Octopamine, one of the main insect biogenic amines, plays an important role in the control of fitness in Drosophila melanogaster Meigen. The present study examines the effects of a null… Click to show full abstract
Octopamine, one of the main insect biogenic amines, plays an important role in the control of fitness in Drosophila melanogaster Meigen. The present study examines the effects of a null mutation of the gene of the insulin‐like receptor substrate (chico), in the heterozygous state, on octopamine metabolism, heat stress resistance and fecundity of D. melanogaster. A rise in the activity of one of the key enzymes of octopamine synthesis, tyrosine decarboxylase, as well as that of an enzyme of its degradation, octopamine‐dependent N‐acetyl transferase, is observed in chico1/+ females. It is also found that the resistance to heat stress is decreased and fecundity is reduced dramatically in chico1/+ flies. Such changes in these parameters in D. melanogaster females result from a rise in octopamine titre, which suggests that chico affects the octopamine level by regulating the activity of tyrosine decarboxylase.
               
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