Cross talk between ecdysteroids and juvenile hormone at the
cellular level
L. M. Riddiford,
B. Zhou, D. Champlin, & J. W. Truman
Dept. of Zoology,
Univ. of Washington, Box 351800, Seattle, WA 98195-1800, USA
Many of the
early ecdysteroid-induced transcription factors appear
during both larval molting and metamorphosis, but the
Broad Complex (BRC) only appears in most tissues in the
absence of juvenile hormone (JH) at metamorphosis in both
Drosophila and the tobacco hornworm larva,
Manduca sexta. In Manduca abdominal epidermis,
pupal commitment occurs at the end of the larval feeding
period in response to low 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) in the
absence of JH. At this time 20E activates BRC
transcription, but it can be suppressed by JH.
Immunocytochemistry shows that BRC expression occurs first
in the areas of the segment that first become committed to
pupal differentiation and hence will form pupal cuticle in
the subsequent molt. Once BRC expression is turned on, its
subsequent regulation by ecdysteroids is unaffected by JH
and it persists through the pupal molt. Hence, BRC is one
of the first molecular markers of pupal commitment in the
abdominal epidermis. The wing disc and the eye primordium
however respond differently to both 20E and JH in the
final instar. The wing disc forms early in larval life and
proliferates as the larva grows. It first acquires
ecdysone receptors (EcR) at onset of the final instar and
becomes able to form pupal cuticle during a larval molt
although it continues to proliferate until the onset of
pupal development. Coincidentally BRC mRNA appears, but
its expression cannot be suppressed, only delayed, by JH
given during the fourth instar molt. Preliminary
experiments suggest that BRC protein at this time is
present only in the peripodial membrane and later appears
in the disc cell themselves at the ecdysteroid-induced
onset of pupal development. The eye primordium makes
larval cuticle through the penultimate molt, then early in
the final instar as the JH titer falls, begins to
proliferate to form the eye disc. In vitro studies show
that only the absence of JH is necessary for this
proliferation to occur. Once this proliferation has begun,
this disc is committed to pupal differentiation. Yet BRC
does not appear until the disc is exposed to low
ecdysteroid in the absence of JH. In the latter state the
eye disc begins organizing its ommatidial clusters, a
process dependent on low ecdysteroid and unaffected by JH.
Thus, BRC seems to be important in all three tissues for
ecdysteroid-induced pupal differentiation, but its role in
pupal commitment of imaginal tissues remains to be fully
resolved and will be discussed. Supported by NIH and NSF.
Index
words: Manduca sexta, Broad Complex
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.
|