Abstract

Injection of 20 nl of 1.0 M beta-alanine, about the minimal amount needed to produce wild-type tanned phenomenocopies from newly eclosed mutant black Drosophila melanogaster, increases stiffness and puncture-resistance of the wing cuticle. Increasing the concentration of beta-alanine to 2.0 M increases puncture-resistance further. Injection of 1.0 M of the beta-alanine analogue beta-aminoisobutyric acid, does not induce tanning or puncture-resistance, nor does injection of 1.0 M dopamine. However, injection of 1.0 M beta-alanine and 1.0 M dopamine increases puncture-resistance more than an injection of 1.0 M beta-alanine, though not more than an injection of 2.0 M beta-alanine alone. Within 10 min after injection of [3- 3H]beta-alanine into newly eclosed normal flies, 3H becomes 8.7 times more concentrated in the cuticle than in an equal area of underlying epidermis. 3H is excluded from the epidermis or cuticle of ebony strains. Ebony strains show a deficiency of cuticular electron-absorbing material, and the cuticular lamellae show a tendency to separate from each other. Compaction of the chitinous lamellae is induced in alkali-detanned pupal sheaths by exposure to nascent quinones of N-acetyldopamine or N-beta-alanyldopamine. Glucosamine, but not N-acetylglucosamine, reacts with such quinones in tanning reactions. Under an infrared beam, black cuticular pigmentation induces more rapid heating of haemocoel fluids than does tan pigmentation. A theory of pigmentation and sclerotization relative to environmental adaptation is presented.

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