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1.
The evolution of the digestive system in the Order Orthoptera is disclosed from the study of the morphophysiology of the digestive process in its major taxa. This paper deals with a cricket representing the less known suborder Ensifera. Most amylase and trypsin activities occur in crop and caeca, respectively. Maltase and aminopeptidase are found in soluble and membrane-bound forms in caeca, with aminopeptidase also occurring in ventriculus. Amaranth was orally fed to Gryllodes sigillatus adults or injected into their haemolymph. The experiments were performed with starving and feeding insects with identical results. Following feeding of the dye the luminal side of the most anterior ventriculus (and in lesser amounts the midgut caeca) became heavily stained. In injected insects, the haemal side of the most posterior ventriculus was stained. This suggested that the anterior ventriculus is the main site of water absorption (the caeca is a secondary one), whereas the posterior ventriculus secretes water into the gut. Thus, a putative counter-current flux of fluid from posterior to anterior ventriculus may propel digestive enzyme recycling. This was confirmed by the finding that digestive enzymes are excreted at a low rate. The fine structure of midgut caeca and ventriculus cells revealed that they have morphological features that may be related to their involvement in secretion (movement from cell to lumen) and absorption (movement from lumen to cell) of fluids. Furthermore, morphological data showed that both merocrine and apocrine secretory mechanisms occur in midgut cells. The results showed that cricket digestion differs from that in grasshopper in having: (1) more membrane-bound digestive enzymes; (2) protein digestion slightly displaced toward the ventriculus; (3) midgut fluxes, and hence digestive enzyme recycling, in both starved and fed insects.  相似文献   

2.
Bostrichiformia is the less known major series of Coleoptera regarding digestive physiology. The midgut of Dermestes maculatus has a cylindrical ventriculus with anterior caeca. There is no cell differentiation along the ventriculus, except for the predominance of cells undergoing apocrine secretion in the anterior region. Apocrine secretion affects a larger extension and a greater number of cells in caeca than in ventriculus. Ventricular cells putatively secrete digestive enzymes, whereas caecal cells are supposed to secrete peritrophic gel (PG) glycoproteins. Feeding larvae with dyes showed that caeca are water-absorbing, whereas the posterior ventriculus is water-secreting. Midgut dissection revealed a PG and a peritrophic membrane (PM) covering the contents in anterior and posterior ventriculus, respectively. This was confirmed by in situ chitin detection with FITC-WGA conjugates. Ion-exchange chromatography of midgut homogenates, associated with enzymatic assays with natural and synthetic substrates and specific inhibitors, showed that trypsin and chymotrypsin are the major proteinases, cysteine proteinase is absent, and aspartic proteinase probably is negligible. Amylase and trypsin occur in contents and decrease along the ventriculus; the contrary is true for cell-membrane-bound aminopeptidase. Maltase is cell-membrane-bound and predominates in anterior and middle midgut. Digestive enzyme activities in hindgut are negligible. This, together with dye data, indicates that enzymes are recovered from inside PM by a posterior-anterior flux of fluid outside PM before being excreted. The combined results suggest that protein digestion starts in anterior midgut and ends in the surface of posterior midgut cells. All glycogen digestion takes place in anterior midgut.  相似文献   

3.
Filimova SA 《Tsitologiia》2001,43(5):425-431
The pattern of digestion in females of Myobia murismusculi was studied with light and electron microscopy. The midgut consists of a stomach and two pairs of blind caeca. The stomach is connected dorsoposteriorly with the excretory organ, that leads externally to an anal opening via the cuticle-lined rectum. No differences were found between the stomach and its caeca. The midgut epithelial cells are of a single type. Their fine structure and gut contents greatly vary depending on different physiological conditions of the mite. Four stages of digestion can be shown with electron microscope. Pino- and phagocytose takes place in the same cells. At an active stage of digestion numerous pinocytic canals were observed in the midgut cells. At each stage of the digestive cycle groups of flat cells are present in the midgut epithelium. They do not take part in the intracellular digestion of food material. Cytoplasmic processes from the underlying cells of coxal glands project into the midgut cells through the orifices in the gut basal lamina.  相似文献   

4.
《Insect Biochemistry》1989,19(4):383-391
Aminopeptidase (soluble form Mr 110,000), carboxypeptidase A (soluble form Mr 47,000), maltase (a dimer composed of two identical Mr 60,000 subunits) and trypsin (two charge isomers with Mr 34,000) are found in major amounts in the crop and midgut tissue, whereas amylase (a trimer of three identical Mr 18,000 subunits) and cellobiase (a trimer of three identical Mr 27,000 subunits) occur mainly in the crop and midgut contents. Subcellular fractions of midgut cells were obtained by conventional homogenization, followed by differential centrifugation or differential calcium precipitation. The results suggest that part of the aminopeptidase and carboxypeptidase A activity is bound to microvilli, that major amounts of trypsin and maltase are trapped in the cell glycocalyx and finally that soluble aminopeptidase, amylase and cellobiase occur in intracellular vesicles. The data support the hypothesis that most protein and carbohydrate digestion takes place in the crop under the action of enzymes passed forward from the midgut, after being secreted by exocytosis. Nevertheless, part of the intermediate and final digestion occurs at the surface of the midgut cells. The peculiar features of the digestion of P. aequinoctialis beetles, including their partly fluid peritrophic membranes, are thought to be derived from putative Coleoptera ancestors.  相似文献   

5.
显微观察发现臭腹腺蝗Zonocerus variegatus(直翅目:锥头蝗科)嗉囊、中肠和后肠的肠壁结构有所不同。嗉囊为空时纵向折叠。中肠上皮层的厚度随龄期有明显变化,1龄和2龄时明显大于3龄、4龄和5龄。后肠具有帮助消化和吸收的功能。  相似文献   

6.
Abstract.  In the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus , proventricular pressure forces a nutrient fluid from the ground food-brei through a sieve at the base of the caecae, and the combination of secreted enzymes and water causes a rapid inflation of the caecae on the first day after imaginal ecdysis. The ceacal region of the midgut is the primary site for the secretion of digestive enzymes. Proteases and amylase flow from the caecae into the mostly empty crop on day 1, and carbohydrate and protein digestion starts as soon as food is present (6 h). Thereafter, much of the amylase activity (but not protease) in the crop is synthesized and released by the crop tissues themselves. Regurgitating proteases and amylases from the caecae into the crop after day 1 is most likely accomplished by temporarily halting proventricular peristalsis and allowing the caecal muscles to contract, forcing caecal contents, including enzymes, forward. The total activity of digestive enzymes in the caecae is virtually identical in 2-day-old fed and unfed females, indicating little or no secretagogue (prandial) regulation of enzyme secretion. Most of the digestive enzymes in the ventricular endoperitrophic space may originate from the mucus dragged from the caecae. Lipase activity is low in all gut regions in both starved and fed females. Head ligation or injection of trypsin modulating oostatic factor, allatostatin A or B fails to indicate any involvement of nerves or hormones in the release of digestive enzymes in the caecae. Gryllus bimaculatus appears to secrete digestive enzymes continuously, and a considerable loss of enzymes may occur at certain times through egestion.  相似文献   

7.
The sand fly Lutzomyia longipalpis is the vector of Leishmania infantum, the etiological agent of American visceral leishmaniasis. Despite its importance, until now the internal anatomy of the immature forms has never been described and little is known about their digestive processes. In nature, sand fly larvae feed on organic detritus in the soil, constantly ingesting large amounts of material. The objective of this study was to describe the anatomy of the gut and the pH of the gut lumen, as well as to investigate the proteases responsible for protein digestion. The larvae have a short gut with a prominent, well-developed midgut. Ingestion of food containing indicator dyes permitted the gut pH to be measured. A pH gradient was observed, varying from >9 in the anterior midgut to 6.5-7.0, in the posterior midgut. The endoproteolytic enzymes are secreted in the anterior midgut and are able to digest azocasein over a large pH range, specially at pH 11. Studies with various inhibitors indicated that the digestive endoproteases are trypsin- and chymotrypsin-like enzymes. These results were confirmed by using the substrates BApNA and N-CBZ-L-PpNA, specific for trypsin and chymotrypsin, respectively. Aminopeptidases were also investigated with p-nitroaniline-derived substrates. These enzymes are located in the posterior midgut, bound to the membranes and functioning at an optimal pH of 6.5-8.0. The results presented here are consistent with the current proposal that proteins are digested to peptides in the anterior midgut inside the endoperitrophic space and subsequently undergo digestion in the ectoperitrophic space of the posterior midgut.  相似文献   

8.
Summary By use of the artificial substrate leucyl--naphthylamide, aminopeptidase was localised in the midgut cells of the haematophagous insect Rhodnius prolixus before and at various times up to 25 days after a meal of rabbit blood. The enzyme was primarily associated with the membranes of the microvilli, with extracellular membrane layers and with the lysosomes of the midgut cells. Aminopeptidase activity was also detected on the rough endoplasmic reticulum and at the periphery of intracellular storage vesicles. The absence of aminopeptidase on the microvilli of the crop supports the conclusion that the crop is not involved in the digestion of blood-meal proteins and that protein digestion is restricted to the intestine. The sites of localisation are in accordance with models for the spatial separation of digestive enzymes in the midgut of several non-haematophagous insects, and this suggests that aminopeptidase plays a major role in the terminal digestion of the blood meal. The changes in enzyme localisation during the digestive period correlate with previously described cycles of digestive-enzyme activity and changes in midgut ultrastructure. A model for blood protein digestion in R. prolixus is described.  相似文献   

9.
The midgut of Rhynchosciara americana larvae consists of a cylindrical ventriculus from which protrudes two gastric caeca formed by polyhedral cells with microvilli covering their apical faces. The basal plasma membrane of these cells is infolded and displays associated mitochondria which are, nevertheless, more conspicuous in the apical cytoplasm. The anterior ventricular cells possess elaborate mitochondria-associated basal plasma membrane infoldings extending almost to the tips of the cells, and small microvilli disposed in the cell apexes. Distal posterior ventricular cells with long apical microvilli are grouped into major epithelial foldings forming multicellular crypts. In these cells the majority of the mitochondria are dispersed in the apical cytoplasm, minor amounts being associated with moderately-developed basal plasma membrane infoldings. The proximal posterior ventriculus represents a transition region between the anterior ventriculus and the distal posterior ventriculus. The resemblance between the gastric caeca and distal posterior ventricular cells is stressed by the finding that their microvilli preparations display similar alkaline phosphatase-specific activities. The results lend support to the proposal, based mainly on previous data on enzyme excretion rates, that the endo-ectoperitrophic circulation of digestive enzymes is a consequence of fluid fluxes caused by the transport of water into the first two thirds of midgut lumen, and its transference back to the haemolymph in the gastric caeca and in the distal posterior ventriculus.  相似文献   

10.
Fifth-instar Erinnyis ello larvae eat 2.1 times their own weight per day of Euphorbia pulcherrima leaves, with a coefficient of digestibility of 45% and an efficiency of food conversion into tissue of 25%. The food takes about 150 min to go through the gut. Midgut contents have a pH of 9.3–9.8, depending on the region. Cellulase is absent from the gut in E. ello. Significant gut hydrolase activities are found only in midgut. Amylase and trypsin occur in the midgut tissue and contents and in regurgitated material, whereas aminopeptidase, α-glucosidase, β-glucosidase and trehalase are found in major amounts in the midgut tissue, in minor amounts in the midgut contents and are absent from regurgitated material. The results support the hypothesis that digestion starts in the endoperitrophic space under the action of amylase and trypsin and is largely completed in the ectoperitrophic space through the catalytic action of several oligomer and dimer hydrolases. Involvement of a membrane-bound aminopeptidase in the terminal digestion of oligopeptides cannot, at present, be excluded. The finding that less than 7% of the total amylase and trypsin are excreted, after a time identical to the passage time of the food bolus, leads to the proposal for the existence of some mechanism by which those enzymes are recovered from the undigested food before it is excreted.  相似文献   

11.
The midgut of the females of Syringophilopsis fringilla (Fritsch) composed of anterior midgut and excretory organ (=posterior midgut) was investigated by means of light and transmission electron microscopy. The anterior midgut includes the ventriculus and two pairs of midgut caeca. These organs are lined by a similar epithelium except for the region adjacent to the coxal glands. Four cell subtypes were distinguished in the epithelium of the anterior midgut. All of them evidently represent physiological states of a single cell type. The digestive cells are most abundant. These cells are rich in rough endoplasmic reticulum and participate both in secretion and intracellular digestion. They form macropinocytotic vesicles in the apical region and a lot of secondary lysosomes in the central cytoplasm. After accumulating various residual bodies and spherites, the digestive cells transform into the excretory cells. The latter can be either extruded into the gut lumen or bud off their apical region and enter a new digestive cycle. The secretory cells were not found in all specimens examined. They are characterized by the presence of dense membrane-bounded granules, 2–4 μm in diameter, as well as by an extensive rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi bodies. The ventricular wall adjacent to the coxal glands demonstrates features of transporting epithelia. The cells are characterized by irregularly branched apical processes and a high concentration of mitochondria. The main function of the excretory organ (posterior midgut) is the elimination of nitrogenous waste. Formation of guanine-containing granules in the cytoplasm of the epithelial cells was shown to be associated with Golgi activity. The excretory granules are released into the gut lumen by means of eccrine or apocrine secretion. Evacuation of the fecal masses occurs periodically. Mitotic figures have been observed occasionally in the epithelial cells of the anterior midgut.  相似文献   

12.
Representative species, two from each of the cockroach families Blattidae, Blattellidae, and Blaberidae, have similar morphology of the digestive tract but differ in the physiology of digestion. The pH of crop and along the midgut varies in different species from 5.9 to 9.0 and the redox parameter from 10.1 to 12.9. Activities of proteinases and amylases in comparable gut regions differ among the species up to 100 times. Proteolytic activity is high in the midgut and moderate in the crop of Blattidae; in the other species, it is very low in the crop and increases to a moderate level in the posterior half of midgut (PM). The level of amylolytic activity is similar in the examined gut compartments of Blattidae and Blattellidae but low in the PM of Blaberidae. Blaberidae are also characterized by a high potential of the salivary glands, crop, and midgut to inhibit subtilisin, trypsin, and chymotrypsin. Inhibition of these proteinases by the extracts of salivary glands and gut is several orders of magnitude lower and often undetectable in the representatives of Blattidae and Blattellidae.  相似文献   

13.
SUMMARY. Gut extracts from Gammarus pulex hydrolysed native and other cellulose substrates in vitro. Digestive fluid cellulase is probably endogenous as cell-free fluid mediated cellulose hydrolysis, but no bacteria were isolated from the fluid which produced a detectable extra-cellular cellulase. There was no apparent digestion of plant cell walls during their passage along the digestive tract, which took about 5–7 h at 10°C. The pH sensitivities of the digestive enzymes and the pH of the various regions of the gut suggest that carbohydrate digestion occurs in the proventriculus, midgut glands and anterior midgut, but protein digestion may be largely limited to the posterior midgut. The pH of the digestive fluid was altered slightly, but significantly, by the consumption of different natural and artificial test diets and by starvation. The most probable reason for the non-digestion of plant cell-walls is the lack of necessary enzymes other than cellulase. The role of cellulase may be confined to digesting the many small, non-cellular particles which are present in the gut.  相似文献   

14.
Digestive proteases of the digestive tract of the apple snail Pomacea canaliculata were studied. Luminal protease activity was found in the crop, the style sac and the coiled gut and was significantly higher in the coiled gut. Several protease bands and their apparent molecular weights were identified in both tissue extracts and luminal contents by gel zymography: (1) a 125 kDa protease in salivary gland extracts and in the crop content; (2) a 30 kDa protease throughout all studied luminal contents and in extracts of the midgut gland and of the endosymbionts isolated from this gland; (3) two proteases of 145 and 198 kDa in the coiled gut content. All these proteases were inhibited by aprotinin, a serine-protease inhibitor, and showed maximum activity between 30°C and 35°C and pH between 8.5 and 9.5. Tissue L-alanine-N-aminopeptidase activity was determined in the wall of the crop, the style sac and the coiled gut and was significantly higher in the coiled gut. Our findings show that protein digestion in P. canaliculata is carried out through a battery of diverse proteases originated from the salivary glands and the endosymbionts lodged in the midgut gland and by proteases of uncertain origin that occur in the coiled gut lumen.  相似文献   

15.
The flow of enzymes, the ratio of bound to unbound enzymes, and their inactivation in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus was studied. The digestive enzymes are forced forward into the crop by caecal contraction and then they are mixed with freshly chewed food and saliva, forming a crop‐chyme. This chyme is blended by crop peristalsis, and periodic opening of the preproventricular valve (PPV) allows posterior movement into the proventriculus and further into the midgut. The contraction of the crop is modulated by Grybi‐AST and Grybi‐SK peptides, which are partially secreted by the caecal endocrine cells. Most of the aminopeptidase and the four disaccharidases examined are membrane bound (62–80%); the remaining (20–38%) as well all trypsin, chymotrypsin, lipase, and amylase are secreted free into the caecal lumen. Cricket trypsin loses only 30% of its activity in 4 h and very little thereafter. The presence of digestive products in the lumen appears to retard further trypsin autolysis. Cricket trypsin digests 42% of the chymotrypsin, 37% of the lipase, and 45% of the amylase in the caecal fluids over 24 h in vitro no significant difference. Without Ca ion amylase was almost completely digested. About 50% of the membrane bound and free aminopeptidase was digested in the caecal lumen, and about 30–38% of the bound and free maltase. This loss of digestive enzyme activity is possible, because enzyme secretion rates are high, the unbound enzymes are effectively recycled, and the time of nutrient passage is short.  相似文献   

16.
The alimentary tract of barnacles is made up of cuticle-lined foregut and hindgut with an intervening U-shaped midgut associated anteriorly with a pair of pancreatic glands and perhaps midgut caeca. Epithelial salivary glands secrete acid mucopolysaccharide, glycoprotein or both. Cells of all the midgut regions are capable of absorption which is carried out mainly by the anterior midgut and caeca. Midgut cells of Balanus balanoides (L.) show a seasonal variation in the distribution of intracellular lipid droplets. Midgut cells rest on an elastic basal lamina and secrete a peritrophic membrane which contains mucopolysaccharide and protein. Cells of the stratum perintestinale connect with the midgut epithelial cells via cell processes which probably translocate absorbed materials. Glycoprotein globules and lipid droplets accumulate in the body parenchyma of B. balanoides and are transported to the ovaries to form yolk (glycolipovitellin). The pancreatic gland cells of all barnacles are active secretory cells secreting proteinaceous material (probably digestive enzymes).  相似文献   

17.
In the midgut of Spodoptera frugiperda larvae, subcellular fractionation data suggest that aminopeptidase and part of amylase, carboxypeptidase A, dipeptidase, and trypsin are bound to the microvillar membranes; that major amounts of soluble dipeptidase, cellobiase, and maltase are trapped in the cell glycocalyx; and finally that soluble carboxypeptidase, amylase, and trypsin occur in intracellular vesicles. Most luminal acetylglucosaminidase is soluble and restricted to the ectoperitrophic contents. Aminopeptidase occurs in minor amounts bound to membranes both in the ectoperitrophic contents and incorporated in the peritrophic membrane. Amylase, carboxypeptidase A, and trypsin are found in minor amounts in the ectoperitrophic contents (both soluble and membrane-bound) and in major amounts in the peritrophic membrane with contents. Part of the activities recovered in the last mentioned contents corresponds to enzyme molecules incorporated in the peritrophic membrane. The results suggest that initial digestion is carried out in major amounts by enzymes in the endoperitrophic space and, in minor amounts, by enzymes immobilized in the peritrophic membrane. Intermediate and final digestion occur at the ectoperitrophic space or at the surface of midgut cells. The results also lend support to the hypothesis that amylase and trypsin are derived from membrane-bound forms, are released in soluble form by a microapocrine mechanism, and are partly incorporated into the peritrophic membrane. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Enzyme activities associated with the labial glands, midgut and rectum of adult Acromyrmex subterraneus were investigated in order to understand their role in digestion of plant and fungal material. High chitinolytic activity was detected in the labial glands, indicating a possible role in the degradation of fungus ingested by the ants. Chitinolytic activity seen in other compartments of the alimentary canal probably originated in the labial glands. The highest activity detected in the midgut was for alpha-glucosidase, which was considered to be of insect origin due to its association with midgut epithelium and it is probably involved in glucose assimilation from nutrient sources such as maltose and sucrose present in plant material. A large range of enzyme activities were detected in the rectal lumen contents, and as in the midgut the highest values were for alpha-glucosidase activity. The absence of activity associated with the epithelium, in the particulate fraction, indicates that the rectal epithelium does not have a secretory function. The detection of enzymes in the rectal lumen contents, which were not detected in the midgut lumen contents, indicates that the rectum acts as a reservoir, accumulating enzymes. The major digestive enzymes were partially characterized using hydrophobic interaction chromatography, gel filtration and SDS-PAGE. The pH of the adult intestinal tract and flow rate of dye through the tract was investigated. A gradual acidification of the intestinal tract was noted commencing with the crop (pH 6-8.2) and terminating with the rectum (pH 3-5). The flow of dye through the different compartments of the tract showed a rapid fill time for all the gut compartments and a short residence time in the crop. In all other compartments, the dye remained detectable for 10 days or longer.  相似文献   

19.
Cyclic changes of the midgut epithelium were observed in females of 5 ticks species of the genus Ixodes during 7-10 days of feeding. The midgut epithelium of unfed females is represented by the digestive cells of nymphal phase and stem cells. The digestive cells of nymphal phase are functional during 1.5-2 days after attachment of the tick, and then, after the tearing away they go into the gut lumen. The secretory cells substitute the digestive cells of nymphal phase and finish their growth during the 4-4.5 days. Secretion of digestive enzymes is performed by the holocrine type with tearing away a whole cell. Intracellular digestion takes place in the digestive cells of four consequent generations. The secretory and digestive cells form a peritrophic matrix on their surface. The presence of peritrophic matrix gives an evidence the maturity and functional activity of the secretory and digestive cells. We suggest, that the peritrophic matrix takes part in intracellular digestion, namely in the process of micropinocytosis. The phagocytosis was not found in the ticks investigated. Digestion in the midgut lumen is performed by enzymes of the ruptured secretory and digestive cells, that is proved by the haemolysis of erythrocytes in the zone of their contact with these cells. The digestive cells of each generation functioned almost synchronously, with largest difference in starting about 12 hours.  相似文献   

20.
The role of the adipokinetic hormone (AKH) in the control of protease, amylase and lipase activities is examined using the cockroach Periplaneta americana and the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster as model species. The effects of Peram‐CAH‐I and ‐II on the activity of cockroach digestive enzymes in the gastric caeca and midgut are measured both in vivo and in vitro. The results show the activity of proteases, amylases and lipases in both parts of the gut: amylase activity is higher in the gastric caeca than in the midgut; lipase activity presents the opposite trend; and protease activity is similar in both organs. The applied hormones stimulate the activity of all digestive enzymes, although this stimulation is not uniform; AKHs affect enzymes selectively, and in some cases unequally, in the gastric caeca and midgut. No substantial differences between Peram‐CAH‐I and ‐II stimulation are recorded. The in vitro results demonstrate that AKH stimulates digestive enzyme activity directly. In agreement with the cockroach results, enzymatic activity in D. melanogaster larvae producing nonfunctional AKH is lower than that in the larvae with ectopically expressed Akh gene, where enzyme activity reaches or even exceeds that of the controls. Overall, the results demonstrate the active role of AKHs in the stimulation of digestive enzyme activity in insects.  相似文献   

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