Abstract

The changes in trehalase activity and its localization in the midgut of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, were studied during larval-pupal-adult development. Trehalase activity in larval midgut epithelium increased with the larval growth, reached a maximum level at the middle of the fifth instar, and then decreased gradually. Trehalase activity in larval midgut was found in the epithelial tissue but not in the digestive juice or the midgut contents. The trehalase activity in the whole midgut started to rise at the onset of spinning and increased abruptly at larval-pupal ecdysis to reach an extremely high level 3 days later. This high activity was maintained throughout the subsequent pharate adult development and dropped suddenly at emergence. The midgut trehalase activity during pupal-adult development was mainly found in the midgut contents but scarcely any in the epithelium. Subcellular distribution of midgut trehalase depended upon larval-pupal-adult development. The activity was concentrated in a precipitate fraction of the epithelium until the middle of the fifth instar. During larval-pupal development, however, the activity increased in the soluble fraction with a concomitant decrease in the precipitate fraction. Almost all the trehalase activity in pupal and pharate adult midgut was recovered in the soluble fraction of the midgut contents. The data are discussed from a viewpoint of the histolysis.

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