Abstract

To elucidate the hormonal mechanisms which regulate reproduction in a beneficial insect, we have begun to investigate the process of vitellogenesis in Coccinella septempunctata, the seven-spotted lady beetle. Vitellin (Vn) constitutes 60–70% of the total protein in C. septempunctata eggs and is composed of four polypeptides with molecular weights determined by electrophoresis in denaturing gels of 133,000, 130,000, 46,000 and 43,000. In the egg these polypeptides occur in a ratio of approx. 1:1:1:2. The two larger Vn polypeptides yielded similar peptide fragments upon partial proteolytic digestion which suggests that they are structurally related. The two smaller Vn polypeptides appear structurally distinct because they yielded unique proteolytic fragments. The Vn precursor, vitellogenin (Vg), was observed in the haemolymph of mature females, but was not detected in the haemolymph of immature females or males. The electrophoretic mobilities, antigenicity, and proteolytic fragmentation patterns of the Vg polypeptides were indistinguishable from those of their Vn counterparts. Thus the major processing of the Vn polypeptides appears to occur prior to their secretion into the haemolymph. The synthesis of Vg was examined in whole animals and in organ cultures. Vg synthesis was observed in the fat body and to a smaller extent in the ovaries of mature females. The newly synthesized Vg was rapidly secreted. Vg synthesis was not detectable in brain or thoracic muscle of mature females or in the fat body of males or immature females. Very little vitellogenin synthesis occurred in female insects reared on artificial diets. The topical application of a juvenile hormone analogue induced Vg synthesis in non-fecund females but not in males.

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