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Formation of insoluble and colloidally dispersed tannic acid complexes in the midgut fluid of Manduca sexta (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae): An explanation for the failure of tannic acid to cross the peritrophic envelopes of lepidopteran larvae

✍ Scribed by Raymond V. Barbehenn; Michael M. Martin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
83 KB
Volume
39
Category
Article
ISSN
0739-4462

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✦ Synopsis


Magnesium and calcium ions, in concentrations comparable to those reported in the midgut fluids of lepidopteran larvae, bring about the precipitation of most of the tannic acid present in simple solutions buffered at pH 8.0 and 10.0, but not at pH 6.5. In contrast, when tannic acid is added to Manduca sexta midgut fluid, less than 31% of the tannic acid added to the gut fluid is converted to a form that can be centrifuged into a pellet. The rest remains in the supernatant solution in the form of a colloidal suspension. Very little of the tannic acid, if any, remains in true solution. We suggest that the tannic acid-containing phase that is produced when tannic acid is added to midgut fluid is a complex multi-molecular aggregate of indefinite chemical composition, incorporating varying amounts of tannic acid, surface-active phospholipids, proteins, and polyvalent metal ions. On the basis of this study, we further suggest that the failure of tannins to diffuse across the peritrophic envelopes of lepidopteran larvae is a result of the capacity of the peritrophic envelope to act as a physical barrier to insoluble and colloidally dispersed particles, not the presence of substances in the matrix that strongly adsorb polyphenols or the presence of an extensive network of fixed anionic sites in the matrix that acts as an electrostatic barrier to the passage of polyphenolate anions.