scholarly journals THE JUVENILE HORMONE. VI. EFFECTS OF THE "PAPER FACTOR" ON THE GROWTH AND METAMORPHOSIS OF THE BUG, PYRRHOCORIS APTERUS

1966 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
CARROLL M. WILLIAMS ◽  
KAREL SLÁMA
2016 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. IJIS.S40566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karel Sláma ◽  
Jan Lukáš

The physiological and biochemical mechanisms that enable insects to feed on dry food to secure enough water for larval growth were investigated. The study was carried out with a plethora of physiological methods, ranging from the simple volumetric determination of O2 consumption and water intake to more advanced methods such as scanning microrespirography and thermovision imaging of insect's body temperature. The experiments were done on the European firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus, which feeds exclusively on dry linden seeds. In order to survive, it needs to drink water or suck a sap from plants occasionally. It was found that the young larval instars compensate the occasional water deficiency by the increased production of metabolic water. The juvenile hormone (JH)-dependent production of metabolic water, which was previously found in other species consuming dry food, was achieved in P. apterus by total metabolic combustion of the dietary lipid (neutral seed oil). The water-producing, hypermetabolic larvae were heated from inside by endothermic energy released from the uncoupling of oxidation from oxidative phosphorylation. The “warm”, hypermetabolic larvae burning the dietary oil into CO2 and water showed the increased rates of respiratory metabolism. Microrespirographic recording of these larvae revealed the ratio of the respiratory quotient (RQ, CO2/O2) of 0.7, which indicated the breakdown of a pure triglyceride. The warm hypermetabolic larvae could be easily spotted and distinguished from the “cold” larvae on the screen of a thermovision camera. The last instar larvae lacking the JH were always only cold. They metabolized a carbohydrate substrate exclusively (RQ = 1.0), while the dietary lipid was stored in the fat body. In comparison with the hypermetabolic larvae of some other species fed on dry food, which exhibited the highest rates of O2 consumption ever recorded in a living organism (10–20 mL O2/g per hour), the metabolic difference between the warm and cold larvae of P. apterus was only some 30% (not a reported 10-fold difference), which was presumably due to their ability to drink. We conclude that a very important, though still largely neglected, epigenetic biochemical role of insect JH depends on switchover between the utilization of dietary lipid (+JH; production of metabolic water) and carbohydrate (-JH; lipid storage in the fat body). The hypermetabolic water supply in insects fed on dry food, which is associated with enormous rates of O2 consumption, liberates endothermic energy that heats the body and potentially influences the insect thermoregulation. A possibility that the JH-dependent lipolytic hormone stimulates the total metabolic breakdown of nutritional lipids may be absolutely different from the currently known adipokinetic peptides that have been emphasized.


Development ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Vladimír J. A. Novák

One of the basic assumptions of the author's gradient-factor theory of insect morphogenesis is that the effects of the hypothetical gradient-factor on tissue growth can be reproduced by the juvenile hormone, not only during postembryonic development, but also in the course of embryogenesis (Novák, 1951 a, b, 1956, 1966). This concept was originally based on the more or less indirect evidence supplied by the findings of Pflugfelder (1947) in Dixippus morosus and by those of Novák (1951 b) in Oncopeltus fasciatus. Recently, however, direct evidence has been made available by the work of Sláma & Williams (1966) on Pyrrhocoris apterus and of Riddiford (1966) on Hyalophora cecropia. Using the ‘paper factor’ in the first case and cecropia oil in the second, the above authors succeeded in demonstrating that these substances were able to block embryogenesis when applied to the egg surface or to the female before egg-laying commenced.


Development ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-31
Author(s):  
P. Masner ◽  
K. Sláma ◽  
V. Landa

The juvenile hormone of insects is known to inhibit the process of insect metamorphosis. It is also known to stimulate ovarian growth in adult females of some species. It has been found recently that some substances with juvenile hormone activity also influence embryonic development. In the bug Pyrrhocoris apterus such substances, which prevent imaginal differentiation in metamorphosis, also affect the differentiation process of embryos at a certain stage of egg development (Sláma & Williams, 1966). This has been confirmed with other juvenile hormone analogues on embryonic development of silkworm eggs (Riddiford & Williams, 1967) and grasshoppers (Novák, 1967). According to the above observations eggs treated with the substances show abnormal development of the embryos, which may pass successfully through the early stages of embryogenesis but are unable to complete differentiation. Usually the embryos do not develop beyond the stage of blastokinesis and die within the egg shells.


2014 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
pp. 69-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vlastimil Smykal ◽  
Adam Bajgar ◽  
Jan Provaznik ◽  
Silvie Fexova ◽  
Marcela Buricova ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document