Steroid control of neuron and muscle development during the metamorphosis of an insect
- 1 May 1986
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neurobiology
- Vol. 17 (3) , 249-267
- https://doi.org/10.1002/neu.480170308
Abstract
Insect metamorphosis is controlled by a small ensemble of developmental hormones including a class of steroids—the ecdysteroids. In the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, the progession from the larval to pupal to adult stages is controlled by the relative blood titers of ecdysteroids and juvenile hormone (JH). The cellular events in the nervous and muscular systems which accompany metamorphosis resemble those of embryonic development, but they occur in an animal which is larger and experimentally more tractable than an embryo. In this paper we review the role of ecdysteroids in directing the metamorphosis of the nervous and muscular systems in Manduca, and how JH modifies the cellular responses to the steroids. In particular, we describe how these hormones control muscle degeneration, changes in the structure and function of identified neurons, and programmed neuron death. One general finding is that interactions between cells (e.g., neurons and their target muscles) are not involved in their hormonal responses, but rather the hormones act independently and in parallel at the different sites. Another key finding is that the critical periods and hormonal requirements for the commitment to a particular differentiative pathway, and the phenotypic expression of that pathway, can differ, and are therefore experimentally separable. Finally, we find that the significance of a hormonal signal (e.g., a rise in blood ecdysteroids) is interpreted differently depending upon the previous history of hormone exposure of a neuron or muscle. This progressive change in the interpretation of hormonal signals is a major mechanism by which a limited number of hormones can orchestrate a complicated phenomenon such as metamorphosis.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hormonal control of rates of metamorphic development in the tobacco hornworm Manduca sextaDevelopmental Biology, 1983
- Neurogenesis of motoneurons in the sexually dimorphic spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus in ratsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1983
- Programmed cell death in the nervous system of an adult insectJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1983
- Metamorphosis of the insect nervous system: changes in morphology and synaptic interactions of identified neuronesNature, 1982
- Afferent innervation shapes the dendritic branching pattern of the Medial Giant Interneuron in grasshopper embryos raised in cultureDevelopmental Biology, 1982
- Changes in translatable mRNAs during the larval-pupal transformation of the epidermis of the tobacco hornwormDevelopmental Biology, 1982
- Endocrine control of the metamorphosis of the larval muscles in Calliphora erythrocephala (diptera): In vitro studies of the role of ecdysteroidsDevelopmental Biology, 1980
- Sequential gene activation by ecdysone in polytene chromosomes of Drosophila melanogaster,Developmental Biology, 1976
- Programmed cell death: Cytochemical evidence for lysosomes during the normal breakdown of the intersegmental musclesJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1974
- Loss of Dendrite Spines as an Index of Pre-Synaptic Terminal PatternsNature, 1966