The use
of Drosophila to study the control pathways for exogenous
and endogenous components of the ecdysis rhythm
J. W. Truman, O.
Shafer & S. McNabb
Dept. of Zoology,
Univ. of Washington, Box 351800, Seattle, WA 98195-1800, USA
The rhythm
of adult eclosion in Drosophila is one of the most
extensively studied rhythms in insects. The final form of
the ecdysis rhythm, however, is a product of endogenous
time-keeping via the circadian clock and responses to
exogenous cues such as the lights-on signal. The latter
results in a pronounced skewing of the ecdysis peak just
following lights-on. Recent studies in both Drosophila
and the moth Manduca have shown that ecdysis is
controlled through a complex hormonal cascade that
includes the steroid hormone, 20 hydroxyecdysone (20E),
and a series of peptide hormones: eclosion hormone (EH),
ecdysis-triggering hormone (ETH), and crustacean
cardioactive peptide (CCAP). We have been interested in
how endogenous and exogenous timing factors impinge on
this endocrine control pathway. Through a series of
mutations and genetically engineered flies, we have found
that endogenous and exogenous factors act through
different portions of the control cascade. Removal of the
EH neurons renders the ecdysis system incapable of
responding to the lights-on signal. Although we originally
though that the lights-on signal acted to induce EH
release in Drosophila, we now have evidence that
this stimulus acts to shorten the delay between EH release
and the subsequent release of CCAP. In contrast to the
lights-on response, the circadian control of ecdysis in
Drosophila does not require the EH neurons. Nor does it
apparently require ETH. We think that there is a parallel
pathway that can also activate the CCAP neurons -- a
prerequisite for ecdysis. This pathway likely involves a
circadian control over the timing of the 20E decline at
the end of metamorphosis. Evidence for this pathway will
be discussed.
Index
items: Drosophila melanogaster, circadian
rhythms, photoreception
Copyright:
The copyrights of this abstract belong to the author
(see right-most box of title table). This document
also appears in Session 13 – INSECT PHISIOLOGY,
NEUROSCIENCES, IMMUNITY AND CELL BIOLOGY Symposium and
Poster Session, ABSTRACT BOOK II – XXI-International
Congress of Entomology, Brazil, August 20-26, 2000.
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