Abstract

AbstractMolecular approaches have led to spectacular improvement of our knowledge of insect endocrinology. The present review focuses on two major classes of insect lipidic hormones, ecdysteroids and juvenile hormones. Although the ecdysteroid biosynthetic pathway is not yet fully elucidated, several new steps have been recently characterized, and molecular studies of biosynthetic enzymes are now beginning. It is expected that, thanks to suitable biological models (e.g., ecdysteroid‐defective mutants of Drosophila), the entire biosynthetic pathway will be elucidated in the near future. The understanding of the ecdysteroid mode of action has benefited from studies with Drosophila and major developments relate to the cascades of gene activation and the molecular basis for the stage‐ and tissue‐specificity of hormonal effects. The biosynthetic pathway of juvenile hormones is fully known, but molecular studies of enzymes are still in their infancy, and there is some controversy about the nature of juvenile hormone receptors. Within the forthcoming years, molecular tools will allow to characterize all the enzymes involved in hormone biosynthesis and then to analyze the fine regulation of hormone titers. They will also allow comparative studies aimed at investigating the presence of related molecules (hormone biosynthetic enzymes and receptors) among other Invertebrates (Arthropods and non‐Arthropods), and thus to propose evolutionary scenarios for their endocrine systems.

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