Abstract

In the salivary gland chromosomes of late-third instar larvae and in late (8- to 12-hr) prepupae of Drosophila melanogaster, there are ecdysone-induced sequences of puffing patterns which can be reproduced in vitro. These two sequences are separated by a period when the glands are thought to be exposed to a low titer of β-ecdysone and during which they acquire the competence to respond to ecdysone at the late prepupal puff sites. Attempts to modify either the late larval or the late prepupal responses to ecdysone in vitro by the simultaneous addition of juvenile hormone (JH) with ecdysone, to larval or prepupal glands, respectively, are unsuccessful. If, however, JH (ca. 10 −6 M) is added to larval glands cultured 6 hr in ecdysone and then 3 hr in JH alone, the subsequent induction of prepupal ecdysone puffs is inhibited. Thus the role of JH appears to lie in modifying the acquisition of competence to respond to ecdysone rather than in a direct antagonism between the two hormones.

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