Insect hormones: more than 50-years after the discovery of insect juvenile hormone analogues (JHA, juvenoids)

K. Slăma
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The first is a complex set of neurohormones (neuropeptides) originating in the neurosecretory cells of the insect brain, which are released from the neurohaemal organs, the corpora cardiaca. These neuropeptides are responsible for stimulation of various developmental events, such as the release of the activation hormone, AH. The second category of centrally produced hormones in insects is the morphogenesis inhibiting hormone, or juvenile hormone (JH), produced by the associated endocrine glands, the corpora allata. JH is responsible for induction of the somatic larval growth in young instar larvae and stimulation of reproduction in the feeding adult stages. Wigglesworth (1935) first described JH as an inhibitory hormone; Williams (1957) discovered its active extracts. Slama (1961) discovered the hormonomimetic or pseudojuvenile effects of various lipid extracts and free fatty acids. In addition to lipid extracts with JH activity, a phenomenon found in various human organs, microorganisms and plants, JH-mimetic materials were found in American paper products in 1964. The source of the so-called “paper factor” was the wood of the Canadian balsam fir. The potential use of these and other analogues of JH as nontoxic, selectively acting “third generation pesticides” stimulated an enormous boom of activity among industrial and academic institutions all over the world, in the pursuit of synthetic JH analogues for replacement of toxic insecticides. For practical reasons, in this review the chemical structures of the synthetic juvenoids have been divided into three categories: a) natural and synthetic, predominantly terpenoid juvenoids known before 1970; b) terpenoid and nonterpenoid juvenoids synthesized and tested before 1980, and; c) predominantly nonterpenoid, polycyclic juvenoids with relatively high JH activity, found and selected for practical use after 1980. Chemical structures of several juvenoids of theoretical or practical importance, together with the essential structure-activity relationships, are outlined in several figures and tables. The total number of all juvenoids reported active in one or more insects species has been estimated to be more than 4000 compounds. A juvenoid molecule has, more or less, a similar molecular size, roughly equivalent to a chain of 15 to 17 carbon atoms, with the presence of some slightly polar functional groups and a more or less lipophilic physico-chemical properties. Beyond these similarities, there are many variations in the structural types of juvenoids, including, derivatives of acyclic terpenoids, arylterpenoids, peptides, heterocyclic and polycyclic juvenoids, phenoxyphenyl juvenoids, juvenoid carbamates, and pyridyl-derivatives. In addition to the generally known and intensively studied effects of juvenoids, such as inhibition of metamorphosis, inhibition of embryogenesis, and stimulation of ovarian growth, there are certain less remarkable and largely unexplored biological effects of juvenoids. Some of those phenomena, which are briefly described in this review, are: a) the effects of juvenoids on embryonic development (ovicidal effects); b) delayed effects of JH on metamorphosis from egg stage; c) sexually transmitted female sterility caused by juvenoid treatments of the males; d) the nonvolatile, biochemically activated juvenogen complexes, generating hormonally active juvenoids by enzymatic hydrolysis of the complex, and; e) antihormones with antijuvenile activity. There are two basic hormonal theories on the regulation of insect metamorphosis by JH that have been proposed during the past 50 years. The first is the theory of Gilbert-Riddiford, which has been widely disseminated at universities worldwide, through textbooks on insect physiology, biochemistry and endocrinology. The second, less renowned, hormonal theory of insect development is that of Novak-Slama. Briefly, the Gilbert-Riddiford theory is based on several fundamental principles. These are: a) the brain hormone-prothoracic gland (PG) concept created more than 50 years ago and later disproved by Williams; b) the conclusions of Piepho, who suggested that a large concentration of JH would cause a single epidermal cell to develop larval patterns, pupal patterns at medium concentrations, and adult epidermal patterns at zero concentration; c) small amounts of JH are necessary in the last larval instars of endopterygote insects for preventing precocious proliferation of imaginal discs; d) metamorphosis is stimulated by PG through a small endogenous peak of ecdysteroid preceding the large prepupal one; e) ecdysteroids are released from the PG in response to superimposed prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) from the brain; f) the true juvenile hormone of the corpora allata is a sesquiterpenoid compound known as epoxy homofarnesoate (JH-I), isolated from the adult male abdomens of the Cecropia silkmoths, and; g) physiological functions of JH and other hormones are regulated at the peripheral level by enzymes (esterase) or genes (methoprene tolerant, Met or a Broad complex gene). The Novak-Slama theory is based on completely different building blocks. Briefly, these are: a) the PG represent a peripheral organ which is not involved in the regulation of the moulting cycles, instead; b) the PG are a subordinated target of JH (not PTTH), they are inactive during the last larval instar and their removal does not abolish the cycles of moults; c) the PG are used to generate metabolic water during the growth of young larval instars by secreting of an adipokinetic superhormone, which stimulates total combustion of the dietary lipids; d) small, medium, or large concentrations of JH are unimportant, the hormone only needs to be present in the minimum, physiologically effective concentrations; e) an imperative condition for metamorphosis to occur is a virtual absence of JH starting from the second half of the penultimate larval instar; f) JH acts according to an “all-or-none” rule at the single cell level, and the temporal sensitivity to JH is strictly limited to a narrow period at the beginning of the moulting cycle, before the cells begin to divide; g) the corpus allatum never produces JH in a nonfeeding stage, and the sesquiterpenoid juvenoid JH-I cannot be the true JH of insects (it has very low JH activity, 100,000-fold smaller in comparison to human made peptidic juvenoids); h) the developmental cycles are stimulated exclusively by neuropeptides produced by the brain’s neurosecretory cells (AH); i) developmental stimulation by AH has nothing in common with the PTTH or PG; j) when environmental interventions in the hormonal system become obsolete, the regulation of moulting cycles becomes autonomic (hormone independent), supported by the stereotypic instructions coded on the genome; k) during the millions of years of insect evolution, the central neuroendocrine system acquired the superimposed, epigenetic ability to adapt gene functions and synchronize them with essential changes in the environment. A model based on the regulation of insect metamorphosis by simple combination of two hormones (AH, JH) of the central neuroendocrine system is outlined. A possibility that the 4000 known juvenoid molecules act as the feedback or homeostatic factors affecting permeability of the epidermal cell membranes has been suggested. Speculations about possible peptidic or proteinic nature of the corpus allatum hormone have been emphasized.","PeriodicalId":88711,"journal":{"name":"Terrestrial arthropod reviews","volume":"6 1","pages":"257-333"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-03-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1163/18749836-06041073","citationCount":"30","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Terrestrial arthropod reviews","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1163/18749836-06041073","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 30

Abstract

This review describes the over half-centennial history of research on insect juvenile hormone (JH) as well as its natural and synthetic bioanalogues (JHA or juvenoids).The leading theories of insect hormone action in growth and metamorphosis were created more than 50 years ago by the pioneers of insect endocrinology, V. B. Wigglesworth, C. M. Williams, V. J. A. Novak, H. Piepho, H. A. Schneiderman and L. I. Gilbert. There are two principal categories of hormones released from the central neuroendocrine system (neurosecretory cells of the brain, corpora cardiaca, corpora allata) that regulate insect growth and metamorphosis. The first is a complex set of neurohormones (neuropeptides) originating in the neurosecretory cells of the insect brain, which are released from the neurohaemal organs, the corpora cardiaca. These neuropeptides are responsible for stimulation of various developmental events, such as the release of the activation hormone, AH. The second category of centrally produced hormones in insects is the morphogenesis inhibiting hormone, or juvenile hormone (JH), produced by the associated endocrine glands, the corpora allata. JH is responsible for induction of the somatic larval growth in young instar larvae and stimulation of reproduction in the feeding adult stages. Wigglesworth (1935) first described JH as an inhibitory hormone; Williams (1957) discovered its active extracts. Slama (1961) discovered the hormonomimetic or pseudojuvenile effects of various lipid extracts and free fatty acids. In addition to lipid extracts with JH activity, a phenomenon found in various human organs, microorganisms and plants, JH-mimetic materials were found in American paper products in 1964. The source of the so-called “paper factor” was the wood of the Canadian balsam fir. The potential use of these and other analogues of JH as nontoxic, selectively acting “third generation pesticides” stimulated an enormous boom of activity among industrial and academic institutions all over the world, in the pursuit of synthetic JH analogues for replacement of toxic insecticides. For practical reasons, in this review the chemical structures of the synthetic juvenoids have been divided into three categories: a) natural and synthetic, predominantly terpenoid juvenoids known before 1970; b) terpenoid and nonterpenoid juvenoids synthesized and tested before 1980, and; c) predominantly nonterpenoid, polycyclic juvenoids with relatively high JH activity, found and selected for practical use after 1980. Chemical structures of several juvenoids of theoretical or practical importance, together with the essential structure-activity relationships, are outlined in several figures and tables. The total number of all juvenoids reported active in one or more insects species has been estimated to be more than 4000 compounds. A juvenoid molecule has, more or less, a similar molecular size, roughly equivalent to a chain of 15 to 17 carbon atoms, with the presence of some slightly polar functional groups and a more or less lipophilic physico-chemical properties. Beyond these similarities, there are many variations in the structural types of juvenoids, including, derivatives of acyclic terpenoids, arylterpenoids, peptides, heterocyclic and polycyclic juvenoids, phenoxyphenyl juvenoids, juvenoid carbamates, and pyridyl-derivatives. In addition to the generally known and intensively studied effects of juvenoids, such as inhibition of metamorphosis, inhibition of embryogenesis, and stimulation of ovarian growth, there are certain less remarkable and largely unexplored biological effects of juvenoids. Some of those phenomena, which are briefly described in this review, are: a) the effects of juvenoids on embryonic development (ovicidal effects); b) delayed effects of JH on metamorphosis from egg stage; c) sexually transmitted female sterility caused by juvenoid treatments of the males; d) the nonvolatile, biochemically activated juvenogen complexes, generating hormonally active juvenoids by enzymatic hydrolysis of the complex, and; e) antihormones with antijuvenile activity. There are two basic hormonal theories on the regulation of insect metamorphosis by JH that have been proposed during the past 50 years. The first is the theory of Gilbert-Riddiford, which has been widely disseminated at universities worldwide, through textbooks on insect physiology, biochemistry and endocrinology. The second, less renowned, hormonal theory of insect development is that of Novak-Slama. Briefly, the Gilbert-Riddiford theory is based on several fundamental principles. These are: a) the brain hormone-prothoracic gland (PG) concept created more than 50 years ago and later disproved by Williams; b) the conclusions of Piepho, who suggested that a large concentration of JH would cause a single epidermal cell to develop larval patterns, pupal patterns at medium concentrations, and adult epidermal patterns at zero concentration; c) small amounts of JH are necessary in the last larval instars of endopterygote insects for preventing precocious proliferation of imaginal discs; d) metamorphosis is stimulated by PG through a small endogenous peak of ecdysteroid preceding the large prepupal one; e) ecdysteroids are released from the PG in response to superimposed prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) from the brain; f) the true juvenile hormone of the corpora allata is a sesquiterpenoid compound known as epoxy homofarnesoate (JH-I), isolated from the adult male abdomens of the Cecropia silkmoths, and; g) physiological functions of JH and other hormones are regulated at the peripheral level by enzymes (esterase) or genes (methoprene tolerant, Met or a Broad complex gene). The Novak-Slama theory is based on completely different building blocks. Briefly, these are: a) the PG represent a peripheral organ which is not involved in the regulation of the moulting cycles, instead; b) the PG are a subordinated target of JH (not PTTH), they are inactive during the last larval instar and their removal does not abolish the cycles of moults; c) the PG are used to generate metabolic water during the growth of young larval instars by secreting of an adipokinetic superhormone, which stimulates total combustion of the dietary lipids; d) small, medium, or large concentrations of JH are unimportant, the hormone only needs to be present in the minimum, physiologically effective concentrations; e) an imperative condition for metamorphosis to occur is a virtual absence of JH starting from the second half of the penultimate larval instar; f) JH acts according to an “all-or-none” rule at the single cell level, and the temporal sensitivity to JH is strictly limited to a narrow period at the beginning of the moulting cycle, before the cells begin to divide; g) the corpus allatum never produces JH in a nonfeeding stage, and the sesquiterpenoid juvenoid JH-I cannot be the true JH of insects (it has very low JH activity, 100,000-fold smaller in comparison to human made peptidic juvenoids); h) the developmental cycles are stimulated exclusively by neuropeptides produced by the brain’s neurosecretory cells (AH); i) developmental stimulation by AH has nothing in common with the PTTH or PG; j) when environmental interventions in the hormonal system become obsolete, the regulation of moulting cycles becomes autonomic (hormone independent), supported by the stereotypic instructions coded on the genome; k) during the millions of years of insect evolution, the central neuroendocrine system acquired the superimposed, epigenetic ability to adapt gene functions and synchronize them with essential changes in the environment. A model based on the regulation of insect metamorphosis by simple combination of two hormones (AH, JH) of the central neuroendocrine system is outlined. A possibility that the 4000 known juvenoid molecules act as the feedback or homeostatic factors affecting permeability of the epidermal cell membranes has been suggested. Speculations about possible peptidic or proteinic nature of the corpus allatum hormone have been emphasized.
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昆虫激素:昆虫幼体激素类似物(JHA, juvenoids)发现50多年后
本文综述了昆虫幼体激素(JH)及其天然和合成生物类似物(JHA或幼体)半个多世纪的研究历史。50多年前,昆虫内分泌学的先驱们,V. B. Wigglesworth、C. M. Williams、V. J. A. Novak、H. pipho、H. A. Schneiderman和L. I. Gilbert,创立了昆虫激素在生长和蜕变中的作用的主要理论。从中枢神经内分泌系统(大脑的神经分泌细胞、心体、异形体)释放的激素主要有两类,它们调节昆虫的生长和变态。第一种是一套复杂的神经激素(神经肽),起源于昆虫大脑的神经分泌细胞,从神经血液器官——心体——释放出来。这些神经肽负责刺激各种发育事件,如激活激素AH的释放。昆虫体内第二类集中产生的激素是形态发生抑制激素,或称幼体激素(JH),由相关的内分泌腺,即异形体产生。JH对幼龄幼虫的体幼虫生长有诱导作用,对成虫取食期的繁殖有刺激作用。Wigglesworth(1935)首次将JH描述为一种抑制激素;Williams(1957)发现了它的活性提取物。Slama(1961)发现了各种脂质提取物和游离脂肪酸的拟激素或假幼年效应。除了具有JH活性的脂质提取物(一种在各种人体器官、微生物和植物中发现的现象)外,1964年在美国纸制品中也发现了类似JH的材料。所谓的“纸张因素”的来源是加拿大香脂冷杉的木材。这些和其他JH类似物作为无毒的、选择性作用的“第三代农药”的潜在用途,刺激了世界各地工业和学术机构的巨大活动热潮,以寻求合成JH类似物来取代有毒杀虫剂。由于实际原因,本文将合成的类芳烃的化学结构分为三类:a)天然的和合成的,主要是1970年以前已知的萜类芳烃;B) 1980年以前合成和测试的萜类和非萜类幼体;c)主要是非萜类,具有较高JH活性的多环芳烃,1980年后发现并选择用于实际应用。几种具有理论或实际意义的幼烷化合物的化学结构,以及基本的构效关系,在几个图和表中进行了概述。据报道,在一种或多种昆虫中活跃的所有稚虫的总数估计超过4000个化合物。幼体分子或多或少具有类似的分子大小,大致相当于由15到17个碳原子组成的链,具有一些微极性官能团和或多或少亲脂性的物理化学性质。除了这些相似之处,在结构类型上也有许多变化,包括无环萜类衍生物、芳基萜类衍生物、多肽、杂环和多环萜类衍生物、苯氧苯基萜类化合物、类氨基甲酸酯和吡啶衍生物。除了众所周知的和深入研究的幼体效应,如抑制变态、抑制胚胎发生和刺激卵巢生长,还有一些不太显著的和很大程度上未被探索的幼体生物学效应。这些现象包括:a)幼虫对胚胎发育的影响(杀卵效应);b) JH对卵期变态的延迟效应;C)性传播的雌性不育,由雄性的幼年性治疗引起;D)非挥发性的、生化活性的幼体复合物,通过酶水解该复合物产生具有激素活性的幼体;E)具有抗青少年活性的抗激素。关于JH对昆虫变态的调控,近50年来提出了两种基本的激素理论。第一种是Gilbert-Riddiford的理论,通过昆虫生理学、生物化学和内分泌学的教科书在世界各地的大学广泛传播。第二种不太出名的昆虫发育激素理论是Novak-Slama的理论。简而言之,吉尔伯特-里迪福德理论建立在几个基本原则的基础上。 它们是:a) 50多年前创造的脑激素-前胸腺(PG)概念,后来被威廉姆斯推翻;b) pipho的结论,高浓度JH可使单个表皮细胞发育成幼虫型、中浓度下的蛹型和零浓度下的成虫表皮型;c)在内生真菌昆虫的最后幼虫阶段需要少量的JH,以防止象盘的过早增生;d) PG通过一个小的内源性表皮甾体激素峰先于大的蛹前峰刺激变态;e)促胸前激素(pth)从PG中释放出来;f)真正的幼体激素是一种倍半萜类化合物,称为环氧高脂脂酸酯(JH-I),从成年雄性蚕蛾的腹部分离出来;g) JH和其他激素的生理功能在外周水平受酶(酯酶)或基因(耐甲氧二烯、Met或Broad复合基因)的调节。诺瓦克-斯拉玛理论建立在完全不同的基础之上。简而言之,它们是:a) PG代表一个外周器官,它不参与换羽周期的调节;b) PG是JH(而不是PTTH)的附属靶标,它们在幼虫的最后阶段是不活跃的,它们的去除并不会取消换毛周期;c)在幼龄幼虫生长过程中,PG通过分泌一种脂肪动力学超激素来产生代谢水,刺激日粮脂肪的完全燃烧;d)小、中、大浓度的JH不重要,激素只需要以最低的、生理上有效的浓度存在;e)发生变态的必要条件是从倒数第二个幼虫的后半期开始实际上没有JH;f) JH在单细胞水平上的作用遵循“全有或无”的规则,对JH的时间敏感性严格限制在蜕皮周期开始前的一个狭窄时期,即细胞开始分裂之前;g)异位体在非摄食期不产生JH,倍半萜类幼体JH- i不可能是昆虫真正的JH(其JH活性很低,比人造肽幼体小10万倍);h)发育周期完全由脑神经分泌细胞(AH)产生的神经肽刺激;i) AH的发育刺激与pth或PG没有任何共同之处;J)当激素系统中的环境干预变得过时时,换毛周期的调节变得自主(激素独立),由基因组编码的刻板指令支持;K)在昆虫数百万年的进化过程中,中枢神经内分泌系统获得了叠加的表观遗传能力,以适应基因功能,并使它们与环境的基本变化同步。本文提出了一种基于中枢神经内分泌系统两种激素(AH、JH)简单联合调控昆虫变态的模型。已经提出了一种可能性,即4000种已知的幼体分子作为影响表皮细胞膜通透性的反馈或稳态因素。关于allatum激素可能的肽或蛋白质性质的推测已被强调。
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