To investigate whether four Papilio species, Papilio xuthus, P. machaon, P. bianor and P. helenus, have two molecular forms of the prothoracicotropic hormones (PTTHs), referred to as big- and small-PTTHs, the PTTHs were extracted and fractionated from their pupal brains. The activating ability of big- and small-PTTH fractions was examined by the in vitro assay using the prothoracic glands (PGs) of 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of their own and several other papilionid species.
Big- and small-PTTH fractions activated the larval PGs of their own species to increase the ecdysteroid secretion in vitro. The doses of small-PTTH fractions for activating the larval PGs were 8- to 10-times larger than those of big-PTTH fractions.
The big- and small-PTTH fractions as well as those of P. machaon activated the PGs of 2-day-old 5thinstar larvae of several heterogeneous papilionids, but the activating ability did not always decrease with the distance of the genetic (or phylogenetic) relationships.
The results indicate that P. machaon, P. bianor and P. helenus may have two molecular forms of the PTTHs, both of which activate the larval PGs of the same species in vitro as in the case of P. xuthus. The bigand small- PTTHs of P. xuthus as well as those of several other Papilio species may retain an ability to activate the 5th-instar larval PGs of numbers of heterogeneous papilionids in vitro.
INTRODUCTION
Cerebral neuropeptides, prothoracicotropic hormones (PTTHs), activate the prothoracic glands (PGs) to secrete ecdysteroids which are essential for growth and metamorphosis in insects (Fukuda, 1944; Williams, 1946; Ishizaki and Ichikawa, 1967; Chino et al., 1974; Warren et al., 1988).
The silkworm, Bombyx mori, has two molecular forms of the PTTHs, referred to as Bom-PTTH and bombyxin (30 kD and 5 kD) (Yagi et al., 1995), both of which activate the PGs from 2-day-old 4th-instar larvae of the same species in vitro (Fujimoto et al., 1991; Kiriishi et al., 1992). However, the former is thought to be the only PTTH of B. mori, since the latter failed to cause the PGs to secrete ecdysteroids in vivo (Kobayashi and Yamazaki, 1966; Ishizaki et al., 1977; Ishizaki et al., 1983; Nagasawa et al., 1984; Kiriishi et al., 1992).
Two molecular forms of the PTTHs, named the big- and small-PTTHs in Manduca sexta (Bollenbacher et al., 1984), were demonstrated to exist in several other lepidopterans, such as Polygonia c-aureum, Papilio xuthus and Mamestra brassicae. The big- and small-PTTHs extracted from the pupal brains of those lepidopterans activated the PGs of 2-day-old last-instar larvae of their own species in vitro (Endo et al., 1990; Fujimoto et al., 1991).
The activating ability of the small PTTHs, quantified by the in vitro assay using the larval PGs of their own species, was far lower than that of the big-PTTHs in several lepidopterans. However, the small-PTTHs showed cross-reactivity to the PGs of last-instar larvae of several heterogeneous species whose range may be wider than the big-PTTHs (Bollenbacher et al., 1984; Endo et al., 1990; Fujimoto et al., 1991).
In numbers of papilionids, the distance of the genetic (or phylogenetic) relationships was attempted to be evaluated on the basis of the egg hatchability, adult formation and F1 fertility of interspecific hybrids (Ae, 1988).
Our study was intended to investigate whether three Papilio species, P. machaon, P. bianor and P. helenus, have two molecular forms of PTTHs activating the PGs of their own species in vitro. Then, the activating ability of the big- and small-PTTHs was examined by an in vitro assay using the PGs of 5th-instar larvae of three or four heterogeneous papilionids.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animals
Five papilionid species, P. xuthus, P. machaon, P. bianor, P. helenus and Byasa alcinous, collected in the towns of Yamaguchi and Hofu were used.
Larvae of papilionids were reared in containers of transparent plastic and subjected to a long-day condition of alternating 16-hr light and 8-hr dark periods at 20°C or 25°C. In the photophase, light intensity was provided at about 400 lux on rearing containers with two 20-W white fluorescent tubes which were controlled by a 24-hr time-switch.
Larvae of P. xuthus, P. bianor and P. helenus were fed on fresh leaves of Fagara ailanthoides and those of P. machaon and B. alcinous were fed on leaves of Glehria littleralis and Aristolochia debilis, respectively.
Extraction of PTTHs
Brains were obtained from 0-day-old pupae of four Papilio species, P. xuthus, P. machaon, P. bianor and P. helenus, by dissection in 0.9% NaCl. A batch of 250 brains was homogenized with a glass homogenizer in 5 ml of total volume of acetone on ice, washed 3 times in 7.5 ml of total volume of 80% ethanol and extracted with 1.8 ml of Grace's medium for 4 min at 95°C. The extracts were cooled rapidly and added to 0.7 ml of fresh Grace's medium to provide crude PTTH extracts. At each step, insoluble materials were removed by a centrifugation at 12,000×g for 20-30 min.
Separation of big- and small-PTTHs
Each crude PTTH extract made from 0-day-old pupae of Papilio species was put in a tube with an ultrafilter passing smaller molecules than 10kD (Ultrafree C3LGC00, Millipore, Tokyo, Japan) and centrifuged at 3,000×g for 4-5 hr at 4°C. The filtrates were used as small-PTTH fractions, whereas the residues were washed twice with 1.0 ml of Grace's medium and served as big-PTTH fractions.
Quantification of the action of big- and small-PTTH fractions on the PGs
The activating ability of big- and small-PTTH fractions was quantified by the in vitro assay. The pairs of the PGs obtained from 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of papilionids by dissection in saline (Wyatt, 1961) were washed in Grace's medium for 30-60 min. One of the pair was incubated in Grace's medium alone (50 μl) and the contralateral was incubated in Grace's medium (50 μl) with one of the assaying samples at 25°C. After a 2-hr incubation, the PGs were removed and the amount of ecdysteroids secreted into the incubation medium was quantified by the radioimmunoassay (RIA). The activation ratio (Ar) showing the amount of ecdysteroids secreted by the experimental PG divided by that secreted by the control PG was obtained by the incubations of 5-6 PG pairs (Bollenbacher et al., 1984). Fractions recording Ar-values larger than 2.0 (or 3.0 in some cases, t-test: P>0.01) were judged to show PTTH-activity.
Assay of ecdysteroids
The titer of ecdysteroids in each sample (5 μl or 20 μl) was measured as a corresponding response to ecdysone (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, USA), using the RIA method (Borst and O'Conner, 1972). Antiserum raised against 20-hydroxyecdysone (Rhoto Pharmaceutical, Osaka, Japan) was obtained from the Meguro Institute, Osaka, Japan. This antiserum exhibits reactivity against 20-hydroxyecdysone approximately 5-times stronger than that against ecdysone and 3-dehydroecdysone. Radioactive ecdysone (23, 24-3H(N))-ecdysone (2,960 GBq/mmol) was obtained from New England Nuclear, Boston, USA. A lower limit of detection of ecdysone by this RIA method was 2.5 pg/20 μl.
RESULTS
The activating ability of big- and small-PTTHs to the PGs of 5th-instar larvae of four Papilio species
To examine whether four Papilio species have two molecular forms of the PTTHs activating the 5th-instar larval PGs of their own species in vitro, brains were obtained from 0-day-old non-diapause pupae of four Papilio species, P. xuthus, P. machaon, P. bianor and P. helenus, by dissection in 0.9% NaCl and stored at −85°C. Batches of 250 brains were extracted with Grace's medium and extracts were filtrated with an ultrafilter to obtain big- and small-PTTH fractions. The activating ability of each fraction was quantified by the in vitro assay using the PGs of 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of their own species at 25°C. The doses of big- and small-PTTH fractions added in the incubation medium (50 μl) were changed from 1/8 to 4 and 1/4 to 8 brain-equivalents, respectively.
All PGs of 5th-instar larvae of four Papilio species secreted ecdysteroids at the rate of 7-15 pg/gland/hr by a 2-hr incubation in Grace's medium alone. The rate of ecdysteroid secretion was increased by adding big- or small-PTTH fractions of their own species into incubation medium. The rate of secretion reached 250-750 pg/gland/hr at its maximum.
Ar-value of each fraction showed the activating ability to the PGs examined in vitro. The Ar-values reached maximum (Ar 4-8) when the PGs of 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of four Papilio species were incubated in Grace's medium (50 μl) with big-PTTH fractions of 1-2 brain-equivalent. Half maximum activation was obtained by the fraction doses of 1/4 to 1/2 brain-equivalent, respectively (Fig. 1 and Table 1).
Table 1.
The activating ability of big-PTTH fractions to the 5th-instar larval PGs of their own and heterogeneous Papilio species
Small-PTTH fractions also activated the 5th-instar larval PGs of their own species (Ar 4-8). The maximum Ar-value obtained by the small-PTTH fraction of each species was almost the same value as that obtained by the big-PTTH fraction. However, for inducing a detectable response, each small-PTTH fraction required an 8- to 10-times larger dose (4-8 brain-equivalents) than that for the big-PTTH fractions (1/2-1 brain-equivalent), respectively (Fig. 1 and Table 2).
Table 2.
The activating ability of small-PTTH fractions to the 5th-instar larval PGs of their own and heterogeneous Papilio species
The results indicated that four Papilio species, P. xuthus, P. bianor, P. helenus and P. machaon, have big- and smallPTTHs, both of which activate the 5th-instar larval PGs of their own species in vitro. However, the doses of small-PTTH fractions which are required for activating the PGs in vitro seem to be far larger than those required for the big-PTTH fractions.
The activating ability of big- and small-PTTHs of P. xuthus to the PGs of 5th-instar larvae of heterogeneous Papilio species
To know whether big- and small-PTTHs of P. xuthus activate the PGs of heterogeneous papilionids, pairs of the PGs were isolated from 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of P bianor, P. helenus, P. protenor and B. alcinous and were incubated for 2 hr in Grace's medium with or without big- and smallPTTH fractions of P. xuthus at 25°C. The doses of big- and small-PTTH fractions were changed from 1/8 to 4 and from 1/4 to 8 brain-equivalents, respectively.
The 5th-instar larval PGs of P. bianor, P. helenus, P. protenor and B. alicinous secreted ecdysteroids at the rate of 10-16 pg/gland/hr in Grace's medium alone. The rate of ecdysteroid secretion was increased by adding P. xuthus big-PTTH fraction into the incubation medium. The maximum Ar-values recorded by the PGs of P. bianor, P. helenus, P. protenor and B. alcinous were 3.4, 4.0, 3.0 and 10.4 when the fraction doses were 1, 4, 2 and 1 brain-equivalents, respectively (Fig. 2 and Table 1).
A small-PTTH fraction of P. xuthus also activated the PGs of 3 (out of 4) heterogeneous papilionids in vitro. The doses of small-PTTH fraction required for inducing a detectable response were 2-8 brain-equivalents, which were 4- to 10-times larger than those for the big-PTTH fractions (Fig. 2) as was shown in the 5th-instar larval PGs of their own species (Fig. 1). By contrast, the PGs of P. helenus showed no response to the P. xuthus small-PTTH fraction (Fig. 2 and Table 2).
The results indicated that the big- and small-PTTHs of P. xuthus seem to have activating ability to the PGs of numbers of papilionids in vitro. But, the activating ability of the big- and small-PTTHs of P. xuthus in vitro seems to vary depending on the species of the PG donors.
The activating ability of big- and small-PTTHs of P. machaon to the PGs of 5th-instar larvae of three heterogeneous Papilio species
To examine whether big- and small-PTTHs of P machaon activate the PGs of heterogeneous Papilio species, big- and small-PTTH fractions were made from a batch of 250 brains of 0-day-old non-diapause P. machaon pupae in the same manner as above, and the PTTH-activity (Ar-values) of the fractions was quantified by the in vitro assay using the PGs of 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of P. xuthus, P. bianor and P. helenus.
All PGs secreted ecdysteroids at the rate of 8-14 pg/gland/hr in Grace's medium alone. The secretion rate was increased by adding one of the big- and small- PTTH fractions of P. machaon into the incubation medium (Fig. 2 and Tables 1 and 2). Ar-values of the big-PTTH fractions were 10.1, 2.4 and 2.8 at their maximum in the PGs of P. xuthus, P. bianor and P. helenus, respectively (Fig. 2). Half maximum Ar-values were obtained at the fraction doses of 1/2 to 1 brain-equivalent (50μl) in the PGs of two (out of three) Papilio species (Table 1).
The P. machaon small-PTTH fraction also activated the PGs of three Papilio species in vitro. But, the activating ability (Ar-values) of the small-PTTH fraction in relation to the PGs of P. bianor and P. helenus was as low as that obtained by the big-PTTH fraction (Fig. 2 and Table 2).
The results indicated that the small-PTTH of P. machaon activates equally the 5th-instar larval PGs of three heterogeneous Papilio species in vitro but that the big-PTTH does not do so.
The activating ability of the big- and small-PTTHs of two Papilio species, P. bianor and P. helenus, to the PGs of 5th-instar larvae of heterogeneous Papilio species
Big- and small-PTTH fractions were prepared from a batch of 250 brains of 0-day-old P. bianor (or P. helenus) pupae and the PTTH-activity of the fractions was quantified by the in vitro assay using the PGs of 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of P. xuthus and P. helenus (or P. xuthus and P. bianor). The big and small-PTTH fractions of P. bianor activated the PGs of P xuthus (Ar 4.5 and 2.8 at its maximum) and those of P helenus (Ar 3.9 and 3.2 at its maximum) in vitro, respectively. A half maximum response of P. bianor big-PTTH fraction was obtained with a dose of 1/2-1 and 1/4-1-1/2 brain-equivalent in the PGs of P. xuthus and P. helenus, respectively (Table 1). While, the doses of P. bianor small-PTTH fraction which gave the PGs of P. xuthus and P. helenus a detectable response were 8 and 1 brain-equivalents, respectively (Table 2).
The P. helenus big-PTTH fraction activated the PGs of two heterogeneous Papilio species (Ar 3.4 and 4.9 at their maximum in the PGs of P. xuthus and P. bianor, respectively), whereas the P. helenus small-PTTH fraction activated the PGs of P. bianor (maximum Ar 4.1), but failed to activate the PGs of P. xuthus in vitro.
DISCUSSION
Three Papilio species, P. machaon, P. bianor and P. helenus have two molecular forms of the PTTHs, both of which activate the PGs of 2-day-old 5th-instar larvae of the same species in vitro. Two molecular forms of the PTTHs found in these three Papilio species are thought to correspond to the big- and small-PTTHs demonstrated in Manduca sexta (Bollenbacher et al., 1984) as was demonstrated in the case of the big- and small-PTTHs of P. xuthus (>15 kD and 4-5 kD) (Fujimoto et al., 1991). The big-PTTH of P. xuthus activated the larval PGs of four heterogeneous papilionid species, P. bianor, P. helenus, P. protenor and B. alcinous, whereas the small-PTTH of P. xuthus activated the 5th-instar larval PGs of three (out of four) heterogeneous papilionid species. The activating ability of the PTTH to the PGs is thought to vary depending on the species of the PG donors examined. It was based on the doses of extracts required for inducing a half maximum response of the PGs (Tables 1 and 2). However, the Ar-values of the fractions as well as their dose-dependent response curves often varied when the PG donors were selected from several larval lots. The effects of PG donors on Ar-values and dose-dependent response curves could be excluded by carefully selecting the PG donors (4th-instar larvae) of the same size from the same larval lots. But, decrement of Ar-values occurred abruptly as observed in Fig. 2 (right) and Fig. 3 (top). The decrement is thought to be accidental, due, for example, to contamination with a poison(s) of the cervical gland by the dissection of the PGs, because it occurred occasionally even in the PGs of the same experimental group.
During the speciation, molecules of the PTTHs as well as the PTTH-receptors on the PGs may have changed to keep reactivity to each other, but the changes may occur with no relation to other species. In numbers of Papilio species, the big- and small-PTTHs were shown to retain the reactivity to the PGs of heterogeneous papilionids (Tables 1 and 2).
An examination of the distance of the genetic (or phylogenetic) relationships and grouping of species was attempted on the basis of the egg hatchability, adult formation and F1 fertility of interspecific hybrids in numbers of Papilio species (Ae, 1988). A differentiation index (D-index) was set up to show the distance of genetic relationships. The D-indexes towards P. machaon were estimated to be 55, 59, 66 and 72 in P. helenus, P. protenor, P. bianor and P. xuthus, respectively.
Differences in the molecules of the PTTHs and their receptors may become larger, but the reactivity of the PTTHs to the PGs of heterogeneous species may not always decrease with the distance of the genetic relationships (or with the values of D-indexes) in Papilio species inhabiting Japan. That is, the big-PTTH of P. machaon exhibits far stronger activating ability against the PGs of P. xuthus (D-index 72) than that against the PGs of P. bianor (D-index 66) and P. helenus (D-index 55) (Fig. 3). While, the big-PTTH of P. xuthus showed a stronger activating ability to the PGs of B. alcinous than that to the PGs of their own and other Papilio species (D-index 0 and 100) (Fig. 2). However, two Papilio species whose big PTTHs failed to activate the PGs of the others, P. xuthus and P. helenus, may not produce their interspecific hybrid undergoing the post embryonic development.
Here, we were not able to provide any evidence about molecules of the PTTHs and their receptors in Papilio species. But, that may emerge following a course of molecular biological study about the PTTHs and PTTH-receptors of Papilio species.
Acknowledgments
We thank Dr. D. Le Sage for his critical reading of this manuscript. This work was supported in part by the Grant-in-Aid from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan (No. 06640881).