Trabajo presentado en la 28th Conference of European Comparative Endocrinologists (CECE 2016), celebrado en Lovaina del 21 al 25 de agosto de 2016.Oogenesis is a crucial process in the animal kingdom to ensure the continuity of the species. Thus, it is not surprising that it is finely regulated. During the process of oogenesis, the ovarian follicle gets a series of signals that initiates competence, which will ultimately lead to maturation and oviposition. Insects are good models to study oogenesis as they have developed very different strategies to regulate it, and one of the most basic has been the design of different ovarian types. Two main types can be distinguished among insects: th...
Ovariectomy has been used to study the role of the ovary in endocrine homeostasis. Our studies on ...
The present work aims at establishing the first bases for studying the insect oocyte polarity in a p...
The rigorous balance of endocrine signals that control insect reproductive physiology is crucial for...
Paper presented at the 4th International Insect Hormone Workshop, between 2019/06/30 and 2019/07/06,...
[Background information] Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signalling is crucial for the regul...
The proper synthesis and functioning of ecdysteroids and juvenile hormones (JHs) are very important ...
Eyes absent (Eya), is a protein structurally conserved from hydrozoans to humans, for which two basi...
© 2018 Elsevier Inc. The physiological control of reproduction in insects depends on a combination o...
The insect eggshell or chorion has been studied ex-tensively as a model system of gene regulation du...
We aimed to elucidate why cockroaches do not produce vitellogenin in immature stages, by studying th...
In most insects, vitellogenesis is regulated by juvenile hormone (JH). The recent cloning of the vit...
Previous studies from our laboratory showed the involvement of juvenile hormone (JH) and ecdysteroid...
In insects, peptide hormones regulate many physiological and developmental processes such as growth,...
Insects, like all heterotrophic organisms, acquire from their food the nutrients that are essential ...
Independent of the design of the life cycle of any insect, their growth and reproduction are highly ...
Ovariectomy has been used to study the role of the ovary in endocrine homeostasis. Our studies on ...
The present work aims at establishing the first bases for studying the insect oocyte polarity in a p...
The rigorous balance of endocrine signals that control insect reproductive physiology is crucial for...
Paper presented at the 4th International Insect Hormone Workshop, between 2019/06/30 and 2019/07/06,...
[Background information] Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signalling is crucial for the regul...
The proper synthesis and functioning of ecdysteroids and juvenile hormones (JHs) are very important ...
Eyes absent (Eya), is a protein structurally conserved from hydrozoans to humans, for which two basi...
© 2018 Elsevier Inc. The physiological control of reproduction in insects depends on a combination o...
The insect eggshell or chorion has been studied ex-tensively as a model system of gene regulation du...
We aimed to elucidate why cockroaches do not produce vitellogenin in immature stages, by studying th...
In most insects, vitellogenesis is regulated by juvenile hormone (JH). The recent cloning of the vit...
Previous studies from our laboratory showed the involvement of juvenile hormone (JH) and ecdysteroid...
In insects, peptide hormones regulate many physiological and developmental processes such as growth,...
Insects, like all heterotrophic organisms, acquire from their food the nutrients that are essential ...
Independent of the design of the life cycle of any insect, their growth and reproduction are highly ...
Ovariectomy has been used to study the role of the ovary in endocrine homeostasis. Our studies on ...
The present work aims at establishing the first bases for studying the insect oocyte polarity in a p...
The rigorous balance of endocrine signals that control insect reproductive physiology is crucial for...