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Diuresis in a desert beetle? hormonal control of the malpighian tubules ofOnymacris plana (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae)

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Summary

Malpighian tubules of a desert tenebrionid beetle,Onymacris plana, have been studied as isolated preparations. Under control conditions tubules of female beetles secreted fluid at an average rate of 3.3 nl/min, but this rate was increased 20–25 times by a diuretic hormone (DH).

Homogenates of the brain, corpora cardiaca (CC) and prothoracic ganglion induced striking increases in tubule secretion rates, which sometimes exceeded 100 nl/min. The increased rates were sustained for 3 h without renewal of the medium. Diuretic activity was also present in the other thoracic ganglia. High K treatment caused release of DH from the CC only.

Exogenous cyclic AMP (1 mM) stimulated the isolated tubules ofO. plana, but to a lesser extent than the DH. The cationic composition of the secreted fluid resembled that of most other insect tubules, with high K and low Na concentrations. Stimulation with DH doubled the Na concentration.

The DH was not inactivated by the tubules themselves, but was destroyed by contact with the haemolymph. An inactivation mechanism is vital in the apparently contradictory situation of a desert beetle possessing a diuretic hormone. The role of the cryptonephric system during diuresis is unknown.

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Abbreviations

DH :

diuretic hormone

cAMP :

adenosine 3′:5′-cyclic monophosphoric acid

CC :

corpora cardiaca

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Nicolson, S.W., Hanrahan, S.A. Diuresis in a desert beetle? hormonal control of the malpighian tubules ofOnymacris plana (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae). J Comp Physiol B 156, 407–413 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01101103

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