The wing margin of adult wings of Lepidoptera is defined by the position of a "bordering lacuna"(BL). During adult wing development, cell proliferation and scale formation proximal to this lacuna and programmed cell death distal to the lacuna are generally observed. To determine the effect of 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) on these events, we cultured the silkworm pupal wings with or without 20E and analyzed regional specificity for cell death by the TUNEL method and cell proliferation by 5-bromodeoxyuridine labeling. Programmed cell death was induced by 20E after 5 days of culture and was detected only in the region distal to BL. Cell proliferation after 1 day of culture and scale formation after 5 days of culture were also inducible by 20E and detected in the region proximal to BL. These results suggest that two types of pupal wing cells, which are divided by the position of the BL, respond to ecdysteroid in different manners. Higher concentrations of 20E (more than 1,000 ng/ml) repressed the scale formation, while such repression could not be observed in the peripheral cell death even with 5,000 ng/ml 20E. The ecdysteroid may work both as a trigger to make the wing margin and scales and as a developmental timer to arrange these cellular responses.