Nutritional and reproductive status affect amino acid appetite in house crickets (Acheta domesticus)

A. Tierney, Elizabeth Velazquez, Lauryn Johnson, Sarah Hiranandani, Meghan Pauly, Maya Souvignier
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Abstract

We examined amino acid appetite in the omnivorous house cricket (Acheta domesticus), a common model organism for both research and teaching. Our first experiment addressed the hypothesis that house crickets can discriminate between sucrose and essential amino acids (EAA), and that preference for the latter would be affected by prior feeding experience. To test this hypothesis, we compared feeding responses of juvenile and adult crickets following pre-feeding with sucrose or an essential amino acid mixture, predicting that sucrose-only pre-feeding would enhance subsequent intake of amino acids in a two-choice preference test. Based on previous studies, we also predicted that amino acid consumption would be enhanced in females compared to males, and in mated compared to virgin females. Hence we compared responses in male and female last instar nymphs, adult males, virgin females, mated females, and mated females allowed to lay eggs. The second experiment examined how extended periods of essential amino acid deprivation (48 h to 6 days) affected appetite for these nutrients in adult male and female insects. Finally, we examined growth and survival of juvenile and adult crickets fed a holidic diet lacking all amino acids and protein. Our results demonstrated that house crickets can distinguish EAA from sucrose and that consumption of the former is enhanced following sucrose-only pre-feeding. We also found sex and developmental differences, with juvenile and virgin females showing a greater preference for EAA than juvenile or adult males. Contrary to expectation, mated females preferred sucrose over EAA both prior to and after egg laying. We also found that the crickets of both sexes increased their intake of EAA when exposed to longer periods of deprivation, indicating that they engage in compensatory feeding on these nutrients. Finally, as expected we found that growth was severely limited in juveniles fed a diet lacking all amino acids, but adults and many juveniles survived for 30 days on this diet.
营养和生殖状况影响家蟋蟀(Acheta domesticus)对氨基酸的食欲
我们研究了杂食性家蟋蟀(Acheta domesticus)的氨基酸食欲,这是一种常见的研究和教学模式生物。我们的第一个实验解决了一个假设,即蟋蟀可以区分蔗糖和必需氨基酸(EAA),并且对后者的偏好会受到先前饲养经验的影响。为了验证这一假设,我们比较了预喂食蔗糖或必需氨基酸混合物后的幼蟋蟀和成年蟋蟀的摄食反应,预测在双选择偏好测试中,仅预喂食蔗糖会增加随后的氨基酸摄入量。根据之前的研究,我们还预测雌性的氨基酸消耗会比雄性增加,交配的雌性比处女的氨基酸消耗会增加。因此,我们比较了雄性和雌性末龄若虫、成年雄虫、处女雌虫、交配雌虫和允许产卵的交配雌虫的反应。第二个实验研究了长时间的必需氨基酸剥夺(48小时至6天)如何影响成年雄性和雌性昆虫对这些营养物质的食欲。最后,我们研究了喂食缺乏所有氨基酸和蛋白质的有机饲料的幼蟋蟀和成年蟋蟀的生长和存活情况。我们的研究结果表明,家蟋蟀可以区分EAA和蔗糖,并且在只喂食蔗糖后,前者的消耗量增加。我们还发现了性别和发育差异,幼鱼和处女雌鱼比幼鱼和成年雄鱼更偏爱EAA。与预期相反,雌性在产卵前和产卵后都更喜欢蔗糖而不是EAA。我们还发现,当暴露于较长时间的剥夺时,雌雄蟋蟀的EAA摄入量都会增加,这表明它们对这些营养物质进行补偿性喂养。最后,正如预期的那样,我们发现在喂食缺乏所有氨基酸的饲料时,幼鱼的生长受到严重限制,但成鱼和许多幼鱼在这种饲料下存活了30天。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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