Structural and chemical properties of insects' chitin-containing extracellular matrices
Wegmann, M.; Beck, M.; Cord-Landwehr, S.; Moerschbacher, B.; Scopolla, E.; Fischer, C.; Bertinetti, L.; Politi, Y.; Merzendorfer, H.
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Insects body barriers rely on specialized extracellular matrices that protect against harmful environmental influences. The outer barrier is the cuticle, which is composed of chitin, cuticle proteins and lipids. The peritrophic matrix (PM) serves as an inner barrier lining the midgut epithelium. It is composed of chitin fibers that are organized by PM proteins. While cuticle and PM proteins have received considerable attention in the past, supramolecular organization and physicochemical properties of the chitin component - particularly of the PM - remain poorly understood. Here, we combine synchrotron-based X-ray diffraction data from the PMs of lepidopteran and coleopteran insects with RNA interference (RNAi), mass spectrometric and histochemical analyses of the PM from Tribolium castaneum to determine chitins allomorphic state and degree of acetylation. The chitin of the PM exhibits signatures characteristic of dihydrate {beta}-chitin along the entire midgut. In contrast, the cuticle is made of tightly packed -chitin nanofibrils. Mass spectrometry revealed that the PMs chitin is highly acetylated (>95%). RNAi silencing of gut-specific genes encoding chitin deacetylasesTcCDA6-9 further increases the degree of acetylation. Histochemical analyses staining chitin with different degrees of acetylation confirm the predominance of highly acetylated chitin in the PM. Notably, the larval cuticle has a layered organization with deacetylated chitin present in exo- and highly acetylated chitin in endocuticles. Depletion of both TcCDA1 or TcCDA2 impairs chitin deacetylation, which indicates that both proteins cooperate in their activity in the integument. These results establish fundamental principles of polysaccharide-based extracellular matrices, with broad implications for insect biology.
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