The development of an enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) for the adipokinetic neuropeptide hormone, Pya-AKH, from the firebug Pyrrhocoris apterus L. is described. The ELISA measures as little as 20 fmol of Pya-AKH. Tested against a range of synthetic peptides, the assay has a high sensitivity for peptides containing the C-terminal motif FTPNWamide. The amounts of Pya-AKH in the brain, corpora cardiaca, suboesophageal ganglia, and fused thoracic and abdominal ganglionic mass are very small, with only the corpora cardiaca containing appreciable levels of hormone (c. 4 pmol per bug). Preliminary estimates of the persistence of the hormone in the haemolymph are consistent with values determined for AKHs in other insects, and suggest that the Pya-AKH has a rapid turnover with a half-life of c. 18 min. Measurements of circulating titres of AKH in Pyrrhocoris are only possible in the ELISA described here by using pooled samples of haemolymph, and after preliminary clean-up of the haemolymph samples. The titre of Pya-AKH in resting reproductive female Pyrrhocoris is c. 1.14 fmol/μl.
Background: Granulomatous amoebic encephalitis due to Acanthamoeba is often a fatal human disease. However, the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of Acanthamoeba encephalitis remain unclear. In this study, the role of extracellular Acanthamoeba proteases in central nervous system pathogenesis and pathophysiology was examined.
Injections of immunogens, such as β-1,3-glucan or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), bring about a marked hyperlipaemia with associated changes in lipophorins and apolipophorin-III in the haemolymph of Locusta migratoria. These changes are similar to those observed after injection of adipokinetic hormone (AKH). The possibility that endogenous AKH is released as part of the response to these immunogens is investigated using passive immunisation against AKH-I, and measurement of AKH-I titre in the haemolymph after injection of immunogens. The data presented show that, despite the similarity of the changes brought about by the presence of immunogens in the haemolymph to those brought about by AKH, there is no release of endogenous AKH after injection of laminarin or LPS. A direct effect of the immunogens on release of neutral lipids by the fat body cannot be demonstrated in vitro, and the mechanism by which hyperlipaemia is induced during immune challenge remains uncertain.
The characteristics of the disappearance of progesterone and 20 alpha-dihydroprogesterone from blood were examined in rats made pseudopregnant by administration of gonadotrophins. Measurement of the disappearance of [3H]progesterone from blood indicated that progesterone metabolism can be represented by a two-compartment model in this animal preparation. The disappearance of [3H]progesterone from blood was described by two half-lives of 0.5 and 11.7 min. The metabolic clearance rate for this steroid was 2.9 litre/day, equivalent to a production rate of 3.9 mumol/day. The initial volume of distribution of the injected [3H]progesterone was 5.0 ml, a volume similar in size to the expected plasma volume. The total volume of distribution of [3H]progesterone (i.e. 'inner' and 'outer' pools) was in the range 24.8-35.4 ml. The disappearance of endogenous progesterone from the blood of pseudopregnant rats after vascular isolation of the ovaries showed two half-lives of 1.1 and 11.4 min respectively. The disappearance of a product of reductive metabolism of progesterone, 20 alpha-dihydroprogesterone, was apparently uniphasic, with a half-life of 41.3 min.
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