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Fig. 6. Larval Cu distribution. Third instar larvae were raised under Cu-limited
conditions with 100 µmol l–1 BCS (A,B), basal food (C,D
and enlarged in E,F, respectively) or exposed to 1 mmol l–1
Cu for 4 h (G,H) and then dissected. MtnA-EYFP fluorescence was used as a
proxy marker of Cu distribution in w1118 control larvae
(A,C,E,G) and Mvl97f/+ larvae (B,D,F,H). EYFP levels were
not different between male and female larvae (data not shown). Regions of the
gut are identified in C: pv, proventriculus; gc, gastric caecum; am, anterior
midgut; cc, copper cell region; mm, middle midgut; fe, iron cell region; pm,
posterior midgut; mp, Malpighian tubule. Under basal conditions, control
larvae (C) showed a complex distribution of EYFP throughout the anterior,
middle and posterior midgut as well as the proventriculus and Malpighian
tubules. By contrast, Mvl97f/+ larvae (D) did not show the
same high levels of EYFP in the proventriculus and anterior midgut (clearly
seen in the enlargements E and F). Under Cu-limited conditions, EYFP levels
were reduced across all tissues of both control (A) and
Mvl97f/+ (B) larvae, with the exception of the iron cell
region of the middle midgut and in the imaginal ring at the
midgut–hindgut border (indicated by arrows in A). Under Cu-excess
conditions EYFP levels were saturated in all tissues of both control (G) and
Mvl97f/+ (H) larvae.