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The use of decapitated insects to study lipid mobilization in adult Manduca sexta: Effects of adipokinetic hormone and trehalose on fat body lipase activity
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In order to perform studies on lipid mobilization in adult M. sexta, it is necessary to overcome the effects of starvation and handling, which both provoke an increase in hemolymph lipid concentration. When trehalose was injected into intact insects, a 35 % decrease in the content of the diacylglycerol (DG)-rich hemolymph lipoprotein, low density lipophorin (LDLp) was observed within 30 min, but the level of LDLp returned to control values after 1 h. Decapitated insects exhibited 60 % reduction in LDLp concentration and the levels remained low for at least 24 h. In contrast to intact insects, injection of trehalose into decapitated animals did not alter the LDLp concentration. After decapitation, the response to adipokinetic hormone (AKH) and the ability of the fat body to release DG into the hemolymph was maintained for at least 24 h. In decapitated insects, 6 pmol of AKH-stimulated measurable lipid mobilization and a near maximum response was obtained with 100 pmol of the hormone. The action of trehalose and AKH on the fat body triacylglycerol (TG)-lipase activity in decapitated animals was studied. Fat body homogenates from trehalose-treated insects exhibited a TG-lipase activity 40 % lower than the control insects. Activation of fat body triacylglycerol-lipase was observed after injection of AKH, with the extent of activation ranging between 97 and 380 % ten min after AKH injection. A time course study showed that the activation of the fat body triacylglycerol lipase preceded the increase in hemolymph LDLp concentration, suggesting that activation of the lipase initiates lipid mobilization. It is concluded that decapitated insects injected with trehalose is a very useful system for investigating the hormonal regulation of lipid mobilization in adult M. sexta.

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