| Literature DB >> 29215078 |
Helena Bilandžija1, Mara Laslo2, Megan L Porter3, Daniel W Fong4.
Abstract
Many species adapted to aphotic subterranean habitats have lost all body pigmentation. Yet, melanization is an important component of wound healing in arthropods. We amputated appendages in a variety of cave-adapted and surface-dwelling arthropods. A dark clot formed at the site of injury in most species tested, including even albino cave-adapted species. The dark coloration of the clots was due to melanin deposition. The speed of wound melanization was uncorrelated with a difference in metabolic rate between surface and cave populations of an amphipod. The chelicerate Limulus polyphemus, all isopod crustaceans tested, and the cave shrimp Troglocaris anophthalmus did not melanize wounds. The loss of wound melanization in T. anophthalmus was an apomorphy associated with adaptation to subterranean habitats, but in isopods it appeared to be a symplesiomorphy unrelated to colonization of subterranean habitats. We conclude that wound melanization i) is an important part of innate immunity because it was present in all major arthropod lineages, ii) is retained in most albino cave species, and iii) has been lost several times during arthropod evolution, indicating melanization is not an indispensable component of wound healing in arthropods.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29215078 PMCID: PMC5719348 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-17471-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Higher taxonomic groupings and results of wound melanization assay for each species.
| Class | Order | Family | Species (albinos in bold*) | WM | PTU |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pycnogonida | Pantopoda | Phoxichilidiidae |
| 1/1 | |
| Merostomata | Xiphosura | Limulidae |
|
| na |
| Arachnida | Araneae | Dysderidae |
| 1/1 | |
| Oribatida | Trhypochthoniidae |
| 3/3 | ||
| Pseudoscorpionida | Neobisiidae |
| 5/5 | ||
| Scorpiones | Euscorpiidae |
| 1/1 | ||
| Diplopoda | Chordeumatida | Cleidogonidae |
| 3/3 | 2/2 |
|
| 1/1 | ||||
| Polydesmida | Polydesmidae |
| 4/4 | ||
|
| 5/5 | 3/3 | |||
| Malacostraca | Amphipoda | Caprellidae |
| 4/4 | |
| Crangonyctidae |
| 3/3 | 1/1 | ||
|
| 4/4 | 2/2 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 3/3 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 6/6 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 3/3 | |||
|
| 3/3 | 2/2 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 3/3 | |||
|
| 2/2 | 1/1 | |||
|
| 3/3 | 3/3 | |||
|
| 2/2 | 1/1 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 3/3 | |||
| Gammaridae |
| 2/2 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 6/6 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 6/6 | |||
|
| 3/3 | 3/3 | |||
|
| 6/6 | 6/6 | |||
| Niphargidae |
| 6/6 | |||
|
| 1/1 | ||||
|
| 3/3 | ||||
| Decapoda | Atyidae |
| 5/5 | ||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
| Crangonidae |
| 3/3 | 3/3 | ||
| Palaemonidae |
| 6/6 | 2/2 | ||
|
| 3/3 | ||||
| Isopoda | Asellidae |
|
| na | |
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
| Cirolanidae |
|
| na | ||
| Trichoniscidae |
|
| na | ||
|
|
| na | |||
| Sphaeromatidae |
|
| na | ||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
|
|
| na | |||
| Collembola | Entomobryomorpha | Entomobryidae |
| 4/4 | 1/1 |
| Isotomidae |
| 1/1 | |||
| Insecta | Hemiptera | Cixiidae |
| 5/5 | 2/2 |
| Coleoptera | Carabidae |
| 2/2 |
Habitat and collection location information are given in Table 2. Albino species are given in bold and marked with an asterisk. Each occurrence of a species listed more than once, differentiated with a letter after the species name, represents a distinct geographic population or clade (see Table 2). WM = wound melanization response, given as number of individuals showing melanized wounds/number of individuals with induced wounds; negative responses are given in bold. PTU = number of individuals where wound melanization was blocked by PTU treatment/number of individuals treated; na denotes not applicable to species showing no wound melanization; blank denotes PTU treatment was not attempted due to lack of specimens or PTU being unavailable in field facilities.
Habitats and origins of species included in this study.
| Species (albinos in bold | Habitat | Collection Site | County/Region | US State/Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Littoral zone | Woods Hole | Barnstable | Massachusetts |
|
| Littoral zone | Woods Hole | Barnstable | Massachusetts |
|
| Cave wall | Tučepska vilenjača (cave) | Middle Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Moss/leaf litter | Lab-bred colony | Middlesex | Massachusetts |
|
| Cave wall | Baba (cave) | Middle Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Cave floor | Jama pod Stipkovcem (cave) | Middle Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Cave wall | Buckeye Creek Cave | Greenbrier | West Virginia |
|
| Cave wall | Buckeye Creek Cave | Greenbrier | West Virginia |
|
| Cave wall | Tamnica (cave) | Kordun | Croatia |
|
| Cave wall | Miljacka II (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Littoral zone | Woods Hole | Barnstable | Massachusetts |
|
| Interstitial | Spring near Elsah | Jersey | Illinois |
|
| Cave pool | Gallohan Cave | Lee | Virginia |
|
| Surface Stream | Pallisades | Jersey | Illinois |
|
| Surface Stream | Loutre River tributary | Montgomery | Missouri |
|
| Seepage Spring | Great Falls | Montgomery | Maryland |
|
| Epikarst | Marshall Cave | Highland | Virginia |
|
| Cave stream | Organ Cave | Greenbrier | West Virginia |
|
| Cave stream | Patton Cave | Monroe | West Virginia |
|
| Phreatic aquifer | Artesian spring | Hays | Texas |
|
| Epikarst | Litton Cave | Lee | Virginia |
|
| Hypotelminorheic | Seepage Spring | Arlington | Virginia |
|
| Karst spring | Tylersville Spring | Centre | Pennsylvania |
|
| Karst spring | Maiden Spring | Tazewell | Virginia |
|
| Karst spring | Ward Spring | Greenbrier | West Virginia |
|
| Cave stream | Fallen Rock Cave | Tazewell | Virginia |
|
| Cave stream | Organ Cave | Greenbrier | West Virginia |
|
| Cave stream | Tamnica (cave) | Kordun | Croatia |
|
| Cave stream | Mandelaja (cave) | Kordun | Croatia |
|
| Cave pool | Bunar kod Rasline (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Cave lake | Jama u Predolcu (cave) | Neretva | Croatia |
|
| Phreatic aquifer | Bunar kod Rasline (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Phreatic aquifer | Izvor špilja Karišnica (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Cave lake | Jama u Predolcu (cave) | Neretva | Croatia |
|
| Phreatic aquifer | Tamnica (cave) | Kordun | Croatia |
|
| Littoral zone | Woods Hole | Barnstable | Massachusetts |
|
| Phreatic aquifer | Artesian spring | Hays | Texas |
|
| Lakes and ponds | Commercial dealer | Howard | Maryland |
|
| Karst spring | Berberov buk | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Seepage Spring | Seepage Spring | Arlington | Virginia |
|
| Cave stream | Bucket O’Blood Cave | Sewanee | Tennessee |
|
| Karst spring | Caskey Spring | Berkeley | West Virginia |
|
| Cave stream | Odgen Cave | Frederick | Virginia |
|
| Karst spring | White House Spring | Jefferson | West Virginia |
|
| Cave pool | Bjelušica (cave) | Southern Herzegovina | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
|
| Cave pool | Manita peć (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Phreatic aquifer | Artesian spring | Hays | Texas |
|
| Cave floor | Miljacka II (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Cave floor | Mrgića špilja (cave) | Kordun | Croatia |
|
| Cave stream | Tamnica (cave) | Kordun | Croatia |
|
| Cave stream | Miljacka II (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Cave stream | Miljacka II (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Cave lake | Izvor špilja Karišnica (cave) | Northern Dalmatia | Croatia |
|
| Leaf litter | Pimmit Run | Arlington | Virginia |
|
| Lab substrate | Lab-bred colony | Middlesex | Massachusetts |
|
| Lava tube | Kaumana cave | Hawaii | Hawaii |
|
| Cave floor | Jama pod Stipkovcem (cave) | Middle Dalmatia | Croatia |
Species are listed in the same order as in Table 1 for cross reference. Albino species are given in bold and marked with an asterisk. Each occurrence of a species listed more than once, differentiated with a letter after the species name, represents a distinct geographic population or clade.
Figure 1Albino cave invertebrates retain the ability to synthesize melanin in response to wounding. The site of cuticular injury turned dark in the cixiid Oliarus polyphemus (A), the diplopod Brachydesmus inferus (B), and the amphipod Stygobromus emarginatus (C). PTU treated specimens showed no black plug formation (D–F), suggesting phenoloxidase is involved in the melanization pathway. Inset in A is a magnified image of another O. polyphemus amputated leg. Red arrows point out the wound site. Photographs by the authors.
Figure 2Albino cave shrimp Troglocaris anophthalmus lost the ability to synthesize melanin at the wound site (A and B, indicated by red arrow). Surface shrimp show melanized clot at the wound site (C). The albinoTexas cave shrimp Palaemon antrorum melanizes wound sites (D). An Atyaephyra desmarestii specimen (surface shrimp) shows a melanized wound (E). Insets in C and E are magnified images of injured limb. Photographs by the authors.
Figure 3Wound melanization is present in most major arthropod lineages. Light blue lines indicate a loss of wound melanization in that lineage; dotted light blue indicates both phenotypes are present in that lineage. Arthropod relationships based on Legg et al.[62]. Photographs by the authors.