The influence of the brain hormone on retention of blood in the mid-gut of the mosquito Aedes aegypti (L.). III. The involvement of the ovaries and ecdysone

Autor(es): Cole S J,Gillett J D


Resumo: Most female mosquitoes require a blood-meal in order to produce mature oöcytes. An egg development neurosecretory hormone (EDNH), which is produced in the medial neurosecretory cells (m.n.c.) of the brain and stored in the corpus cardiacum, is released into the haemolymph following the ingestion of blood and is essential for the promotion of ovarian development to maturity. It has been shown that a factor from the m.n.c., presumably EDNH, is necessary if the blood-meal is to be retained in the mid-gut until the oöcytes approach maturity. The present paper shows that retention is not a direct result of the action of EDNH, but is dependent on the ovaries and may well involve ecdysone. Removal of the ovaries before a blood-meal leads to early haem-defaecation, but delay can be restored by injection of ecdysterone. Sub-threshold feeders and mosquitoes decapitated immediately after the intake of blood, each of which would be expected to eliminate the blood-meal early, also show a delay in the onset of haem-defaecation when injected with ecdysterone. Further, both in ovariectomized insects and sub-threshold feeders the time of onset of haem-defaecation is associated with the dose of ecdysterone given.


Imprenta: Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, v. 205, n. 1160, p. 411-422, 1979


Identificador do objeto digital: 10.1098/rspb.1979.0074


Descritores: Aedes aegypti - Cell


Data de publicação: 1979