Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, 1-1 Machikaneyama, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan.
Mathematical Assist Design Laboratory, 4-2 Kamisadori, Maebashi, Gunma 371-0865, Japan.
J Phys Chem B. 2021 Sep 2;125(34):9757-9767. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c04931. Epub 2021 Aug 18.
The cuticular lipid covering the integument of insects is exposed to the environment and involved in a variety of functions offered by insect body surfaces, ranging from protection against the environment, such as the control of water transpiration, the reduction of abrasive damage, and the prevention of pathogen intrusion, to the communication between insects from intraspecific to interspecific interactions. In comparison with the importance of their physiological functions, there is remarkably little information on the structure and physical property of cuticular lipids on insect body surfaces. The lipid layer on the outer exoskeleton is very thin, estimated on the order of 0.01-1 μm or less, and this has led to a lack of practical methodologies for detailed structural analyses. To fill this devoid, we have exploited the characteristics of Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) attenuated total reflection (ATR) spectroscopy, which allows us to conduct a chemical analysis on insect body surfaces and also to investigate depth-dependent structural changes. We have applied a combination of FTIR ATR microspectroscopy with IR radiation provided by a synchrotron facility to obtain in situ two-dimensional (2D) information of the cuticular lipid layer on the surface of the integument. The 2D FTIR spectra measured on the two-spotted cricket and the American cockroach show that the IR bands due to the cuticular lipid, such as CH symmetric and antisymmetric stretch, ν(CH) and ν(CH), change in intensity significantly, depending on the location of measurements. As if to keep pace with this, the bands of the amide group for the underlying cuticular layer also change in intensity significantly, although the changes are in the opposite direction; as the lipid bands increase in intensity, the amide band decreases, and vice versa. The ATR spectral analysis, which takes into account the characteristics of the evanescent wave, points out that the lipid layer would vary tens of times in the range of 0.01-1 μm significantly. The ν(CH) and ν(CH) bands show frequency shifts, which correlate to some extent with their intensity changes, suggesting that the drastic uneven distribution of the cuticular lipid would be related to the solid-liquid phase separation and also the coarsening of the solid phase domains. The formation of such topological features, significant heterogeneity in the lipid layer thickness, and solid-liquid phase ratios would be accompanied by the partitioning of lipid components according to molecular structures and physicochemical properties. Considering that each lipid component in insect body surface lipids is involved in various physiological roles, the segregation of lipid components during the formation of such heterogeneous structures is thought to have a significant impact on the functionality of the insect body surface.
昆虫表皮的角质层脂质暴露于环境中,并参与昆虫体表提供的各种功能,从保护免受环境影响(如控制水分蒸腾、减少磨损损伤和防止病原体入侵)到昆虫种间和种内的交流。与它们生理功能的重要性相比,关于昆虫体表角质层脂质的结构和物理性质的信息却少得惊人。外骨骼的脂质层非常薄,估计在 0.01-1 μm 或更薄的范围内,这导致缺乏用于详细结构分析的实用方法。为了填补这一空白,我们利用了傅里叶变换红外(FTIR)衰减全反射(ATR)光谱的特点,该技术允许我们对昆虫体表进行化学分析,并研究深度依赖的结构变化。我们将 FTIR ATR 微光谱学与同步辐射提供的红外辐射相结合,以获得表皮表面角质层脂质层的原位二维(2D)信息。在双斑蟋蟀和美洲大蠊上测量的 2D FTIR 光谱表明,由于角质层脂质的 IR 带,如 CH 对称和反对称伸缩、ν(CH)和 ν(CH),其强度根据测量位置的不同而显著变化。似乎为了与之保持同步,下面的角质层酰胺基团的带也显著变化,尽管变化方向相反;随着脂质带的强度增加,酰胺带的强度降低,反之亦然。ATR 光谱分析考虑了消逝波的特性,指出脂质层在 0.01-1 μm 的范围内会有数十倍的显著变化。ν(CH)和 ν(CH)带显示出频率位移,与它们的强度变化在一定程度上相关,这表明角质层脂质的剧烈不均匀分布与固-液相分离和固相畴的粗化有关。这种拓扑特征的形成、脂质层厚度的显著不均匀性以及固-液相比会伴随着根据分子结构和物理化学性质对脂质成分进行分配。考虑到昆虫体表脂质中的每个脂质成分都参与了各种生理作用,因此在形成这种不均匀结构的过程中,脂质成分的分离被认为对昆虫体表的功能有重大影响。