𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Activity of insulin growth factors and shrimp neurosecretory organ extracts on a lepidopteran cell line

✍ Scribed by P.J. Hatt; C. Liebon; M. Morinière; H. Oberlander; P. Porcheron


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
108 KB
Volume
34
Category
Article
ISSN
0739-4462

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Ecdysteroids, or molting hormones, have been proven to be key differentiation regulators for epidermal cells in the postembryonic development of arthropods. Regulators of cell proliferation, however, remain largely unknown. To date, no diffusible insect peptidic growth factors have been characterized. Molecules structurally related to insulin have been discovered in insects, as in other eucaryotes. We developed in vitro tests for the preliminary characterization of potential growth factors in arthropods by adapting the procedures designed to detect such factors in vertebrates to an insect cell line (IAL-PID2) established from imaginal discs of the Indian meal moth. We verified the ability of these tests to measure the proliferation of IAL-PID2 cells. We tested mammalian insulin and insulin-like growth factors (IGF-I, IGF-II). Following an arrest of cell proliferation by serum deprivation, IGF-I and IGF-II caused partial resumption of the cell cycle, evidenced by DNA synthesis. In contrast, the addition of 20-hydroxyecdysone arrested the proliferation of the IAL-PID2 cells. The cell line was then used in a test for functional characterization of potential growth factors originating from the penaeid shrimp, Penaeus vannamei. Crude extracts of neurosecretory and nervous tissues, eyestalks, and ventral neural chain compensated for serum deprivation and stimulated completion of mitosis. Arch.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Differential effects of basic fibroblast
✍ Alejandra Ochoa; Clelia Domenzáin; Carmen Clapp; Gonzalo Martínez de la Escalera 📂 Article 📅 1997 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 418 KB 👁 2 views

Recent studies in several neuronal lineages suggest that extrinsic factors such as polypeptide growth factors regulate various stages of neuronal development, from initial commitment of multipotent progenitors to induction of specific gene expression that is characteristic of terminal neuronal diffe