4.8 Article

Epoxidation of juvenile hormone was a key innovation improving insect reproductive fitness

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2109381118

Keywords

Aedes aegypti; corpora allata; juvenile hormone; methyl farnesoate; reproduction

Funding

  1. NIH-National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R01AI04554, R21AI153689, K22AI112585]
  2. Florida International University
  3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Southeastern Center of Excellence in Vector Borne Diseases
  4. Slovak grant agency [APVV-16-0395, APVV-18-0201]
  5. Czech Science Foundation [20-05151X]

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The study showed that while MF can substitute for JH in mosquitoes, it comes with a significant fitness cost, highlighting the importance of epoxidation to JH for insect reproduction.
Methyl farnesoate (MF) plays hormonal regulatory roles in crustaceans. An epoxidated form of MF, known as juvenile hormone (JH), controls metamorphosis and stimulates reproduction in insects. To address the evolutionary significance of MF epoxidation, we generated mosquitoes completely lacking either of the two enzymes that catalyze the last steps of MF/JH biosynthesis and epoxidation, respectively: the JH acid methyltransferase (JHAMT) and the P450 epoxidase CYP15 (EPDX). jhamt(-/-) larvae lacking both MF and JH died at the onset of metamorphosis. Strikingly, epox(-/-) mutants, which synthesized MF but no 1H, completed the entire life cycle. While epox(-/-) adults were fertile, the reproductive performance of both sexes was dramatically reduced. Our results suggest that although MF can substitute for the absence of JH in mosquitoes, it is with a significant fitness cost. We propose that MF can fulfill most roles of JH, but its epoxidation to JH was a key innovation providing insects with a reproductive advantage.

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