How A Brain Hormone Controls Insect Metamorphosis

A team of University of have discovered how PTTH, a hormone produced by the brain, controls the metamorphosis of juvenile insects into adults.

The finding, published in the Dec. 4 issue of Science, will help scientists understand how size is programmed in response to developmental and environmental cues and offers the opportunity to develop a new generation of more environmentally safe ways to control as well as insects that carry human pathogens.

Scientists have known for 100 years that a brain-derived neuropeptide known as PTTH controls metamorphosis and although its specific sequence was identified 20 years ago, the way it signaled endocrine tissue has remained elusive until now.

“Understanding the signaling pathway that controls metamorphosis has been a long-term goal for many insect ,” says lead O’Connor, professor of genetics, and development at the University of Minnesota’ of Biological Sciences, where he holds the Ordway Chair in .

Although humans don’t undergo metamorphosis, passage from childhood through and development of adult is also regulated by a brain-derived neuropeptide that is controlled by genetics, environment and nutrition. Understanding how this process works in insects sheds light on human development.

“In its overall design, is very much like passage through ,” O’Connor says. “From a biological point of view, both and metamorphosis accomplish the same goal – to provide reproductive capacity for the species at the appropriate .” The becomes active when insects have reached a threshold body weight, which is also a trigger for human .

and silk were used for the study; however, all insects that undergo appear to use this , O’Connor says. His next step is to learn how environmental and nutritional cues regulate the production of PTTH (prothoracicotropic hormone).

O’Connor is one of the University of Minnesota’s most distinguished researchers working in the biological sciences. In addition to holding the Ordway Chair, he is an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. After earning a B.S. in biochemistry from Brown University and his Ph.D. from Tufts University School of Medicine, he conducted postdoctoral studies in the laboratory of Welcome Bender at Harvard Medical School. The O’Connor lab focuses on determining how signaling systems control animal development and studies the roles of several different types of growth factors in both insects and mice.

Co-authors for the Science paper are U of M postdoctoral researchers Kim Rewitz and Naoki Yamanaka and Lawrence Gilbert, who is an emeritus biology professor at the University of North Carolina.

Source: Patty Mattern
University of Minnesota

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