Abstract

European corn borer (ECB; Ostrinia nubilalis (Hubner)) larvae (third instar) fed 0.05% w/w wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) in their diet for 72 h showed very little increase in body weight, whereas weight of control larvae increased nearly fourfold. Light and transmission electron microscopy studies showed that the morphology of the peritrophic membrane (PM) changed within 24 h after ECB larvae fed on the WGA diet. Whereas the PM in the anterior region of the midgut was a thin membranous structure in control larvae, the WGA-fed larvae secreted a multiple-layered and unorganized PM that contained embedded food particles, bacteria, and pieces of disintegrated microvilli. Gold-labeled WGA was localized specifically in the PM and microvilli. The PM of WGA-fed larvae was inundated with dark-staining amorphous structures that, when incubated with anti-WGA, showed heavy WGA localization. The antibody label indicated that most of the ingested WGA was found in the PM, with lesser amounts on the microvillar surface and the least amount within the epithelium. After 72 h, the middle portion of the mesenteron revealed a thin, compact PM in the control larvae, whereas the PM of the WGA-fed larvae was multilayered and discontinuous, which allowed plant cell-wall fragments to penetrate into the microvilli of the epithelium. Scanning electron microscopy of PMs from fifth instar ECB larvae fed the WGA diet revealed a breakdown in the chitinous meshwork by 48 h after initiation of feeding. The endo-PM surface from control larvae was smooth and intact, whereas the PM of WGA-fed larvae showed disintegration of the meshwork and a reduced proteinaceous matrix. This allowed bacteria and food particles to penetrate through the PM into the ectoperitrophic space and directly contact the microvilli. Therefore, WGA, a protein inhibitor of larval growth, interferes with the formation and integrity of the PM, which exposes the brush border to ingested material. This, in turn, appears to stimulate secretion of additional PM layers, the concomitant disintegration of the microvilli, and cessation of feeding.

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