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Apidologie 34 (2003) 257-267
DOI: 10.1051/apido:2003019
Protein content and pattern during mucus gland maturation and its ecdysteroid control in honey bee drones
Nínive Aguiar Colonello and Klaus HartfelderDepartamento de Biologia, Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão Preto, Universidade de São Paulo, Avenida Bandeirantes 3900, 14040-901 Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil
(Received 10 July 2002; revised 17 October 2002; accepted 18 October 2002)
Abstract
We analyzed mucus gland protein content and pattern for drones of Africanized honey bees.
The effect of exogenous ecdysteroids on mucus gland maturation was judged against
the endogenous ecdysteroid titer. During the first 5 days of adult life, the mucus
protein content increases steeply, whereas the protein pattern becomes reduced in
complexity. Subsequently, the protein content decreases, reaching a plateau level at
day 8. The protein pattern of mature glands is characterized by three dominant polypeptides.
Injection of 20-hydroxyecdysone into newly emerged drones abolished the normal increase
in protein content and prolonged the persistence of the protein pattern typical for
immature glands. Ecdysteroids thus appear to act as negative regulators in the maturation
process of drone mucus glands. This hypothesis received support from analyses of the
hemolymph ecdysteroid titer, which was found to rapidly decline soon after emergence.
Key words: male accessory gland / ecdysone / radioimmunoassay / Apis mellifera / mucus protein
Correspondence and reprints: Klaus Hartfelder
e-mail: khartfel@rge.fmrp.usp.br
© INRA, EDP Sciences, DIB, AGIB 2003
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