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Mutations in theDrosophilaglycoprotein hormone receptor,rickets, eliminate neuropeptide-induced tanning and selectively block a stereotyped behavioral program
- Source :
- Journal of Experimental Biology. 205:2555-2565
- Publication Year :
- 2002
- Publisher :
- The Company of Biologists, 2002.
-
Abstract
- SUMMARYAdult insects achieve their final form shortly after adult eclosion by the combined effects of specialized behaviors that generate increased blood pressure, which causes cuticular expansion, and hormones, which plasticize and then tan the cuticle. We examined the molecular mechanisms contributing to these processes in Drosophila by analyzing mutants for the rickets gene. These flies fail to initiate the behavioral and tanning processes that normally follow ecdysis. Sequencing of rickets mutants and STS mapping of deficiencies confirmed that rickets encodes the glycoprotein hormone receptor DLGR2. Although rickets mutants produce and release the insect-tanning hormone bursicon, they do not melanize when injected with extracts containing bursicon. In contrast, mutants do melanize in response to injection of an analog of cyclic AMP, the second messenger for bursicon. Hence, rickets appears to encode a component of the bursicon response pathway, probably the bursicon receptor itself. Mutants also have a behavioral deficit in that they fail to initiate the behavioral program for wing expansion. A set of decapitation experiments utilizing rickets mutants and flies that lack cells containing the neuropeptide eclosion hormone, reveals a multicomponent control to the activation of this behavioral program.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
animal structures
Invertebrate Hormones
Physiology
Neuropeptide
Genes, Insect
Receptors, Cell Surface
Rickets
Molting
Aquatic Science
Biology
Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled
Internal medicine
medicine
Animals
Drosophila Proteins
Wings, Animal
Receptor
Molecular Biology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Sequence Tagged Sites
Bursicon
fungi
medicine.disease
Endocrinology
Hormone receptor
Insect Hormones
Insect Science
Ecdysis
Mutation
Second messenger system
Drosophila
Animal Science and Zoology
Stereotyped Behavior
Hormone
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14779145 and 00220949
- Volume :
- 205
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Experimental Biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0a0b36a240db005371c766db91eb3006
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.205.17.2555