Juvenile hormone as a causal factor for maternal regulation of diapause in a wasp
Most temperate multivoltine insects enter diapause, a hormonally controlled developmental suspension, in response to seasonal photoperiodic and/or thermal cues. Some insect species exhibit maternal regulation of diapause in which developmental trajectories of the offspring are determined by mothers...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Insect biochemistry and molecular biology 2022-05, Vol.144, p.103758-103758, Article 103758 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Most temperate multivoltine insects enter diapause, a hormonally controlled developmental suspension, in response to seasonal photoperiodic and/or thermal cues. Some insect species exhibit maternal regulation of diapause in which developmental trajectories of the offspring are determined by mothers in response to environmental cues that the mother received. Although maternally regulated diapause is common among insects, the maternal endocrinological mechanisms are largely veiled. To approach this issue, we used the jewel wasp Nasonia vitripennis, which produces non-diapause-destined offspring under long days and diapause-destined offspring under short days or low temperatures. Comparative transcriptomics of these wasps revealed possible involvement of the juvenile hormone (JH) biosynthetic cascade in maternal diapause regulation. The expression of juvenile hormone acid O-methyltransferase (jhamt) was typically downregulated in short-day wasps, and this was reflected by a reduction in haemolymph JH concentrations. RNAi targeted at jhamt reduced haemolymph JH concentration and induced wasps to produce diapause-destined offspring even under long days. In addition, topical application of JH suppressed the production of diapause-destined offspring under short days or low temperatures. These results indicate that diapause in N. vitripennis is determined by maternal jhamt expression and haemolymph JH concentration in response to day length. We therefore report a novel role for JH in insect seasonality.
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•Endocrine mechanisms underlying maternal regulation of diapause are obscure.•Short daylength correlates with low JH titre in wasps whose offspring enter diapause.•Reduction of JH titre through jhamt RNAi promotes diapause in offspring.•Exogeneous JH applied to short-day mothers suppresses diapause in offspring.•The data reveal a novel maternal role for JH in insect seasonality. |
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ISSN: | 0965-1748 1879-0240 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ibmb.2022.103758 |