17) Yоu аre put оn а prоject to study the endocrine bаsis of larval overwintering diapause in the caterpillar of an important pest moth. In this species, the caterpillar grows and feeds until it reaches the same final size/mass as non-diapausing caterpillars of the same species, but the short-day programmed caterpillars remain a fully-grown larva all winter and do not pupate until the next spring. You show that after feeding has ceased diapause-destined caterpillars release a large peak of PTTH in the presence of JH, just like non-diapause caterpillars. Non-diapause caterpillars secrete ecdysteroids into the blood and subsequently pupate after this peak of PTTH, but diapausing caterpillars do not secrete ecdysteroids into the blood and remain as larvae. Your advisor thinks this is interesting and challenges you to determine how this larval diapause could be regulated. Use your knowledge of the control of ecdysteroid production to describe a candidate protein that you might expect to play a role in maintaining the larval diapause in this species. Describe this candidate protein, where it comes from, how it acts, and when you might expect to see it present/acting on the target tissue in both non-diapausing individuals during the larval-pupal transition and in diapausing individuals before, during, and after overwintering. (8 pts)