The ecdysone agonist tebufenozide (RH-5992) blocks the progression into the ecdysteroid-induced regulatory cascade and arrests silkmoth oogenesis at mid-vitellogenesis

Citation
L. Swevers et K. Iatrou, The ecdysone agonist tebufenozide (RH-5992) blocks the progression into the ecdysteroid-induced regulatory cascade and arrests silkmoth oogenesis at mid-vitellogenesis, INSEC BIO M, 29(11), 1999, pp. 955-963
Citations number
39
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control","Biochemistry & Biophysics
Journal title
INSECT BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
ISSN journal
09651748 → ACNP
Volume
29
Issue
11
Year of publication
1999
Pages
955 - 963
Database
ISI
SICI code
0965-1748(199911)29:11<955:TEAT(B>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
The non-ecdysteroidal ecdysone agonist tebufenozide (RH-5992) induces early and early-late gene expression in lepidopteran target tissues in a fashion similar to that of the naturally occurring molting hormone, 20-hydroxy-ecd ysone (20E), but the RH-5992 induced response becomes subsequently arrested and the expression of genes that require a decline in hormone titre is sup pressed. Here, we demonstrate that injection of RH-5992 into developmentall y arrested pupal abdomens of the silkmoth, Bombyx mori, results in the init iation of vitellogenesis in ovarian follicles but the ensuing development t owards the production of an eggshell (chorion) is not sustained. The develo pmental arrest occurs during mid-vitellogenesis (around stage "-20"), prior to the initiation of a cascade of changes in the expression of regulatory factors that include the nuclear receptors BmEcR, BmHR3A, BmFTZ-F1 and BmE7 5C, the adaptor protein BmSH3, the membrane protein P30 and the transcripti on factor BmGATA beta. The developmental arrest cannot be rescued by cultur ing the follicles in vitro, either in the absence or presence of 20E. Inter estingly, both the decline of BmHR3A and the up-regulation of BmFTZ-F1 that normally occur during middle to late vitellogenesis are prevented by RH-59 92, suggesting that changes in the normal expression of genes involved in t he first part of the ecdysteroid-controlled cascade are responsible for the arrest. RH-5992 arrested follicles provide a powerful system that can be u sed for the identification of regulatory factors that promote the transitio ns from mid to late vitellogenesis and choriogenesis through arrest-rescue experimentation. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.