Department of Biology, University of Toronto at Mississauga, 3359 Mississauga Road, Mississauga, ON, Canada, L5L 1C6.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, 25 Willcocks Street, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5S 3B2.
J Exp Biol. 2024 Dec 1;227(23). doi: 10.1242/jeb.247752. Epub 2024 Nov 28.
Desiccation is a fundamental challenge confronted by all terrestrial organisms, particularly insects. With a relatively small body size and large surface-to-volume ratio, insects are susceptible to rapid evaporative water loss and dehydration. To counter these physical constraints, insects have acquired specialized adaptations, including a hydrophobic cuticle that acts as a physical barrier to transpiration. We previously reported that genetic ablation of the oenocytes - specialized cells required to produce cuticular hydrocarbons (HCs) - significantly reduced survivorship under desiccative conditions in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. Although increased transpiration - resulting from the loss of the oenocytes and HCs - was hypothesized to be responsible for the decrease in desiccation survival, this possibility was not directly tested. Here, we investigated the underlying physiological mechanisms contributing to the reduced survival of oenocyte-less (oe-) flies. Using flow-through respirometry, we show that oe- flies, regardless of sex, exhibited an increased rate of transpiration relative to wild-type controls, and that coating oe- flies with fly-derived HC extract restored the rate to near-wild-type levels. Importantly, total body water stores, including metabolic water reserves, as well as dehydration tolerance, measured as the percentage of total body water lost at the time of death, were largely unchanged in oe- flies. Together, our results directly demonstrate the critically important role played by the oenocytes and cuticular HCs to promote desiccation resistance.
脱水是所有陆地生物,特别是昆虫面临的基本挑战。由于昆虫的体型相对较小,表面积与体积的比例较大,因此它们容易受到快速蒸发失水和脱水的影响。为了应对这些物理限制,昆虫已经获得了专门的适应能力,包括作为蒸腾物理屏障的疏水表皮。我们之前曾报道过,基因消融产生表皮碳氢化合物(HCs)所必需的特化细胞——性腺细胞,会显著降低果蝇在干燥条件下的生存能力。尽管蒸腾作用的增加(由于性腺细胞和 HCs 的丧失)被假设是导致干燥生存能力下降的原因,但这一可能性并未直接得到验证。在这里,我们研究了导致性腺细胞缺失(oe-)果蝇生存能力降低的潜在生理机制。通过流动呼吸计,我们发现,无论性别如何,oe- 果蝇的蒸腾速率相对于野生型对照均显著增加,而用源自果蝇的 HC 提取物涂覆 oe- 果蝇可将该速率恢复到接近野生型水平。重要的是,oe- 果蝇的总身体水分储存量(包括代谢水储备)以及脱水耐受性(以死亡时总身体水分丧失的百分比来衡量)基本不变。总之,我们的结果直接证明了性腺细胞和表皮 HCs 在促进干燥抵抗方面发挥了至关重要的作用。