Abstract

The absence of juvenile hormone (JH) at the time of head capsule slippage during the molt to the fifth (final) instar of the tobacco hornworm was found to cause ommochrome (primarily dihydroxanthommatin) synthesis in the epidermis during the first two days after ecdysis. Then synthesis decreased until its transient reappearance during the wandering stage. Either JH-I (ED50=8x10−4 μg) or methoprene (ED50=1.4x10−2 μg) applied at this critical time during the molt prevented the first synthesis. A comparison of developmental profiles of tryptophan and its metabolites, kynurenine and 3-hydroxykynurenine, in normal and allatectomized wild type larvae showed that JH at this critical time prevented both the conversion of kynurenine to 3-hydroxykynurenine and 3-hydroxykynurenine to ommochromes. A similar study in normal and methoprene-treatedblack mutant larvae showed that only the latter conversion was inhibited by JH. The accumulation of 3-hydroxykynurenine in the epidermis of the JH-treatedblack mutant is thought to be due to the altered tryptophan metabolism in these mutants in previous instars due to lower JH levels. Neither starvation of theblack mutant nor injection of 3-hydroxykynurenine significantly affected ommochrome synthesis by the epidermis. Preliminary studies of the enzymes involved showed that JH at the critical period suppressed the later activity and/or production of kynurenine 3-hydroxylase in the wild type larva, but had little effect on the particulate ommochrome synthetase activity of the epidermis.

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