MetaTOC stay on top of your field, easily

The adipokinetic hormone of Mantodea in comparison to other Dictyoptera

,

Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology

Published online on

Abstract

Six species of the order Mantodea (praying mantises) are investigated for the presence and sequence of putative adipokinetic hormones (AKHs). The selected species span a wide evolutionary range of various families and subfamilies of the clade Mantodea. The corpora cardiaca of the different species are dissected, methanolic extracts prepared, peptides separated by liquid chromatography, and AKHs detected and sequenced by ion trap mass spectrometry. All six species investigated contain an octapeptide with the primary structure pGlu‐Val‐Asn‐Phe‐Thr‐Pro‐Asn‐Trp amide, which is code‐named Emppe‐AKH and had been found earlier in three other species of Mantodea. Conspecific bioassays with the species Creoboter sp. (family Hymenopodidae) reveal an adipokinetic but not a hypertrehalosemic function of Emppe‐AKH. Comparison with other members of the Dictyoptera (cockroaches, termites) show that Emppe‐AKH is only found in certain termites, which have been recently placed into the Blattaria (cockroaches) as sister group to the family Cryptocercidae. Termites and cockroaches both show biodiversity in the sequence of AKHs, and some cockroach species even contain two AKHs. In contrast, all praying mantises—irrespective of their phylogenetic position—synthesize uniformly only one and the same octapeptide Emppe‐AKH.