The release of lipophorin and total protein was examined from the fat body of nondiapause and diapause larvae of the southwestern corn borer, Diatraea grandiosella, incubated in vitro in Grace's medium. The characteristics of the released lipophorin were compared to those of the high-density lipophorin present in the hemolymph of nondiapause and diapause larvae. Over a 4 h incubation period, the fat body of nondiapause larvae released about 1.5 times more total protein and 2 times more lipophorin per mg dry weight than did that of diapause larvae. Lipophorin isolated from the medium in which fat bodies of nondiapause and diapause larvae had been incubated and from the plasma of nondiapause and diapause larvae had similar mean densities of 1.115, 1.112, 1.117 and 1.119 g/ml, respectively. Although the lipid classes detected in lipophorin isolated from the fat body incubation medium and hemolymph were identical, more polar lipids and less diacylglycerol were associated with lipophorin isolated from fat body incubation medium then were associated with lipophorin isolated from the hemolymph. Sterols accounted for about 11% of the total lipids of lipophorin isolated from the fat body incubation medium, whereas they accounted for about 20% of the total lipids of lipophorin from hemolymph. We conclude that the fat body of feeding nondiapause larvae and nonfeeding diapause larvae releases high-density lipophorin.