1. The protease activity of the adult Calliphora female measured on the first 5 days after emergence was found to be highly influenced by the diet, the activity of females fed on sugar, water and meat (meat-flies) being much higher than that of females fed only on sugar and water (sugar-flies).

  2. The development of the enzyme(s) was found to be controlled by the medial neurosecretory cells (m.n.c.), the mean protease activity of females deprived of their m.n.c. only amounting to one-quarter to one-third of the maximum values for the meat-flies.

  3. Implantation of corpora cardiaca-allata (presumably containing m.n.c. hormone) into females without m.n.c. raised the protease activity of these significantly, showing that the influence of the implanted organs must be hormonal.

  4. The corpus allatum was found to have a certain, if minor, effect on the protease activity.

  5. It is concluded that in Calliphora the eating of meat exerts its effect on the production of protease mainly indirectly by causing liberation of m.n.c. hormone into the blood.

  6. As proteases are themselves proteins, the effect of the m.n.c. hormone on the production of proteolytic enzymes by the gut cells must be regarded as an effect on the specific protein synthesis of these cells. There is some evidence that the m.n.c. hormone might be involved in the regulation of protein synthesis in general.

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Quite recently Fraser, Ring & Stewart (1961) have shown that in Calliphora vomitoria proteases are also produced in the mid-midgut at a pH of about 3.

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For the technique of allatectomy see Thomsen (1942). However, it should be pointed out that whereas in the experiments from 1942, the thoracic glands (then called ‘sidelobes of the ring-gland’) were at least partly removed together with the c.all., in the present experiments care was taken m remove as little of the thoracic glands as possible.

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It is possible that the c.all. is activated by the m.n.c. hormone simultaneously with the gut cells

*

This was the reason why in the previously published experiments we used 5-day-old females as controls instead of 7-day-old females as were used in the former studies on the function of the m.n.c. (Thomsen, 1952).

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