Synthesis and mobilization of glycogen and trehalose in adult male
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
15 p. : il.The vector of Chagas’ disease, Rhodnius prolixus, feeds exclusively on
blood. The blood meals are slowly digested, and these insects wait some
weeks before the next meal. During the life of an insect, energy-requiring
processes such as moulting, adult gonadal and reproductive growth,
vitellogenesis, muscular activity, and fasting, lead to increased
metabolism. Carbohydrates are a major source of energy and their
mobilization is important. We determined the amounts of glycogen,
trehalose, and glucose present in the fat body and/or hemolymph of adult
males of R. prolixus and recorded the processes of accumulation and
mobilization of these carbohydrates. We also tested our hypothesis that
these processes are under endocrine control. The amount of glycogen in
the fat body progressively increased until the fourth day after feeding
(from 9.372.2 to 77.377.5 mg/fat body), then declined to values
around 36.374.9 mg/fat body on the fifteenth day after the blood meal.
Glycogen synthesis was eliminated in decapitated insects and headtransplanted
insects synthesized glycogen. The amount of trehalose in the
fat body increased until the sixth day after feeding (from 16. 671.7 to
40. 675.3 nmol/fat body), decreased abruptly, and stabilized between
days 7 and 15 at values ranging around 15–19 nmol/fat body.
Decapitated insects did not synthesize trehalose after feeding, and this
effect was reversed in head-transplanted insects. The concentration of
trehalose in the hemolymph increased after the blood meal until the
third day (from 0.0770.01 to 0.7570.05 mM) and at the fourth
day it decreased until the ninth day (0.2170.01 mM), when it
increased again until the fourteenth day (0.7970.06 mM) after the
blood meal, and then declined again. In decapitated insects, trehalose
concentrations did not increase soon after the blood meal and at the
third day it was very low, but on the fourteenth day it was close to the
control values. The concentration of glucose in the hemolymph of
untreated insects remained low and constant (0.1870.01 mM)
during the 15 days after feeding, but in decapitated insects it
progressively increased until the fifteenth day (2.0070.10 mM). We
recorded the highest trehalase activity in midgut, which was
maximal at the eighth day after feeding (2,8307320 nmol of
glucose/organ/h). We infer that in Rhodnius prolixus, the
metabolism of glycogen, glucose, and trehalose are controlled by
factors from the brain, according to physiological demands at
different days after the blood mea