Juvenile Hormones and Juvenoids

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activity
advanced insect hormone research applications
analog
Arthropod Repellent
CAS RN
Category=PNR
Category=PSB
Category=PSVA
computational toxicology
CoMSIA Analysis
CoMSIA Model
CoMSIA Study
Endocrine disruption
Endocrine Disruption Potential
endocrine system disruption
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
esterase
farnesoate
Frontal Gland
Furan-3 Carboxylic Acid
Hydrogen Bond Acceptor
insect developmental biology
Insect endocrinology
insecticide resistance modeling
Jan Uar
JH
JH Activity
JH Analogue
JH Receptor
JH Titer
JHE
JHE Activity
JHMs
Juvenile hormone analogs
Juvenile hormones
Juvenoids
Linear and nonlinear modeling techniques
methyl
MF
mimics
MM-GBSA Calculation
PDB Code
pest management strategies
Pharmacophore Model
QSAR
quantitative
relationship
Repellent Activity
sesquiterpene biosynthesis
structure
titer
Vector control
Wing Polymorphism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138382206
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Nov 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Juvenile hormones (JHs) are a group of structurally related sesquiterpenes secreted by the insect corpora allata. They affect most insect life-cycle stages and physiological functions, including embryogenesis, larval and adult development, metamorphosis, reproduction, metabolism, diapause, polyethism, and migration. Juvenoids such as methoprene, hydroprene, kinoprene, pyriproxyfen, and fenoxycarb are man-made chemicals that mimic the structure and/or activity of JHs, selectively targeting and disrupting the endocrine system of insects. They are particularly suited as larvicides for the control of pest and disease vectoring insects such as mosquitoes.
Juvenile Hormones and Juvenoids: Modeling Biological Effects and Environmental Fate discusses the various modeling approaches that can be used to study the mechanism of action of JHs in insects and to estimate the adverse effects and the environmental fate of the juvenoids that mimic their activity. This book is the third of the QSAR in Environmental and Health Sciences series, but the first dedicated to the use of QSAR and other in silico techniques to provide these insights into JHs and their analogs.

With contributions by an international team of scientists, the book begins with a historical survey of JHs and juvenoids. It then discusses biosynthesis of sesquiterpenoids followed by chapters covering JH activity such as morph-specific JH titers in crickets, and JH analog activity including soldier-specific organ development in termites and the role of methoprene in gene transcription. The book examines modeling approaches applied to resistance to JH analogs, to population dynamics of nontarget species in the presence of juvenoids, and to SAR and QSAR of JH mimics. The book concludes with a discussion on the use of multicriteria analysis for selecting insecticides for vector control.

James Devillers has authored/edited 13 books and published more than 200 peer-reviewed papers and book chapters in QSAR and (eco)toxicology modeling. He is editor-in-chief of the journal SAR and QSAR in Environmental Research (Taylor & Francis) and editor of the series of books QSAR in Environmental and Health Sciences (CRC Press). James Devillers is also member of the editorial boards of Ecological Modelling (Elsevier), Xenobiotica (Taylor & Francis), and Current Bioactive Compounds (Bentham Science).