Abstract

The white color in the larval integument of the silkworm Bombyx mori is considered the result of uric acid accumulation in its epidermal cells. Larvae of the eri silkworm Samia ricini (Lepidoptera; Saturniidae) also have a white and opaque integument, but little is known about its coloration mechanism. In this study, we first performed a feeding assay of S. ricini larvae using allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, which catalyzes the degradation of xanthine to uric acid. This treatment induced a clear translucent integument phenotype, indicating that the larval color of S. ricini is also determined by uric acid accumulation. Next, to investigate the genetic basis that controls uric acid accumulation in S. ricini larvae, we isolated and characterized the S. ricini homolog of mammalian biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles complex 1, subunit 2 (BLOS2), which is known to play a crucial role in urate granule biosynthesis. We created a transcription activator-like effector nuclease (TALEN)-mediated gene knockout of S. ricini BLOS2 (SrBLOS2) and succeeded in establishing SrBLOS2 knockout strains (SrBLOS2KO). SrBLOS2KO mutants exhibited a translucent larval integument phenotype and lacked uric acid in the epidermis, as also observed in allopurinol-fed larvae. In addition, electron microscopy revealed that urate granules were rarely observed in the epidermis of SrBLOS2KO larvae, whereas abundant granules were found in the epidermis of wild-type larvae. These results clearly demonstrated that larval S. ricini accumulates uric acid as urate granules in the epidermis and that the genetic basis that controls uric acid accumulation is evolutionarily conserved in S. ricini and B. mori.

Highlights

  • Uric acid is the final product of purine metabolism [1]

  • We revealed that S. ricini larvae accumulate uric acid as urate granules in the epidermis and that a certain part of the genetic basis that controls uric acid accumulation is evolutionally conserved between S. ricini and B. mori

  • These results indicate that the white color of the S. ricini larval integument is formed by the accumulation of uric acid in the epidermis

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Summary

Introduction

Uric acid is the final product of purine metabolism [1]. Most insects have been considered to merely emit uric acid to discard excessive nitrogen. Recent studies revealed that insects reuse and utilize uric acid in diverse manners [2,3]. The larvae of Bombyx mori (Lepidoptera: Bombycidae) represent one example. B. mori larvae accumulate uric acid as urate granules in their epidermal cells [4,5]. As urate granules diffuse and reflect external light, the larval integument of B. mori appears white and opaque.

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