In mosquitoes, a hormone (egg development neurosecretory hormone or EDNH), produced by the medial neurosecretory cells and stored in the corpus cardiacum soon after eclosion, is released after a blood meal, and vitellogenesis begins a few hours later. When either the ovaries or the neurosecretory cells and corpus cardiacum are removed before the blood meal, vitellogenin is not synthesized. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that the release of EDNH from the corpus cardiacum is dependent on the secretion of a releasing factor from the ovaries. Using a bioassay for EDNH in the corpus cardiacum, we found that the gland of an ovariectomized female remained active after blood feeding, and therefore, has not released EDNH. When an ovary was implanted before the blood meal, the corpus cardiacum was inactive, and therefore, had released EDNH. We concluded that the ovaries secrete an EDNH-releasing factor, and that this factor and EDNH must both be in circulation before vitellogenesis can begin. Although releasing factor alone did not stimulate vitellogenesis, it was the rate limiting process that controlled the onset of vitellogenesis. Using a bioassay for the EDNH-releasing factor from the ovaries and using rocket-immuno-electrophoresis, we showed that a Culex ovary, but not an Anopheles ovary, could replaces Aedes ovaries as a source of the releasing factor. In Ae. aegypti, EDNH-releasing factor was required again after oviposition in order to reinitiate the vitellogenic process in females that took a second blood meal. Thus, the releasing factor is part of the mechanism regulating cyclic egg maturation in mosquitoes.
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