Abstract

For the first time a sugar receptor (lectin) has been localized by electron microscopy in an invertebrate. The peritrophic membrane of the blowfly larva, Calliphora erythrocephala, is shown here to express lectins with high specificity for mannose. The lectin is restricted to the lumen side of the peritrophic membrane. The surface of the midgut epithelium is devoid of mannose-specific lectins. It is suggested that the midgut epithelium has lost these lectins during the course of evolution in favour of the peritrophic membrane which is secreted by specialized cells only at the beginning of the midgut. Peritrophic membranes and the midgut epithelium lack lectins specific for galactose. The lumen side of the peritrophic membrane of the larvae has mannose and/or glucose residues, and it is densely packed with two species of bacteria, Proteus vulgaris and P. morganii. These also have mannose-specific lectins as well as mannose residues on their pili. The existence of mannose-specific receptors and mannose residues on both, peritrophic membranes and bacteria, leads to the assumption of mutual adherence between the two surfaces.

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