Homeostasis and physiology on Vitamin B2 of the silkworm,
Bombyx mori
M. Nakamura
Dept. of
Sericulture, National Inst. of Sericultural and Entomological
Sci., 1-2 Ohwashi Tsukuba Ibaraki 305-8634 Japan
The effects of
lack of vitamin B2 on the growth and physiology of the silkworm
was examined. When silkworm larvae were reared on a vitamin B2
deficient diet, their growth retarded gradually whereas the
total vitamin B2 content in larval body was decreased rapidly.
This decrease was mostly due to the fall of riboflavin content;
FAD and FMN, the coenzyme forms of vitamin B2, changed in
content only slightly. There were no changes in activity of
xanthine dehydrogenate that requires FAD for coenzyme. A large
amount of riboflavin was accumulated in the Malpighian tubules
but this almost disappeared when the larvae were reared on a
vitamin B2 deficient diet. When the supply of vitamin B2 to the
larvae is deficient, riboflavin accumulated in the Malpighian
tubules may act as a pool for the homeostasis of FAD and FMN.
The activity of flavokinase that catalyzes the formation of FMN
from riboflavin was found to be high in the Malpighian tubules.
This enzyme, therefore, would play a part in the incorporation
of riboflavin into the Malpighian tubules. As the activity of
flavokinase was also high in the midgut, it may function during
the ingestion of vitamin B2 from diet. When larvae were reared
on a vitamin B2 deficient diet from the beginning of the 3rd
instar, the activities of flavokinase in the midgut and
Malpighian tubules at the 5th instar were higher than the
control. The increased activity possible favors the increased
supplement of the coenzymes forms of vitamin B2. Since there was
no changes in flavokinase activity when larvae were reared on a
vitamin B2 deficient diet from the beginning of the 5th instar,
so that the coenzyme forms will be supplied from a riboflavin
pool by the increased flavokinase activity only in the serious
shortage of vitamin B2.
Index terms:
Bombyx mori, riboflavin, flavokinase, Malpighian tubules
Copyright: The copyrights of
this abstract belong to the author (see right-most box of
title table). This document also appears in Session 13 –
INSECT PHISIOLOGY, NEUROSCIENCES, IMMUNITY AND CELL BIOLOGY
Symposium and Poster Session, ABSTRACT BOOK II –
XXI-International Congress of Entomology, Brazil, August
20-26, 2000.