Abstract

We have previously shown that the pathway of porphyrin synthesis operates in the blood feeding triatomine bug Rhodnius prolixus but not in the cattle tick Boophilus microplus. In the present paper we studied the correlation between heme synthesis and egg development in Rhodnius. There is a sharp increase heme biosynthetic capability in the fat body (160%) and in the ovaries (360%) in response to a blood meal, as evaluated from the activity of the enzyme δ-aminolevulinate dehydratase (EC 4.2.1.24). The in vivo inhibition of ALA-D by succinyl acetone results in a dose dependent decrease of oviposition. Oviposition is recovered when porphobilinogen, the product of the impaired reaction, is added to the succinyl acetone enriched blood. Taken together, these results show that heme biosynthesis is a fundamental event to vitellogenic females. The demand for heme in this metabolic juncture cannot be supplied by the heme eventually absorbed during blood digestion and associated with Rhodnius heme binding protein (RHBP), which is then incorporated into growing oocytes. Inhibition of heme biosynthesis results in lower levels of RHBP in the hemolymph, suggesting that the synthesis of this protein is controlled by heme availability.

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