Evolutionary trends of digestion and absorption in the major insect orders.

Arthropod Struct Dev

Departamento de Bioquimica, Instituto de Quimica, Universidade de São Paulo, Av. Prof. Lineu Prestes 748, 05508-000, São Paulo, Brazil.

Published: May 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses how digestion in insects varies across different gut regions, influenced by their evolutionary history and feeding habits.
  • It identifies key insect orders and proposed ancestral digestive patterns, noting the similarities between basic digestive plans of Neoptera and Polyneoptera.
  • The review also incorporates recent genomic data to highlight the evolutionary trends of midgut function and the known spatial organization of midgut absorption in certain insects.

Article Abstract

The spatial organization of digestion, which corresponds to the steps by which the ingested food is hydrolyzed in the different regions of the gut, was described in insects from the major insect orders. The pattern of digestion and absorption in the midgut shows a strong phylogenetic influence, modulated by adaptation to particular feeding habits. Based on this, basic digestive patterns were recognized and were proposed to represent the major ancestors from which the different orders evolved. The putative ancestors chosen to represent different points in the evolution from basal Neoptera to more derived orders were: Neoptera, Polyneoptera, Hemiptera, Hymenoptera-Panorpoidea (Diptera-Lepidoptera), Lepidoptera, and Cyclorrhapha. The basic plan of Neoptera was supposed to be alike that of Polyneoptera, which was hypothesized from studies performed in grasshoppers, crickets and from stick insects. For Holometabola, the basic plan was initially proposed from studies carried out in beetles, bees, nematocerous flies, common flies and also from moths. This review updates the physiological data supporting the putative midgut basic patterns by discussing available data on insects pertaining to different taxa and details the evolutionary trends of midgut function among the major insect orders. Furthermore, by using recent genomic and transcriptome data, this review discusses the few insects for which the spatial organization of midgut absorption is known.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.asd.2020.100931DOI Listing

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