Metabolism of ecdysteroids by a chitin-synthesizing insect cell line (original) (raw)

1990, Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology

A chitin-synthesizing cockroach cell line (UMBGE-4) previously shown to secrete ecdysteroids was analyzed for its ability to metabolize potential precursors of ecdysone (e.g., 2-deoxyecdysonet 2,22-dideoxyecdysone, 2,22,25trideoxyecdysone, and cholesterol). All, except cholesterol, were actively metabolized by UMBGE-4 cells. However, all but 2-deoxyecdysone were converted to polar and hydrolyzable metabolites, and not to ecdysone. Labeling with cholesterol was unsuccessful. Labeling experiments with molting hormones, i.e., ecdysone and 20-hydroxyecdysone, confirmed that this cell line can metabolize ecdysteroids and allowed identification of some of the products. Molting hormones were converted into acetate conjugates and polar conjugates which were often double-conjugates, i.e., polar conjugates of acetate conjugates. Labeling experiments with ecdysone demonstrated that this cell line possesses a low ecdysone 20-hydroxylase activity. The capacity of UMBGE-2 cells, which do not synthesize chitin or ecdysteroids, was also examined. Neither ecdysone nor 20-hydroxyecdysone was significantly metabolized by UMBCE-2 cells. 2-Deoxyecdysone and 2,22-dideoxyecdysone were very slowly metabolized respectively to more polar compounds.