Abstract

Abstract The initiation of blowfly metamorphosis is associated with a pronounced decrease in the number of larval ribosomes; this reduced number then remains constant throughout pharate adult development. Ribosomal RNA accounts for most of the total RNA in larvae shortly after the cessation of feeding and growth, but thereafter the amount of rRNA declines disproportionately to total RNA until early pharate adult development; thereafter, the ratio remains constant until adult emergence. Larval fatbody ribosomes, which constitute about half of the total in the entire organism, are destroyed in situ prior to pupariation. The progressive decrease in fatbody rRNA is accompanied by a corresponding increase in a degraded, relatively insoluble 4–7 S nucleic acid which, stored until adult emergence when it is discarded, accounts for the disparity between total RNA and rRNA. The extracellular ribosomes previously observed during pharate adult development are thus derived from dissolution of larval tissues other than fatbody.

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