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The salivary gland secretions of a neotropical bumblebee
Authors:Maria Luiza S. Mello  B. C. Vidal
Affiliation:(1) Department of Cell Biology, Institute of Biology, UNICAMP, 13100 Campinas (SP), Brazil
Abstract:Summary The larval salivary gland secretions ofBombus atratus were studied with cytochemical and cytophysical methods. In the young feeding larvae a proteic filamentous secretion depicting striations perpendicular to the long axis of its fibrillary threads and exhibiting a wellordered macromolecular array was found. It appears not to differ from the silk secretion described for the fully grown larvae of an europeanBombus species. However, in the fully grown larvae ofB. atratus changes which have not yet been reported for other bees occur involving the salivary gland secretion. Two secretion types are then distinguishable. One is composed of carboxylated and sulfated acid glycosaminoglycans and glycoprotein(s) (mucous secretion), and the other has the same composition as that of the filamentous secretion of the young larvae, although differing morphologically and in terms of macromolecular alignment (flocculent secretion). The filamentous secretion is assumed to be involved inB. atratus with the spinning of the ldquosilken partitionsrdquo which at a relatively early stage separate the larvae reared within a common cell from one another. The mucous and flocculent secretions will participate in the cocoons which will cover the pupating larvae. The filamentous and flocculent secretions appear to contain an agr-helical fibroin, glycoprotein(s) and lipoprotein(s), but not collagen-type proteins.
Keywords:Bombus atratus  Salivary gland secretion cytochemistry  Salivary gland  Silk
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