Water-Proofing Properties of Cuticular Lipids

SYNOPSIS. Epicuticular lipids play a critical role in allowing arthropods to thrive in terrestrial environments, by reducing transpiration of water through the cuticle. These lipids consist of a diverse array of compounds, especiaUy long-chain hydrocarbons. Rates of water loss are correlated with hy...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIntegrative and comparative biology Vol. 38; no. 3; pp. 471 - 482
Main Author Gibbs, Allen G
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chicago Oxford University Press 01.06.1998
Oxford Publishing Limited (England)
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Summary:SYNOPSIS. Epicuticular lipids play a critical role in allowing arthropods to thrive in terrestrial environments, by reducing transpiration of water through the cuticle. These lipids consist of a diverse array of compounds, especiaUy long-chain hydrocarbons. Rates of water loss are correlated with hydrocarbon structural features, including chain length, unsaturation and methyl-branching. The water-proofing abilities of cuticular lipids appear to depend largely on their physical properties. In most arthropods, rates of water loss increase rapidly above a “transition” temperature. A widely accepted model proposes that this transition is due to melting of the surface lipids to a fluid, permeable state. Evidence for this hypothesis has primarily been correlative, due to experimental limitations. Recent technical advances in lipid biophysics and water loss measurements have made it possible to test the lipid melting model more directly. Experiments using model cuticles, in vitro preparations and intact arthropods support the idea that the phase behavior of cuticular lipids is a major factor determining cuticular permeability.
Bibliography:ArticleID:38.3.471
ark:/67375/HXZ-907KMCK3-J
1From the Symposium Responses of Terrestrial Arthropods to Variation in the Thermal and Hydric Environment: Molecular, Organismal, and Evolutionary Approaches presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, 26–30 December 1996, at Albuquerque, New Mexico.
istex:20A641D3282261FB8A782CB600CD9A76A3DC219A
ISSN:1540-7063
1557-7023
DOI:10.1093/icb/38.3.471