the genetic, morphological, and physiological characterization of a dark larval cuticle mutation in the butterfly, bicyclus anynana遗传、形态和生理特征的黑蝴蝶的幼虫表皮突变,bicyclus anynana.pdf
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The Genetic, Morphological, and Physiological
Characterization of a Dark Larval Cuticle Mutation in the
Butterfly, Bicyclus anynana
. . ´
Ashley Bear* , Ariel Simons , Erica Westerman, Antonia Monteiro
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America
Abstract
Studies on insect melanism have greatly contributed to our understanding of natural selection and the ultimate factors
influencing the evolution of darkly pigmented phenotypes. Research on several species of melanic lepidopteran larvae have
found that low levels of circulating juvenile hormone (JH) titers are associated with a melanic phenotype, suggesting that
genetic changes in the JH biosynthetic pathway give rise to increased deposition of melanin granules in the cuticle in this
group. But does melanism arise through different molecular mechanisms in different species? The present study reports on
a Bicyclus anynana (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) dark larvae single locus mutation, in which larvae exhibit a darker cuticle
relative to wild type. Unlike other lepidopteran melanic larvae mutations, this one is autosomal recessive and does not
appear to involve a deficiency in JH titers. Unlike JH deficiency mutants, dark larvae mutants display similar growth rates and
sexual behaviors as wild type, and topical application of a JH analogue failed to rescue the wild type cuticular coloration.
Finally, transmission electron microscopy showed that sclerotization or deposition of diffuse melanin, rather than deposition
of melanin granules, produces the dark coloration found in the cuticle of this species. We conclude that different molecular
mechanisms underlie larval melanism in different species of Lepidoptera.
Citation: Bear A, Simons A, Wester
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