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| Pack Size | SKU | Availability | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 mg | Please contact Customer Service for Availability | $321.00 | |
| 50 mg | Please contact Customer Service for Availability | $1,270.00 $1,079.50 |
About This Item
Empirical Formula (Hill Notation):
C16H26O3
CAS Number:
Molecular Weight:
266.38
UNSPSC Code:
51111800
NACRES:
NA.32
PubChem Substance ID:
EC Number:
246-072-9
Beilstein/REAXYS Number:
1316317
MDL number:
Biological source:
synthetic (organic)
Form:
liquid
Assay:
≥65% (HPLC)
biological source
synthetic (organic)
Quality Level
sterility
non-sterile
assay
≥65% (HPLC)
form
liquid
concentration
≥65%
technique(s)
activity assay: suitable
shipped in
ambient
storage temp.
−20°C
SMILES string
COC(=O)\C=C(/C)CC\C=C(/C)CC[C@H]1OC1(C)C
InChI
1S/C16H26O3/c1-12(9-10-14-16(3,4)19-14)7-6-8-13(2)11-15(17)18-5/h7,11,14H,6,8-10H2,1-5H3/b12-7+,13-11+
InChI key
QVJMXSGZTCGLHZ-ZPLWXOMKSA-N
General description
Research Area: Cell Signaling
Juvenile hormone III (JH III) is the most prevalent juvenile hormone (JH) found in insects.[1]
Juvenile hormone III (JH III) is the most prevalent juvenile hormone (JH) found in insects.[1]
Application
Juvenile hormone III has been used to:
- study the effect of juvenile hormone on mictic (sexual) female production of the rotifer Brachionus plicatilis Muller[2]
- study the effect of juvenile hormone on head GB19811 (putative Takeout/juvenile hormone binding protein) mRNA levels in adult honeybees[3]
- study the effect of juvenile hormone on gonadotropic and physiological functions in bumblebee Bombus terrestris[4]
Biochem/physiol Actions
Controls the larval metamorphosis of insects, including the retention of juvenile characteristics.
JHBPs (JH-binding proteins) protect JH (juvenile hormone) from JH esterase- and epoxide hydrolase-mediated degradation. They also help in delivering JH to target tissues.[5]Juvenile hormones(JHs) are a group of acyclic sesquiterpenoids, and in some insect lineages, the farnesol backbone of these compounds undergoes chemical modification to produce a homologous series of hormones. JH is essential for insect development and reproduction in every aspect. It plays a key role in metamorphosis and caste determination in social insects. It modulates behavior, polyphenism, larval and adult diapause, and ovarian development.[1] The sesquiterpenoid backbone of juvenile hormone III (JH III) is biosynthesized through the classical mevalonate (MVA) pathway in cockroaches.[6]
1 of 1
This Item | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| biological source synthetic (organic) | biological source - | biological source synthetic (organic) | biological source human pituitary glands |
| assay ≥65% (HPLC) | assay ≥98% (TLC) | assay ≥97% (HPLC) | assay - |
| Quality Level 200 | Quality Level 200 | Quality Level 200 | Quality Level 200 |
| technique(s) activity assay: suitable | technique(s) - | technique(s) - | technique(s) cell culture | mammalian: suitable |
| concentration ≥65% | concentration - | concentration - | concentration - |
| form liquid | form - | form powder | form lyophilized powder |
hcodes
Hazard Classifications
Aquatic Chronic 4
Storage Class
10 - Combustible liquids
wgk
WGK 3
flash_point_f
Not applicable
flash_point_c
Not applicable
ppe
Eyeshields, Gloves, multi-purpose combination respirator cartridge (US)
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Linquan Ge et al.
Frontiers in physiology, 11, 579233-579233 (2020-10-13)
The mirid bug, Cyrtorhinus lividipennis Reuter, is an important predator of rice planthoppers in Asia. In a previous study, C. lividipennis fed on gramineous weeds with brown planthopper (BPH) eggs had reduced development compared to those fed on rice with
A Ishikawa et al.
Insect molecular biology, 21(1), 49-60 (2011-10-13)
Most aphids show reproductive polyphenism, i.e. they alternate their reproductive modes from parthenogenesis to sexual reproduction in response to short photoperiods. Although juvenile hormone (JH) has been considered a likely candidate for regulating the transition from asexual to sexual reproduction
Tzachi Hagai et al.
Insect biochemistry and molecular biology, 37(7), 689-701 (2007-06-07)
We identified and characterized eight genes encoding putative Takeout/juvenile hormone binding proteins (To/JHBP) in the honeybee genome. Phylogenetic analyses revealed nine distinct lineages within this gene family, including those containing Takeout (To) and JHBP for which there are no honeybee
Global Trade Item Number
| SKU | GTIN |
|---|---|
| J2000-50MG | 04061833271865 |
| J2000-10MG | 04061833866221 |



