Abstract

A blood meal initiates oöcyte maturation in Aedes aegypti, and we have used rocket immunoelectrophoresis to investigate the function of midgut, ovaries, and head in the onset of vitellogenin synthesis. Non-blood-fed females and those fed blood (by enema) containing soybean trypsin inhibitor never contained vitellogenin. This demonstrates that the pressure of an undigested blood meal on stretch receptors of the midgut plays no role in the induction of vitellogenin synthesis, rather the stimulus is a digestion product of blood. When females were ovariectomized or decapitated and then fed blood, the haemolymph contained newly synthesized vitellogenin 24 h later. This was also demonstrated in isolated ovariectomized abdomens. Apparently, induction of vitellogenin synthesis does not require factors from either the head, thorax, or ovaries. When ovariectomy or decapitation was postponed after a blood meal, the level of vitellogenin in the haemolymph rose. Therefore, interaction of factors from the head and ovaries maintain the synthesis needed for oöcyte maturation.

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