Juvenile hormone III skipped bisepoxide, not its stereoisomers, as a juvenile hormone of the bean bug Riptortus pedestris

2020 
Abstract Juvenile hormone (JH) plays a pivotal role in many aspects of insect physiology. Although its presence was first reported in a blood-sucking bug belonging to the suborder Heteroptera (true bugs), JH species in the group has long been controversial. Although some recent studies proposed a putative JH molecular species in several Heteropteran species, it is not conclusive because physicochemical analyses were insufficient in most cases. Here, we studied this issue with an ultraperformance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometer (UPLC-MS/MS) equipped with C18 and chiral columns in the bean bug Riptortus pedestris (Heteroptera, Alydidae), in which the JH species has long been controversial. Although a recent study describes JHSB3 as the major JH of this species, that finding was not conclusive because its chirality has not been clarified. In the present study, we detected methyl (2R,3S,10R)-2,3;10,11-bisepoxyfarnesoate, commonly named juvenile hormone III skipped bisepoxide (JHSB3), in the culture media of the corpora cardiaca-corpus allatum (CC-CA) complex and in the hemolymph of this species by a chiral ultraperformance liquid chromatography- tandem mass spectrometer (UPLC-MS/MS). Other JHSB3 stereoisomers were not detected. Topical application of JHSB3 effectively averted diapause. These results indicate that JHSB3 is the major JH of R. pedestris. The present study further revealed that JHSB3 and its (2R,3S,10S) isomer are more potent than (2S,3R,10R) and (2S,3R,10S) isomers, which suggests that there is a significance to the configuration of the 2,3-epoxide moiety in JH action. We further found a supplemental significance to the configuration of the 10-position.
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