Title of article
Protein catabolism in mosquitoes: ureotely and uricotely in larval and imaginal Aedes aegypti
Author/Authors
von Dungern، نويسنده , , Petra and Briegel، نويسنده , , Hans، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
11
From page
131
To page
141
Abstract
Catabolism of excess dietary protein by Aedes aegypti was investigated during larval development, during and after metamorphosis. Activity profiles were established for xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH, uricotelic pathway) and arginase (ureotelic pathway). Both enzymes are active at all times during the life-cycle. During the aquatic larval and pupal instars, XDH and arginase activities increase with body size. Maximal activities of these two enzyme systems coincide with the time of metamorphic restructuring.
nzymes are found in the fatbody tissue: XDH activity is found in 80% of the tissue, while arginase activity is distributed equally between abdominal fatbody and the thorax. This might indicate a role for arginase other than catabolic, such as energy metabolism.
se activity is high in the aquatic instars and low in sugar-fed females but increases after blood-feeding. XDH activity, also high in larvae and pupae, increases markedly after a blood meal.
excretion is characterized by the ureotelic pathway. The pupae as closed systems excrete neither uric acid nor urea; urate accumulates during larval and pupal periods, is conserved throughout metamorphosis, and is finally voided with the meconium by the teneral imago. This presents a form of transient storage–excretion.
Keywords
Aedes aegypti , Xanthine dehydrogenase , Ureotely , arginase , Uricotely
Journal title
Journal of Insect Physiology
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Journal of Insect Physiology
Record number
1412069
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