Affiliation:
1. Institute of Evolutionary Biology, CSIC-Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract
Present-day pterygote insects have two pairs of wings, one in the mesothorax (T2), the other in the metathorax (T3), and both have diverged in structure and function in different groups. Studies in endopterygote and paraneopteran species have shown that the gene
Ultrabithorax
(
Ubx
) specifies the identity and wing structure in T3, whereas the gene
apterous
(
ap
) significantly contributes to forming modified T2 wings. We wondered whether these
Ubx
and
ap
mechanisms operate in the lineage of polyneopterans. To explore this possibility, we used the cockroach
Blattella germanica
(Polyneoptera and Blattodea), in which the T2 wings are sclerotized (tegmina), whereas those of the T3 are membranous. We found that
Ubx
determines the structure of T3 and the membranous wing, while
ap
significantly contributes to form the sclerotized T2 tegmina. These results along with the studies carried out on the beetle
Tribolium castaneum
by Tomoyasu and collaborators suggest that
ap
plays an important role in the sclerotization and melanization of the T2 wings in neopteran groups that have sclerotized forewings. In turn, the sclerotizing properties of
ap
demonstrated in beetles and cockroaches suggest that the origin of this function goes back to the emergence of Neoptera, in the mid Devonian.
Funder
Consell Català de Recerca i Innovació
Agencia Estatal de Investigación
European Fund for Economic and Regional Development
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
1 articles.
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