Crystallization of alpha- and beta-carotene in the foregut of Spodoptera larvae feeding on a toxic food plant

in: Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (2011)
Shao, Yongqi; Spiteller, Dieter ; Tang, Xiaoshu; Colesie, Claudia; Münchberg, Ute; Schneider, Bernd; Büdel, Burkhard; Popp, Jürgen; Heckel, David G.; Boland, Wilhelm; Ping, Liyan; Bartram, Stefan
In the animal kingdom, carotenoids are usually absorbed from dietary sources and transported to target tissues. Despite their general importance, the uptake mechanism is still poorly understood. Here we report the “red crop” phenomenon, an accumulation of a- and b-carotene in crystalline inclusions in the enlarged foregut of the polyphagous Spodoptera larvae feeding on some potentially toxic plant leaves. The carotene crystals give the insect foregut a distinctive orange-red color. The crystals are embedded in a homogenous lawn of the bacterium Enterococcus casseliflavus, but the carotene seems to be selectively taken from the food plant. Caterpillars which fail to develop these carotene crystals exhibit a high mortality or fail to develop to adulthood. The crystallization of carotene and the enlargement of the foregut thus appears to manifest a multiple-step physiological adaptation of the insects to toxic food plants.

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