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The ecdysis triggering hormone system is essential for successful moulting of a major hemimetabolous pest insect, Schistocerca gregaria

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Insects are enclosed in a rigid exoskeleton, providing protection from desiccation and mechanical injury. To allow growth, this armour needs to be replaced regularly in a process called moulting. Moulting… Click to show full abstract

Insects are enclosed in a rigid exoskeleton, providing protection from desiccation and mechanical injury. To allow growth, this armour needs to be replaced regularly in a process called moulting. Moulting entails the production of a new exoskeleton and shedding of the old one and is induced by a pulse in ecdysteroids, which activates a peptide-mediated signalling cascade. In Holometabola, ecdysis triggering hormone (ETH) is the key factor in this cascade. Very little functional information is available in Hemimetabola, which display a different kind of development characterized by gradual changes. This paper reports on the identification of the ETH precursor and the pharmacological and functional characterisation of the ETH receptor in a hemimetabolous pest species, the desert locust, Schistocerca gregaria. Activation of SchgrETHR by SchgrETH results in an increase of both Ca2+ and cyclic AMP, suggesting that SchgrETHR displays dual coupling properties in an in vitro cell-based assay. Using qRT-PCR, an in-depth profiling study of SchgrETH and SchgrETHR transcripts was performed. Silencing of SchgrETH and SchgrETHR resulted in lethality at the expected time of ecdysis, thereby showing their crucial role in moulting.

Keywords: ecdysis; ecdysis triggering; triggering hormone; hemimetabolous pest; schistocerca gregaria

Journal Title: Scientific Reports
Year Published: 2017

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