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First published online January 16, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, 363-372 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
doi: 10.1242/jeb.023739
Review |
Too much of a good thing: how insects cope with excess ions or toxins in the diet
Department of Biology, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8S 4K1
e-mail: odonnell{at}mcmaster.ca
Accepted 18 September 2008
| Summary |
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Key words: insect, Malpighian tubule, midgut, ion-selective microelectrodes, excretion, dietary toxins, haematophagy
| Introduction |
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| Short-term mechanisms for ionic and osmotic homeostasis in Rhodnius |
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320 mosmol l–1) is lower than that of its
own haemolymph (370 mosmol l–1). It must therefore secrete a
hypo-osmotic urine in order to preserve homeostasis, and this process involves
two steps, as first outlined by Maddrell and Phillips
(Maddrell and Phillips, 1975
|
Water movements during diuresis are a passive osmotic consequence of active
transepithelial ion secretion. Early measurements of osmotic permeability of
up to 4.3x 10–3 cm s–1
osmol–1, equivalent to 5.8x10–3 cm
s–1 osmol–1 after correction for unstirred
layer effects (O'Donnell et al.,
1982
), indicated that osmotic gradients of as little as 0.7 mosmol
l–1 across the basolateral membrane and a further 2.6 mosmol
l–1 across the apical membrane are sufficient to account for
the observed fluid secretion rates
(O'Donnell and Maddrell,
1983
). Thus, an increase in luminal osmolality of 3.3 mosmol
l–1 (=0.7 mosmol l–1+2.6 mosmol
l–1) is sufficient to account for the observed rates of fluid
secretion. This value is within 1% of iso-osmolarity, close to the value
(1.3%) actually measured. Osmotic permeability is increased 35% in the upper
Malpighian tubule (UMT) by the diuretic factor 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)
(O'Donnell et al., 1982
),
probably as a consequence of the insertion of aquaporins
(Martini et al., 2004
).
Aquaporin functions in insect Malpighian tubules are reviewed by Spring and
colleagues in this review volume (Spring
et al., 2009
).
It is worth emphasizing the very high rates of fluid and ion secretion by
the UMTs of Rhodnius during diuresis. Maddrell
(Maddrell, 1991
) estimated
that each cell secretes its own volume of near iso-osmotic fluid every 10 s.
Given that the levels of Cl– in the cell are less than
one-third of those in the secreted fluid
(Ianowski et al., 2002
), rates
of transepithelial Cl– secretion are even more impressive,
equivalent to exchange of the entire cellular content of Cl–
every 2 to 3 s!
The maintenance of K+ homeostasis during diuresis requires
reabsorption of K+ from the near-equimolar NaCl and KCl secreted by
the UMT. Simon Maddrell and John Phillips first demonstrated that reabsorption
of KCl is accomplished by the lower Malpighian tubule (LMT)
(Maddrell and Phillips, 1975
)
and that almost all of this reabsorption is accomplished by the lower third of
the LMT (Maddrell, 1978
). In
tubules of fifth instar Rhodnius, fluid moves along the LMT at 0.6 mm
s–1 (at 22°C) and is in contact with the reabsorptive
region for less than 10 s. The K+ concentration falls from 80 mmol
l–1 to less than 5 mmol l–1 during this
time, meaning that a decline of 1 mmol l–1 K+
takes only 130 ms and a decline in osmolality of 1 mosmol l–1
takes only 80 ms (Maddrell,
1978
). Almost no water is reabsorbed during KCl reabsorption. The
osmotic permeability (Pos) of the upper two-thirds of the
LMT is 3x10–3 cm s–1
osmol–1, similar to the value of 4.3x
10–3 cm s–1 osmol–1 for the
UMT. Osmotic permeability (Pos) decreases along the lower
third of the LMT to 0.4 cm s–1 osmol–1
(O'Donnell et al., 1982
).
Moreover, Pos declines further over much of the lower
third of the LMT in response to 5-HT. Pos is thus reduced
when rates of K+ and Cl– reabsorption are highest,
thereby further minimizing water reabsorption and contributing to the
production of hypo-osmotic urine.
The importance of rapid K+ reabsorption by the LMT can be
appreciated by considering the consequences of its failure. Given the high
rate of fluid secretion by the UMT and the high (
80 mmol
l–1) concentration of K+ in the fluid, the entire
haemolymph K+ content would be lost in <60 s if K+
was not reabsorbed downstream (Maddrell et
al., 1993
). It is thus important that the ion reabsorption
mechanism of the LMT be activated prior to the onset of fluid and ion
secretion by the UMT. The mean time for K+ reabsorption to reach
50% of the maximum rate in the LMT of fifth instar Rhodnius is 2.7
min. By contrast, the UMT does not begin to secrete fluid until 3 min after
addition of 5-HT and the mean time for secretion to reach 50% of the maximum
rate is 4.1 min (Maddrell et al.,
1993
).
The transporters involved in K+ and Cl–
reabsorption by the LMT differ fundamentally from those involved in the
secretion of these ions and Na+ by the UMT
(Fig. 1C). The results of a
variety of pharmacological and ion-substitution experiments suggest the
involvement of an omeprazole-sensitive P-type
H+/K+-ATPase and a stilbene-insensitive
Cl–/HCO –3 exchanger in the
apical membrane of the LMT. There are separate conductive pathways (i.e.
channels) for both ions in the basolateral membrane
(Haley and O'Donnell, 1997
;
Haley et al., 1997
). The
effects of changes in bathing saline K+ and Cl–
indicate that as much as 61% of the membrane potential is attributable to a
Cl– conductance and 29%–52% is attributable to a
K+ conductance. Cl– makes a larger contribution to
basolateral membrane potential when the bathing saline K+
concentration is reduced. A role for basolateral Cl– channels
is further suggested by the finding that Cl–-dependent
changes in basolateral membrane potential and KCl reabsorption are inhibited
by Cl– channel blockers such as diphenylamine-2-carboxylate
and 5-nitro-2(3-phenylpropylamino) benzoic acid. The effects of a variety of
pharmacological agents rule out the involvement of
K+/Cl–- or
Na+/K+/2Cl–-cotransporters in KCl
reabsorption. The contribution of basolateral K+ channels is
suggested by the finding that K+ reabsorption and
K+-dependent changes in membrane potential are inhibited by the
K+ channel blocker Ba2+.
Maintenance of haemolymph K+ homeostasis during diuresis
involves autonomous regulatory mechanisms in the UMT and LMT. As K+
concentration in the haemolymph declines, the UMT secretes fluid more slowly
and less K+ is secreted. It now appears that the replacement of
K+ by Na+ in the secreted fluid reflects competition
between Na+ and K+ for entry into the cell through the
bumetanide-sensitive Na+:K+:2Cl-cotransporter in the
basolateral membrane (Ianowski et al.,
2004
). Dose–response curves of secretion rate
versus bumetanide concentration are identical for tubules bathed in
K+-free saline and control saline with IC50 values of
2.6x10–6 mol l–1 and
2.9x10–6 mol l–1, respectively.
Kinetic analyses using double-reciprocal plots of K+ secretion rate
versus bathing saline K+ concentration show that
increasing Na+ concentration in the bathing saline increases the
Michaelis–Menten parameter Kt but has no effect on
maximum flux, Jmax, consistent with competitive inhibition
of K+ transport by Na+. The
Na+/K+/2Cl–-cotransporter thus appears
to operate as a bumetanide-sensitive
2Na+/2Cl–-cotransporter under some conditions. The
net effect of these changes in K+ secretion by the UMT is that the
LMT has more time to reabsorb K+, because fluid moves down the
lumen more slowly, and that there is less K+ to reabsorb. In
addition, the LMT reabsorbs more K+ from the lumen as haemolymph
K+ declines, presumably reflecting more favourable gradients for
K+ to move from cell to lumen through the basolateral channels.
| Long-term threats to homeostasis following the blood meal |
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| Nitrogenous waste excretion by blood feeders |
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Another surprise is that only 3% of the amino acids derived from the blood
meal proteins are used for egg production in the mosquito Aedes
aegypti (Scaraffia et al.,
2005
). By contrast, 60% of the amino acids are oxidized to provide
energy. Ammonia toxicity from amino acid metabolism is avoided by high rates
of ammonia excretion in the faeces but also through the synthesis of glutamine
and proline. Ammonia derived from amino acid deamination is temporarily stored
in a non-toxic form as proline. The ammonia can subsequently be recovered for
excretion and the carbon skeleton used for synthesis of various compounds or
for energy production (Goldstrohm et al.,
2003
). Glutamine plays an important role in shuttling ammonia from
the flight muscle to the fat body.
| Increases in the rates of transport of Ca2+, urate and organic anions after the blood meal |
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Malpighian tubules isolated from unfed Rhodnius secrete organic
anions such as para-aminohippurate (PAH) at very low rates. PAH secretion
rates rise sharply after feeding, reaching peak values 3–4 days after
the ingestion of a blood meal (Fig.
2). The induction is produced by the continued presence in the
haemolymph of a product of digestion of a protein rich meal
(Maddrell and Gardiner, 1975
).
A similar pattern is seen for the rates of excretion of uric acid
(Fig. 2). Urate secretion
increases dramatically in isolated tubules dissected from animals 2–3
days after feeding. Injection into the haemolymph of an amount of urate
equivalent to the amount eliminated in 2 h is sufficient to induce a doubling
of the rate of urate transport by the Malpighian tubules. In vitro
experiments with the tsetse fly Glossina suggest that increases in
the rates of urate secretion may be a direct response of the tubule cells to
an increase in urate concentration in the surrounding fluid
(O'Donnell et al., 1983
).
|
| ROS in blood feeders |
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Fe3++OH–+OH*.
Hydroxyl radicals then enter into a multistep pathway of lipid peroxidation
that leads to the production of organic hydroperoxides (ROOH). These, in turn,
react with haem-Fe2+ and haem-Fe3+ to produce alkoxyl
(RO*) and peroxyl (ROO*) radicals.
The potential for severe oxidative stress in blood-feeding insects has
resulted in the evolution of multiple lines of defence
(Graca-Souza et al., 2006
).
Firstly, insoluble aggregates of haem (such as haemozoin in Rhodnius)
may form inside the gut. Secondly, antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide
dismutase and catalase act to reduce the levels of ROS. Thirdly, haem-binding
proteins and ferritins (iron-binding proteins) may minimize the formation of
ROS from haem and iron. Lastly, blood feeders such as Rhodnius
maintain high levels of urate in the haemolymph by balancing the rates of
urate formation and excretion. High levels of urate are produced
experimentally in response to the injection of haemin (the Fe3+
oxidation product of haem) into the haemolymph or exposure to high ambient
O2 levels. Urate is thus produced in response to oxidative stress
and its concentration, up to 5 mmol l–1 in vivo, may
account for almost all of the free radical scavenging activity
(Souza et al., 1997
).
| Excretion of organic cations and organic anions in Drosophila and other species |
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Organic anions (OAs) are similarly classified as type I or type II.
Endogenous organic anions include mono-, di- and tricarboxylates, folates,
ascorbate, cyclic nucleotides and the metabolites of the ring-containing amino
acids Phe, Trp and Tyr. Exogenous OAs include fluorescein, para-aminohippuric
acid, salicylate, herbicides such as 2,4-D and metabolites of insecticides
such as malathion. Transport of type I OAs by insect Malpighian tubules is
strongly Na+ dependent (Linton
and O'Donnell, 2000
;
Ruiz-Sanchez and O'Donnell,
2007a
), whereas transport of type II OAs such as Texas Red and
methotrexate is sodium independent and appears to involve transporters which
are similar to multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 (MRP2). MRP2-like
transporters have been identified in the Malpighian tubules of cockroaches,
crickets and fruit flies (Karnaky et al.,
2003
; Leader and O'Donnell,
2005
; O'Donnell and Leader,
2006
).
| Methods for analysis of toxin transport in insects |
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Radiolabelled probes have long been used to measure the concentration of
inorganic ions and organic compounds in fluid samples collected from
Malpighian tubules in vitro (e.g.
Maddrell and Gardiner, 1974
).
Recently, fluorescent probes and either conventional fluorescence microscopy
or confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) techniques have been developed
for use with insect preparations and collected fluid samples
(Karnaky et al., 2003
;
Neufeld et al., 2005
;
Leader and O'Donnell,
2005
).
ISMEs have been used extensively for analysis of physiological ions
(H+, Na+, K+, Ca2+,
Cl–) inside cells of the Malpighian tubules or in samples of
secreted fluid (O'Donnell and Maddrell,
1995
; Ianowski et al.,
2002
). More recently, a Cd2+-selective microelectrode
originally developed for analysis of Cd2+ uptake by plant roots
(Piñeros et al., 1998
)
has been applied to the analysis of Cd2+ transport by isolated
tissues of the larvae of the midge Chironomus riparius, a species
known to be extraordinarily tolerant of toxic metals (E. M. Leonard, P. L.
Gillis, C. M. Wood and M.J.O'D., unpublished observations). ISMEs have also
been used to study transport of the prototypical organic cation
tetraethylammonium (TEA) and the organic anion salicylate. In addition, we
have applied the non-invasive SIET to measure the fluxes of TEA and salicylate
across isolated tissues such as the gut and the Malpighian tubules of insects
(Rheault and O'Donnell, 2004
;
O'Donnell and Rheault,
2005
).
SIET exploits ionic concentration gradients created in the unstirred layer
by ion transport across cell membranes or epithelial layers
(Fig. 3). The microelectrode is
positioned by an orthogonal array (X, Y, Z) of computer-controlled
stepper motors and is moved between two points at each measurement site. The
first point is close (within 5 to 10 µm) of the cell surface and the second
point is 30–100 µm farther away, at right-angles to the surface. The
voltage difference between the two limits of the microelectrode excursion
(
V) is used to calculate a corresponding concentration
difference (
C) using the electrode calibration curve. The
concentration difference is then converted to net flux
(molcm–2 s–1) using Fick's Law:
J=D
C/
X, where D is
the diffusion coefficient of the ion of interest and
X is the
excursion distance. SIET is particularly useful for spatial and temporal
analysis of ion transport. As discussed below, the role of different segments
of the gut and the Malpighian tubules in ion transport can be determined even
for small insects such as fruit flies and mosquitoes that are not amenable to
the Ussing chamber studies used for gut segments of larger species such as
locusts and Manduca sexta.
|
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| Organic cation transport by insect Malpighian tubules and gut |
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1 pmol cm–2 s–1 for
Malpighian tubules bathed in saline containing 0.1 mmol l–1
TEA) and then increases along the LMT, reaching values as high as 6 pmol
cm–2 s–1 close to the ureter
(Fig. 5). The LMT shows the
highest area-specific rate of TEA transport and the highest affinity for TEA
(i.e. lowest Kt), relative to the main segment of the
tubule and the posterior midgut (Fig.
6). The main segment nonetheless plays an important role in TEA
secretion by virtue of its greater length. TEA influx across the main segment
of tubules bathed in saline containing 0.1 mmol l–1 TEA is
equal to 72% of the flux across the whole tubule (main plus lower)
(Bijelic and O'Donnell,
2005
|
|
TEA transport by the LMT increases when the basolateral membrane potential
(Vbl) is hyperpolarized and decreases when
Vbl is depolarized, consistent with entry through a
potential-dependent mechanism. Importantly, blockade of K+ channels
with Ba2+ does not block either TEA uptake or the effects of TEA on
Vbl, indicating that electrogenic, carrier-mediated TEA
uptake does not occur through K+ channels
(Rheault et al., 2005
).
The mechanisms involved in the movement of TEA from cell to lumen across
the apical membrane of the tubule are unclear. In vertebrate models of OC
transport, exchange of cellular organic cations for luminal H+ has
been proposed (Pritchard and Miller,
1991
). The LMT of Drosophila acidifies the lumen
(O'Donnell and Maddrell,
1995
), so OC/H+ exchange would be a feasible mechanism.
TEA transport across the LMT is sensitive to the P-glycoprotein inhibitor
verapamil, suggesting that a P-glycoprotein-like mechanism may also be
involved in secretion of TEA by this segment. By contrast, TEA secretion along
the main segment is unaltered by verapamil
(Rheault and O'Donnell,
2004
).
| Dietary loading with organic cations: effects on mortality and excretion in Drosophila |
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3% of that
in the diet over the range 0–300 mmol l–1 TEA.
Mortality increases if competitive inhibitors of organic cation transporters
are also included in the diet: mortality increases from 24% with diets
containing 100 mmol l–1 TEA to 83% and 61% when the diet
contains 100 mmol l–1 TEA and 10 mmol l–1
quinidine or 10 mmol l–1 cimetidine, respectively
(Bijelic et al., 2005
Feeding Drosophila larvae a diet enriched in TEA is associated
with dramatic increases in TEA secretion by isolated Malpighian tubules. Acute
(24 h) exposure of the larvae to diets containing 50 mmol l–1
or 100 mmol l–1 TEA is correlated with an increase in TEA
secretion by isolated tubules of 37% and 77%, respectively
(Bijelic et al., 2005
). There
was no effect on TEA transport by the gut. The effects on the tubules are more
pronounced in response to chronic exposure to TEA in the diet. For larvae
raised from egg hatching to third instar (
10 days) on a diet containing
10 mmol l–1 or 50 mmol l–1 TEA, secretion of
TEA by isolated tubules increases by 114% and 158%, respectively (S.
Weerawardane and M.J.O'D., unpublished observations). These findings suggest
that even acute exposure to a toxin may result in enhancement of the capacity
of the excretory system to eliminate the toxin.
Although TEA transport by the gut does not appear to be altered in response
to acute exposure to TEA in the diet, the gut nonetheless plays an important
role in the elimination of TEA from the haemolymph. Active, saturable
transport of TEA by the posterior midgut and Malpighian tubules can account
for much of the observed rate of clearance of TEA from the haemolymph when the
diet contains less than 20 mmol l–1 TEA, corresponding to
haemolymph TEA concentrations of
0.5 mmol l–1. However,
for very high concentrations of haemolymph TEA, the combined rates of
saturable transport of TEA by the posterior midgut and Malpighian tubules can
account for only
10% of the observed rate of decline in haemolymph TEA
levels both in larvae switched from a TEA-rich to a TEA-free diet and after
injection of TEA into the haemolymph of animals maintained on TEA-free diet
(Bijelic and O'Donnell, 2005
).
It appears that passive diffusion of TEA from the haemolymph into the gut
lumen may augment TEA clearance. Ingestion of TEA-free food not only clears
the gut lumen of TEA but also creates a TEA-free compartment into which TEA
may diffusive passively from the haemolymph. This raises the possibility that
an insect exposed to a toxin such as TEA may be able to clear that toxin from
the haemolymph much more rapidly simply by ingesting toxin-free food. The
large volume and surface area of the gut in insects, particularly in larvae,
may thus allow it to act as a passive sink for toxins.
| P-Glycoproteins and alkaloid transport in insect Malpighian tubules |
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| Secretion of type I organic anions |
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Secretion of PAH is sodium dependent in vertebrate renal tissues, where
renal secretion of OAs involves tertiary active transport. The
Na+/K+-ATPase generates a Na+ gradient
favouring entry of Na+ into the cell. This Na+ gradient
is utilized to drive secondary active uptake of dicarboxylic acids such as
-ketoglutarate into the cell. In turn, cellular
-ketoglutarate
is exchanged for extracellular organic anions such as PAH. Preloading the
cells with dicarboxylic acids such as
-ketoglutarate tends to stimulate
uptake of PAH into the cells (trans-stimulation), whereas addition of
-ketoglutarate to the external medium along with PAH reduces PAH uptake
into the cells (cis-inhibition). Although basolateral uptake of
organic anions such as PAH or salicylate is strongly Na+ dependent
in Drosophila Malpighian tubules, there is no evidence for
cis-inhibition or trans-stimulation
(Ruiz-Sanchez and O'Donnell,
2006
). Current models propose that salicylate entry across the
basolateral membrane of Drosophila Malpighian tubules involves
Na+/salicylate-cotransport. This mechanism is sensitive to the
organic anion transport inhibitor probenecid, as well as to the monocarboxylic
acid transport inhibitor
-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid. Although some
monocarboxylate transporters involve cotransport of H+ with the
monocarboxylate and are stimulated by acidic external pH values, there is no
effect of pH on salicylate uptake by Drosophila tubules over the pH
range 5 to 7. We have therefore proposed that a direct coupling of salicylate
entry to that of Na+ mediates salicylate entry across the
basolateral membrane.
Chronic exposure (10 days) of Drosophila larvae to dietary
salicylate is associated with dramatic effects on fluid and salicylate
secretion by isolated Malpighian tubules
(Fig. 7). Unexpectedly, there
is a 3-fold increase in the basal rate of fluid secretion. This increase
appears not to be mediated by the release of diuretic factors into the
haemolymph because full responsiveness to first messengers such as the
diuretic peptide leucokinin or intracellular second messengers such as cAMP is
retained (Ruiz-Sanchez and O'Donnell,
2007b
). There are no large changes in the concentration of
salicylate in the secreted fluid (Fig.
7B) and the salicylate flux (the product of fluid secretion rate
and salicylate concentration in the secreted fluid) increases 3- to 5-fold
over the range of 0.05 to 0.5 mmol l–1 salicylate in the
bathing saline (Fig. 7C).
|
| MRPs in insect Malpighian tubules |
|---|
|
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Evidence for MRP2-like transporters in insect Malpighian tubules was first
presented by Karnaky and colleagues
(Karnaky et al., 2000
;
Karnaky et al., 2001
;
Karnaky et al., 2003
) using
the fluorescent MRP2 substrate Texas Red (sulphorhodamine 101). Accumulation
of Texas Red in the cells and lumen of the cockroach Periplaneta
americana and the cricket Acheta domesticus is ATP dependent and
is reduced by the presence of the non-fluorescent MRP2 substrate
chlorodinitrobenzene. The presence of MRP2-like transporters in insect
Malpighian tubules is further supported by staining of the apical surface of
cricket (or cockroach) MTs with an antibody to a sequence of rat MRP2
(Karnaky et al., 2003
).
Isolated Malpighian tubules of the cricket Teleogryllus commodus
accumulate the MRP2 substrate Texas red in the cells and lumen at
concentrations up to 20 and 40 times, respectively, those in the bathing
medium (Leader and O'Donnell,
2005
). However, quantitative CLSM analysis of fluorochrome
transport is not practical for some cricket tubules and most
Drosophila tubules because opaque concretions that can block or
interfere with laser light transmission are present in the cells and lumen.
Instead, nanolitre samples of fluid secreted by tubules set up in Ramsay
assays can be collected in hollow rectangular glass capillaries. Dye
concentration in the samples within the optically flat capillaries can then be
measured by CLSM and transepithelial dye flux is calculated as the product of
the fluid secretion rate (measured in the Ramsay assay) and dye concentration
(Leader and O'Donnell, 2005
).
The latter study also noted that high concentrations of MRP2 substrates such
as Texas Red or inhibitors such as MK571 inhibit fluid secretion by isolated
Malpighian tubules. It can therefore be difficult to determine from
concentration measurements alone whether an observed increase in luminal dye
concentration reflects a change in dye transport per se or simply a
decrease in the rate of fluid secretion. Calculation of dye flux as the
product of fluid secretion rate and dye concentration in collected fluid
samples thus provides an independent measurement of the non-specific toxicity
of transporter substrates or inhibitors.
In Drosophila Malpighian tubules, transporters implicated in Texas
Red secretion show a 3-fold lower capacity (Jmax=118 fmol
min–1 tubule–1) but 4-fold higher affinity
(Kt=7.1 µmol l–1) than the
transporters implicated in secretion of the type I organic anion fluorescein
(Jmax=299 fmol min–1
tubule–1, Kt=31.9 µmol
l–1) (Leader and
O'Donnell, 2005
). Nonetheless, the Malpighian tubules can play an
important role in eliminating MRP2 substrates from the haemolymph. For
example, Texas Red at a concentration of 20 µmol l–1 can
be cleared from the haemolymph in
6 min in adult Drosophila
(Leader and O'Donnell,
2005
).
| Effects of fluid secretion rate on the transport of organic anions and organic cations |
|---|
|
|
|---|
A similar relationship is seen for the type I organic anion salicylate; 64%
of the change in salicylate secretion in response to stimulation with cAMP,
cGMP or leucokinin can be explained on the basis of changes in fluid secretion
rate (Ruiz-Sanchez and O'Donnell,
2007a
). By contrast, only 7% of the increase in secretion of the
organic cation TEA by the Malpighian tubules can be explained on the basis of
the increase in fluid secretion rate when the tubules are stimulated with
cAMP, cGMP, leucokinin or tyramine (Bijelic
and O'Donnell, 2005
). For TEA, higher rates of proton transport by
the apical V-type H+-ATPase in stimulated tubules may enhance the
availability of H+ for a process of TEA/H+ exchange.
| Future research |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It will also be important to examine the links between phase I detoxification pathways (such as P450 enzymes), phase II conjugation reactions (such as those mediated by glutathione-S-transferases) and phase III elimination pathways. It will be of interest, in particular, to test the hypothesis that exposure to a toxin leads to a coordinated up regulation of both detoxification pathways and phase III elimination pathways. An understanding of these processes may contribute to the design of novel and environmentally benign control measures for pest species of insect.
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
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|---|
Bard, S. M. (2000). Multixenobiotic resistance as a cellular defense mechanism in aquatic organisms. Aquat. Toxicol. 48,357 -389.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bijelic, G. and O'Donnell, M. J. (2005). Diuretic factors and second messengers stimulate secretion of the organic cation TEA by the Malpighian tubules of Drosophila melanogaster. J. Insect Physiol. 51,267 -275.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bijelic, G., Kim, N. and O'Donnell, M. J. (2005). Effects of dietary or injected organic cations on larval Drosophila melanogaster: mortality and elimination of tetraethylammonium from the haemolymph. Arch. Insect. Biochem. Physiol. 60,93 -103.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bursell, E. (1965). Nitrogenous waste products of the tsetse fly, Glossina morsitans. J. Insect Physiol. 11,993 -1001.[CrossRef][Medline]
Chintapalli, V. R., Wang, J. and Dow, J. A. (2007). Using FlyAtlas to identify better Drosophila melanogaster models of human disease. Nat. Genet. 39,715 -720.[CrossRef][Medline]
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