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Abstract
Annual Review of Entomology
Vol. 51: 25-44 (Volume publication date January 2006)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.ento.51.110104.151021)
First published online as a Review in Advance on July 11, 2005
PROSTAGLANDINS AND OTHER EICOSANOIDS IN INSECTS: Biological Significance

David Stanley
USDA/ARS, Biological Control of Insects Research Laboratory, Columbia, Missouri 65203; email:

▪ Abstract Prostaglandins and other eicosanoids are oxygenated metabolites of certain polyunsaturated fatty acids. These compounds are well known for their important actions in mammalian physiology and disease. Recent work has revealed the presence and biological actions of eicosanoids in insects and many other invertebrate animals. In insects, eicosanoids mediate cellular immunity to microbial and metazoan challenge. Notably, some infectious organisms secrete factors responsible for impairing host insect immune reactions by inhibiting biosynthesis of eicosanoids. Eicosanoids also act in insect reproductive biology, in ion transport physiology, and in fever response to infection as well as in protein exocytosis in tick salivary glands. Aside from ongoing actions in homeostasis, certain eicosanoid actions occur at crucial points in insect life histories, such as during infectious challenge and important events in reproduction.

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Author:
David Stanley
Keywords:
eicosanoid biosynthesis
insect immunity
protein exocytosis
yolk protein endocytosis

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