Abstract

In mammals, the iron storage protein ferritin is predominantly synthesized on free polysomes and accumulates in the cytosol but some is secreted and circulates in the blood as serum ferritin. In insect tissues, on the other hand, iron-containing holoferritin accumulates in the vacuolar system and can be secreted through the Golgi complex. The midgut can secrete it to the gut lumen and other tissues to the hemolymph. Ferritin was isolated from the midgut and hemolymph of fifth instar larvae of Calpodes ethlius, Lepidoptera, Hesperiidae. This holoferritin is stable to heat (75°C) or in the presence of SDS, proteinase K, or urea, has an Mr above 600,000, contains iron and resembles mammalian ferritins in appearance by electron microscopy. Calpodes ferritin is a glycoprotein having N-linked high-mannose oligosaccharides. It is not antigenically related to horse ferritin but is related to that from Manduca sexta, Lepidoptera, Sphingidae. In its native form, Calpodes ferritin has only 3 isoforms with a pI 6.5–7 suggesting a more uniform subunit composition than that in vertebrates. It has two principle subunits, with relative Mrs of 24,000 (L) and 31,000 (G) and two minor subunits with Mrs of 26,000 and 28,000 all of which cross-react with antibody to Manduca ferritin. The 24 kDa subunit is the only one that is not glycosylated. Iron injections induce an increase in the proportion of the 24 kDa subunit. We conclude that Calpodes has ferritin and that it is glycosylated like mammalian serum ferritin.

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