Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2842156 Journal of Insect Physiology 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

The plasmatocytes of diapausing saturniid pupae are round or spindle-shaped cells floating free in the haemolymph. Upon injury to the pupa, these haemocytes become amoeboid and adhesive. A technique is described for the isolation and short-term culture of pupal haemocytes in their inactive state and for their conversion in vitro into the active, ‘injured’ form. The activation of ‘uninjured’ haemocytes was stimulated by fragments of epidermal tissue or by plasma from previously activated blood samples. A fraction capable of stimulating the activation of haemocytes was partially purified from both plasma and epidermal tissue and has been called haemokinin. Haemokinin from either source has a molecular weight in the range of 50,000. The intensity of the haemocyte injury reaction in vitro changes systematically during diapause; the nature and significance of the changes are discussed.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Insect Science