Baker F C, Lanzrein B, Miller C A, Tsai L W, Jamieson G C, Schooley D A
Life Sci. 1984 Oct 8;35(15):1553-60. doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(84)90353-9.
We have conducted a reinvestigation into both the identification and quantification of juvenile hormone (JH) from several developmental stages of the cockroach, Nauphoeta cinerea, and the firebrat, Thermobia domestica, using a gas chromatography-mass spectrometric (GC/MS) method. We detected only JH III in these animals in contrast to prior studies in which JH I, II, and/or III had been reported using a different scheme relying on HPLC purification and subsequent GC/MS analysis under chemical ionization (CI) conditions. Very high levels (approximately 800 ng/g) of JH III were found in N. cinerea embryos at stages after dorsal closure whereas first stadium nymphs and female penultimate stadium nymphs contained only low levels (approximately 1 ng/g and approximately 7 ng/ml respectively); in adult females at the stage of rapid oocyte growth approximately 150 ng JH III per ml of hemolymph was measured. T. domestica nymphs and egg laying adults contained only low levels (approximately 1 ng/g) of JH III. The results emphasize the caution which must be used in interpreting results of procedures for analysis of JH at parts-per-billion levels, and also enforce prior observations that the higher JH homologs are not present except in the Lepidoptera.