Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 67, Issue 1, November 1978, Pages 202-213
Developmental Biology

Full paper
Nonvitellogenic female sterile mutants and the regulation of vitellogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster

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Abstract

The genetic and endocrine regulation of vitellogenesis was investigated by studying 18 female sterile mutations that disrupt the development of normal vitellogenic follicles. Applications of exogenous juvenile hormone analog and reciprocal ovarian transplants between flies of different genotypes were employed to accomplish our first two objectives: to find (1) whether the mutation blocked development of the ovary directly, and (2) whether the mutation altered the hormonal milieu. In 15 of the mutants the developmental defect was localized to the ovary, but in the other 3 the ovary was competent to respond to a permissive environment. The internal milieu of these three mutants (ap4, fs(3)A1, fs(2)A18) was unable to provoke normal development in wild-type ovaries, suggesting that these mutations cause endocrine defects. Our third objective was to find whether an endocrine organ was itself defective in any of these mutants. The corpus allatum from two of the mutants was unable to provoke vitellogenesis in isolated wild-type abdomens, but corpora allata from wild-type females or from other mutants were able to promote maturation of ovarian follicles in isolated abdomens. Our fourth objective was to find whether any of the mutants were able to produce yolk proteins. Immunoelectrophoresis of fly hemolymph demonstrated that in all mutants tested vitellogenins were found in the blood. These experiments permit four main conclusions. First, they identify the first Drosophila mutants in which an endocrine gland is shown to be intrinsically defective during adulthood. Second, they show that the production of morphologically normal late previtellogenic follicles is not required for the induction of vitellogenin synthesis and secretion. Third, they show that juvenile hormone can cause ovarian follicles to sequester yolk in mutant flies. And finally, they show that mutants with defective corpora allata still synthesize and secrete vitellogenin. Taken together, these conclusions suggest that in Drosophila melanogaster the uptake of vitellogenin into follicles depends upon the availability of juvenile hormone, but that the synthesis and secretion of vitellogenin are independent of both normal ovaries and totally normal corpora allata.

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  • Cited by (0)

    Research Grant GM 21548 supported this work.

    2

    Support was provided to A.M.H. by Behavioral Biology Training Grant MH 14281 from the NIH, and to J.H.P. by a Research Career Development Award from the NIH.

    1

    Current address: Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125.

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