蟋蟀飞肌多态性:肌肉特征及其对无飞性进化的影响。

A J Zera, J Sall, K Grudzinski
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引用次数: 145

摘要

蟋蟀的飞肌是多态的,以粉红色或白色的表型存在。与刚蜕皮的全翅成虫的粉红色肌肉相比,白色肌肉尺寸较小,肌肉纤维的数量和大小减少,体外酶活性和呼吸速率也降低。G. firus在翅膀长度上也是多态的。所有新蜕皮的长翅成虫都表现出粉红色肌肉表型,而大多数新蜕皮的短翅成虫表现出白色肌肉表型,这是由于肌肉生长受阻造成的。随着长翅成虫年龄的增长,成熟的粉红色肌肉通过组织分解转化为白色肌肉。粉红色肌肉更高的呼吸速率可能导致长翼雌性的整体呼吸速率升高,这在之前已经有文献记载,并且被认为是将营养从产卵中转移。与短翅成年蟋蟀的未发育白肌相比,长翅成年蟋蟀的组织分解白肌也表现出显著的呼吸速率和酶活性,尽管这种差异不如粉红色和白色肌肉之间的差异那么大。有白色和粉红色飞行肌肉的雌性的繁殖力比有短翅膀和长翅膀的雌性要高得多。在以前的研究中,没有考虑飞行肌肉变化的影响,通过比较短翼和长翼雌性的产蛋量来估计无飞行能力带来的适应性增加。我们的研究结果表明,这种适应性增加的幅度被大大低估了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Flight-muscle polymorphism in the cricket Gryllus firmus: muscle characteristics and their influence on the evolution of flightlessness.

Flight muscles of the cricket Gryllus firmus are polymorphic, existing as pink or white phenotypes. White muscles are smaller in size, have reduced number and size of muscle fibers, and have reduced in vitro enzyme activities and respiration rates relative to pink muscles of newly molted, fully winged adults. G. firmus is also polymorphic for wing length. All newly molted long-winged adults exhibited the pink-muscle phenotype, while most newly molted short-winged adults exhibited the white-muscle phenotype, which resulted from arrested muscle growth. As long-winged adults aged, fully grown pink muscle was transformed into white muscle via histolysis. The substantially higher respiration rate of pink muscle likely contributes to the elevated whole-organism respiration rate of long-winged females, which has been documented previously and which is thought to divert nutrients from egg production. Histolyzed white flight muscle from long-winged crickets also exhibited significantly elevated respiration rate and enzyme activities compared with underdeveloped white muscle from short-winged adults, although these differences were not as great as those between pink and white muscles. Fecundity was much more elevated in females with white verus pink flight muscles than it was in females with short versus long wings. The fitness gain resulting from flightlessness has typically been estimated in previous studies by comparing enhanced egg production of short-winged and long-winged females, without considering the influence of flight-muscle variation. Our results suggest that the magnitude of this fitness gain has been substantially underestimated.

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