts on brain neurosecretory cells which dispatch inhibitory signals through nerves to prevent continuous proliferation of CA cells.

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