Abstract

Stick insects (Carausius morosus) develop pseudotumors in aging adults. Pseudotumor formation starts at the M2 midgut region where an accumulation of stomatogastric nerve terminals is observed. Pseudotumors arise from dying columnar cells whose basal parts form an "amorphous substance" at the basement membrane whereas the apical parts, including the nucleus, are expelled into the gut lumen. The "amorphous substance" is ensheathed by hemocytes. These nodules, which do not melanize, characterize the phenotype of the pseudotumors. With age, cell death and pseudotumor infestation increases. It is shown that the maintenance of midgut tissue homoeostasis is disturbed and becomes more serious with growing pseudotumor incidence. The increased death rate of differentiated columnar cells is no longer compensated by the proliferation of regenerative cells, i.e., intestinal stem cells, in the midgut nidi. The appearance of "holes" in the intestinal wall is evidently a causative factor of premature death. Extirpation of the hypocerebral ganglion in young adults of the stick insect (before the onset of spontaneous pseudotumor formation) provokes the apoptosis of a large number of columnar cells within 24 h and the formation of pseudotumors that are histologically identical with spontaneous ones. We conclude that the stomatogastric nervous system plays a decisive role in the regulatory mechanism maintaining midgut tissue homeostasis. The possibility of experimentally manipulating the regulatory system provides a valuable tool for the exploration of extrinsic factors involved into the feedback circuitry of tissue homeostasis. The fact that comparable pseudotumors were observed in a number of orthopteromorphan species, where they could also be induced by the interruption of the stomatogastric nervous system, indicates that its role in tissue homoeostasis may be widespread in insects and possibly represent a general principle.

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