Secretory products of the Malpighian tubules of Cicadellidae (Hemiptera,Membracoidea): an ultrastructural study |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, and Molecular Medicine Program, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA;2. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario NIG 2W1, Canada;3. Medical Service, Veterans Affairs Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, UT, USA;1. Department of Developmental Biology and Morphology of Invertebrates, Institute of Zoology and Biomedical Research, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 9, 30-387, Kraków, Poland;2. Department of Invertebrate Zoology and Parasitology, Faculty of Biology, University of Gdańsk, Wita Stwosza 59, 80-308, Gdańsk, Poland |
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Abstract: | The middle segment of the Malpighian tubules (MT), specialized for secretion of proteins and lipids, was investigated by transmission electron microscopy in nymphs and adults of nine cicadellid species (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae). In addition, the external cuticle coated with secretory products of the MT was studied by scanning electron microscopy. The ultimate secretory product found in adult cicadellids, both in the MT and on the cuticle, were intricately structured particles known as brochosomes (BS). These showed significant differences in size, shape and internal structure among species studied. Common features of all BS were a bounding outer membrane and regular cell-like depressions on the surface. Nascent BS develop in numerous Golgi regions as secretory vesicles individually enclosed in larger vacuoles. Definitive structure of BS is acquired during the peculiar post-Golgian maturation. Two basic patterns of the secretion in the MT during ontogenesis were recognized. In Cicadella viridis (L.), Bathysmatophorus reuteri J. Shlb., Graphocraerus ventralis (Fall.) and Doratura impudica Horv. BS are produced and applied onto the cuticle in both adults and nymphs. In contrast, in young nymphs of Vilbasteana oculata (Ldb.), Populicerus nitidissimus (H.-S.), Oncopsis flavicollis (L.) and Ulopa reticulata (F.) the MT are involved in production of various secretions other than BS. The secretory cells in these species undergo a change switching to BS production in the last nymphal instar, so that the BS are applied onto the cuticle for the first time only in freshly molted adults. The secretory patterns differ among subfamilies. The observed diversity of products suggests that the protective water- or feces-repellent function proposed for BS cannot completely explain the adaptive significance of the secretory specialization of the MT in cicadellids. |
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