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Locust gut epithelia do not become more permeable to fluorescent dextran and bacteria in the cold.

Mahmoud I El-SaadiKaylen BrzezinskiAaron HinzLaura PhillipsAlex WongLucie GerberJohannes OvergaardHeath A MacMillan
Published in: The Journal of experimental biology (2023)
The insect gut, which plays a role in ion and water balance, has been shown to leak solutes in the cold. Cold stress can also activate insect immune systems, but it is unknown if the leak of the gut microbiome is a possible immune trigger in the cold. We developed a novel feeding protocol to load the gut of locusts (Locusta migratoria) with fluorescent bacteria before exposing them to -2°C for up to 48 h. No bacteria were recovered from the hemolymph of cold-exposed locusts, regardless of exposure duration. To examine this further, we used an ex vivo gut sac preparation to re-test cold-induced fluorescent FITC-dextran leak across the gut and found no increased rate of leak. These results question not only the validity of FITC-dextran as a marker of paracellular barrier permeability in the gut, but also to what extent the insect gut becomes leaky in the cold.
Keyphrases
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