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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Juvenile hormone analogs do not affect directly the activity of the ecdysteroid receptor complex in insect culture cell lines.

During insect development, ecdysteroids and juvenile hormones (JHs) interact to regulate larval growth, metamorphosis and reproduction but the molecular mechanisms by which both hormones influence each other's activity remain unknown. Because of their ease of use and straightforward genetic manipulation, insect cell lines often have been used to clarify the actions and interactions of hormones at the molecular level. Here we report on the use of two insect culture cell lines, Drosophila melanogaster S2 and Bombyx mori Bm5 cells, to investigate two molecular processes in which ecdysteroids and JH have been shown to interact: (1) direct modulation of the activity of the ecdysteroid receptor transcription complex and (2) interference at the level of induction of the primary gene E75. Our data do not support JH analogs (JHAs) acting through the above processes: 'antagonism' of ecdysteroid receptor activity by JHAs correlated with cytotoxicity and induction of E75 expression by JHAs was not demonstrated. However, we confirm previous studies in which it was observed that methoprene can partially reverse the growth inhibition by 20E in S2 cells (but not Bm5 cells). Therefore, the molecular mechanism by which both hormones influence each other's activity to regulate cell growth in S2 cells remains unknown.[1]

References

  1. Juvenile hormone analogs do not affect directly the activity of the ecdysteroid receptor complex in insect culture cell lines. Soin, T., Swevers, L., Mosallanejad, H., Efrose, R., Labropoulou, V., Iatrou, K., Smagghe, G. J. Insect Physiol. (2008) [Pubmed]
 
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