Abstract
The present ultrastructural investigation using scanning and transmission electron microscopy as well as light and fluorescence microscopy describes in detail the attachment devices and tarsal gland of the bug Coreus marginatus (L.) (Hemiptera: Coreidae). In particular, the fine structure of pulvilli reveals a ventral surface rich with pore channels, consistent with fluid emission, and a folded dorsal surface, which could be useful to enhance the pulvillus contact area during attachment to the substrate. The detailed description of the tarsal gland cells, whose structure is coherent with an active secretory function, allows us to consider the tarsal gland as the plausible candidate for the adhesive fluid production. Scolopidia strictly adhering to the gland cells are also described. On the basis of the fine structure of the tarsal gland, we hypothesise a fluid emission mechanism based on changes of the hydraulic pressure inside the gland, due to the unguitractor tendon movements. This mechanism could provide the fluid release based on compression of the pad and capillary suction, as demonstrated in other insects. The data here reported can contribute to understanding of insect adhesive fluid production, emission and control of its transport.
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Introduction
Insects successfully survive in almost all ecosystems due in part to their ability to safely walk and attach to many different types of surfaces owing to the presence of claws together with smooth or hairy attachment pads on the distal portion of their legs (Beutel and Gorb 2001). Long deformable setae forming independent contacts with the substrate at numerous points (hairy pads) or soft and deformable structures with a smooth surface (smooth pads) evolved independently in different insect orders (Beutel and Gorb 2001). Notwithstanding a great variety of attachment devices, all insects count on a wet adhesion: indeed, in all insect groups studied so far, fluid mediates adhesion to the substrate (see review in Dirks and Federle 2011a). In both smooth and hairy attachment devices, a nanometer thin layer of fluid plays an important role in the adhesion based on both capillarity (surface tension) and viscosity principles (Edwards and Tarkanian 1970; Dixon et al. 1990; Vötsch et al. 2002; Dirks and Federle 2011a, b). Another function of the fluid is to enhance the self cleaning function of adhesive pads (Clemente et al. 2010). In spite of the numerous studies performed so far on insect adhesion, the chemical composition of the adhesive fluid in different insect orders, its exact origin, the secretion mechanism and how the secretion is controlled are still not completely elucidated (Dirks and Federle 2011a, b; Schmitt and Betz 2017).
Among different insect orders, Hemiptera and Diptera demonstrate a potential to evolve a great variety of adhesive pad designs in relation to the necessity to cling to vegetation or other substrates (Beutel and Gorb 2001). In Heteroptera, a fossula spongiosa (a hairy pad situated on the ventral surface of the distal tibia) has been described in Reduviidae (Wang and Liang 2015), smooth pseudopulvilli are present in Miridae (Voigt et al. 2007), while smooth pulvilli are found in members of Coreidae (Ghazi-Bayat 1979; Gorb and Gorb 2004) and Pentatomidae (Rebora et al. 2018). In particular, in Nezara viridula L. (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae), a detailed ultrastructural investigation of its attachment structures showed that they are represented by sclerotised claws, smooth flexible pulvilli and a hairy adhesive pad located at the ventral side of the basitarsus (Salerno et al. 2017; Rebora et al. 2018).
As far as the adhesive fluid production in Heteroptera is concerned, Ghazi-Bayat and Hasenfuss (1980), based only on scanning and light microscopy investigations, suggested that there are two areas secreting the adhesive fluid through the cuticle: (1) a membranous infolding at the base of the pretarsus and (2) the proximal portion of the claws. In Pentatomidae (Ghazi-Bayat and Hasenfuss 1980) and in Coreidae (Ghazi-Bayat 1979), the integumental folds on the dorsal side of the pulvilli were interpreted as a transporting system of adhesive fluid from the secretory areas to the ventral surface of pulvilli.
The present study based on scanning and transmission electron microscopy examinations describes in detail the morphology of the attachment devices with an emphasis on the ultrastructure of the tarsal gland in the bug Coreus marginatus (L.) (Hemiptera: Coreidae). The presence and distribution of resilin, an elastomeric protein, typically occurring in various regions of arthropod exoskeletons (Michels and Gorb 2012; Michels et al. 2016) and providing flexibility, resilience and enhancing adaptability of attachment pads to uneven surfaces (Perez Goodwyn et al. 2006; Peisker et al. 2013), is analysed using fluorescence light microscopy. A schematic reconstruction of the gland based on serial transversal, frontal and longitudinal semi-thin sections is also presented.
The data reported in the present study can help to shed light on the mechanisms of insect adhesive fluid production, emission and control of its transport toward the contact with the substrate.
Materials and methods
Insects
Coreus marginatus, also known as dock bug, is an important weed phytophage common in Europe, Asia and North Africa. Its favourite food is represented by leaves and seeds of species belonging to the genus Rumex, but it also feeds on a vast variety of species belonging to different families (Hrušková et al. 2005). Adult bugs were captured in the fields around Perugia, Italy. Insects were kept in a controlled condition chamber (14 h photophase, temperature of 25 ± 1 °C; relative humidity of 70 ± 10%), inside net cages (30 cm × 30 cm × 30 cm) (Vermandel, Hulst, The Netherlands). Seeds of plant species from the genus Rumex and chard (Beta vulgaris L.) leaves were used as food.
Light microscopy
To visualise the real contact area between the tarsal attachment devices and the substrate, living individuals of C. marginatus walking on glass were analysed with reflection contrast microscopy (RCM) using an inverted bright-field microscope ZEISS Axio Observer.A1 (Carl Zeiss Microscopy GmbH, Jena, Germany) in combination with a high-speed camera Photron FASTCAM SA1.1 (VKT Video Kommunikation GmbH—Technisches Fernsehen, Pfullingen, Germany) as described earlier (Ploem 1975; Federle et al. 2002; Heepe et al. 2014).
Fluorescence light microscopy
Tarsi were cut off, mounted on cover-slips in a water-soluble medium (Moviol), and observed in a fluorescence microscope Zeiss Axioplan (Carl Zeiss Microscopy GmbH, Jena, Germany) in one of the three bands of wavelengths: green (excitation 512–546 nm, emission 600–640 nm), red (excitation 710–775 nm, emission 810–890 nm), and UV bands (excitation 340–380 nm, emission 425 nm). It is known that an insect cuticle has a strong autofluorescence at the variety of wavelengths from the blue–green area to deep-red. However, resilin has an autofluorescence at the very narrow band of wavelengths (ca. 400 nm) (Andersen and Weis-Fogh 1964). Such behaviour of this protein makes it possible to reveal it in biologically native structures without immune labelling and other treatments (Gorb 1999). Exoskeleton structures that are blue in the overlay micrographs are composed of large proportions of the soft and very elastic protein resilin, while green exoskeleton structures in the overlay micrographs are chitinous and non- or weakly sclerotised, and red exoskeleton structures in the overlay micrographs are chitinous and strongly sclerotised.
Observations of the tarsal gland filled with fluorescein disodium salt (acid yellow 73, Alquera Ciencia, Spain) (Fig. 11c) were performed with a fluorescence microscope Zeiss Axiophot (Carl Zeiss Microscopy GmbH, Jena, Germany) with an excitation filter 450–490, chromatic beam splitter FT 510, emission 520. The gland was injected (the simple contact enabled injection) using a glass capillary (1.5 mm o.d, 0.9 mm i.d), filled with fluorescein disodium salt solution (15 mg salt in 10 ml of distilled water). The capillary tubes were drawn to a fine point using a microelectrode puller (Narishige PC-10, Narishige International Ltd., London, U.K.) to get a tip less than 0.3 mm in diameter. The capillary insertion (Fig. 11b) was controlled with a micromanipulator HS6 (Märzhäuser Wetzlar, Wetzlar, Germany) equipped with a MCL3 controller (Lang GmbH & Co. KG, Hüttenberg, Germany).
Transmission electron microscopy
The tarsi of ten adults were dissected from anaesthetised bugs and fixed for 12 h in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in cacodylate buffer (Electron Microscopy Sciences), pH 7.2. The fixed tarsi were repeatedly rinsed in sodium cacodylate buffer and post-fixed for 1 h at 4 °C in 1% osmium tetroxide in sodium cacodylate buffer (Electron Microscopy Sciences). The samples were then repeatedly washed in the same buffer, dehydrated using ascending ethanol concentrations and finally embedded in an Epon-Araldite resin mixture (Sigma-Aldrich). Afterwards, semi-thin and ultra-thin sections were cut using a Leica EM UC6 ultramicrotome (Leica Microsystem GmbH, Wetzlar, Germany). Serial semi-thin sections of the last tarsomere cut longitudinally, frontally and transversally, examined with a Leica DMLB light microscope (Leica Microsystem GmbH, Wetzlar, Germany), allowed to describe in detail the gland structure. Ultra-thin sections were collected on Parlodion (Spi-Chem, West Chester, PA, U.S.A.) coated copper grids, stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate (Electron Microscopy Sciences) and inspected in a Tecnai G2 Spirit BioTWIN transmission electron microscope (FEI Company, Hillsboro, OR, U.S.A.) operated at 80 kV. Images were acquired with a bottom-mount 4 k × 4 k CDD Eagle camera equipped with the TEM Imaging & Analysis (TIA) software (FEI, now Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Waltham, MA, USA). Additionally, ultra-thin sections mounted on the TEM grids were coated with carbon–platinum at an angle of about 15° to contrast surface relief and examined in SEM or TEM.
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM)
For scanning electron microscopy, the tarsi were carefully cut off, air dried, sputter coated with gold–palladium, and observed in a Hitachi S-800 (Hitachi Ltd. Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) scanning electron microscope (SEM) at 20·kV.
To obtain 3D images of inner structures from semi-thin sections, the sections (0.5–2.0 mm) of the cuticle fixed and embedded as for TEM procedure were prepared using a diamond knife. Sections were picked up on pioloform-covered glass plates, treated with Maxwell’s solution (Maxwell 1978) for 2–5 min to remove the resin, washed, dehydrated, and critical point dried. All preparations were mounted on holders, sputter coated with gold–palladium (10 nm) and examined in a Hitachi S-800 SEM at 20 kV.
Cryo-scanning electron microscopy (Cryo-SEM)
Liquid-nitrogen shock-frozen samples of the bug tarsi at various configurations were studied using a scanning electron microscope Hitachi S-4800 (Hitachi High-Technologies Corp., Tokyo, Japan) equipped with a Gatan ALTO 2500 cryo-preparation system (Gatan Inc., Abingdon, UK). For details of the sample preparation and the mounting for cryo-SEM analyses, see Gorb and Gorb (2009). Whole-mount specimens were sputter coated in frozen conditions with gold–palladium (10 nm thickness) and examined at an acceleration voltage of 3 kV and a temperature of − 120 °C at the cryo-stage of the SEM.
Results
The tarsus of the adult of Coreus marginatus is constituted of three tarsomeres (the three sclerotised tubes of the tarsus are ring sclerites of the tarsal segment and they cannot be considered true segments as they do not bear muscle attachments) plus the pretarsal complex (Fig. 1a). The attachment devices are represented by an unpaired hairy pad and by paired pretarsal claws and pulvilli. The hairy pad is located on the ventral side of the first tarsomere (Fig. 1a). The adhesive setae of the hairy pad are socketed and have a blunt tip when observed with cryo-SEM (Fig. 1b), while they are curled when air-dried and observed with SEM (thus revealing the high flexibility of their tips) (Fig. 1c). The pulvilli are smooth pads with rather smooth ventral surface and a grooved dorsal side (Fig. 1d, e). At the level of its basal portion, the basipulvillus, each pulvillus is connected with the ipsilateral claw (Fig. 1f). An unguitractor plate is situated on the ventral side of the pretarsus and is characterised by distally oriented microplates and bears two distal paraempodia (Fig. 1f, g). The plate is surrounded by a lamina connected with the basipulvilli and the claws (Fig. 1f). The unguitractor plate with its lamina is visible, when the muscle retractor unguis (with its tendon) is relaxed (Fig. 1f), while the unguitractor plate is retracted inside the tarsus and not visible, when the muscle is contracted (Fig. 1g). When the muscle and tendon are relaxed, the claws and pulvilli are straight and aligned, while when the tendon is strained, the claws and pulvilli are bent and laterally spread (Fig. 1f, g).
As revealed by reflection contrast microscopy, during walking on a smooth surface, C. marginatus feet contact the substrate using mainly the ventral surfaces of the distal portions of the pulvilli, the setae of the hairy adhesive pad and the paraempodia (Fig. 1h). After detaching the leg from the surface, a consistent amount of fluid remains on the substrate, mostly in correspondence to pulvilli, especially after pulling them along the substrate (Fig. 1i).
Semi-thin sections and ultra-thin sections observed under TEM reveal the internal structure of the pulvilli (Fig. 2). Pulvilli are constituted of a complex cuticle in their distal portion: a thin outermost cuticular layer (epicuticle) bordering an inner cuticular rod layer, consisting of rods oriented distally at an angle of 40° to the surface plane (Fig. 2a–f). This cuticular rod layer is supported by a cuticular plate representing an internal apodeme (Fig. 2a, b, d, e). A connection is visible between the lumen of the pulvillus and the distal part of the pulvillus characterised by rods (asterisk in Fig. 2e). Microfolds are occasionally present on the ventral side of the pulvillus (Fig. 2c, e). Along the epicuticular outer layer, numerous porous channels are clearly seen in Pt/C-coated ultra-thin sections (Fig. 2g). In some images, even the opening to the outside of the pore channels is clearly visible (inset of Fig. 2g).
The dorsal side of pulvilli is characterised by a grooved surface constituted of caps and grooves (Figs. 1d, 3). The caps are constituted of thick sclerotised cuticle, while the grooves have much thinner cuticle (Fig. 3c, d).
As revealed by fluorescence light microscopy, the cuticle surrounding the unguitractor plate appears blue, thus revealing high proportion of resilin; while the plate itself and its microplates are sclerotised (Fig. 4). A sclerotised tarsal apodeme is clearly visible in connection with the pretarsal apodemes representing the two sclerotised plates sustaining the two complexes claw–pulvillus (Fig. 4, see semi-thin sections in Figs. 5, 6). All these sclerotised portions are immersed in the lamina, rich with resilin. The ventral side of the pulvilli is constituted of large proportions of resilin, whereas the basipulvilli and partly the dorsal sides of the pulvilli consist of sclerotised chitinous material (Fig. 4).
Semi-thin sections of the last tarsomere observed under the light microscope reveal the presence of a big gland occupying a wide area of the tarsus from its proximal to its distal portion (Figs. 5, 6, 7). The gland is folded on itself in its distal portion and is strictly connected to the unguitractor tendon in its proximal portion. It is constituted of a monolayer of big cells separating a wide inner compartment, the gland lumen, located ventrally, from a smaller outer compartment, the haemolymph space, located dorsally. The gland lumen is in connection with the pulvilli lumen (Fig. 5). Scolopidia are visible (Figs. 5a–c, 6a, c. Figure 9 for details of scolopidia visualised with TEM) in the outer compartment (the hemolymph space), strictly in contact with the gland cells. The gland is in close contact with two connective ligaments (Fig. 5d, e, 6b, c, g) running from the dorsal portion of the tarsus to the ventral distal tarsus, towards the two pretarsal apodemes, each sustaining the complex claw–pulvillus (Figs. 5, 6). Each ligament is attached to the ipsilateral pretarsal apodeme (Figs. 5, 6, 7).
The monolayered epithelium of the gland observed in TEM (Fig. 8) shows the presence of huge secretory cells separating the lumen of the gland from the haemolymph space (outer compartment), which is in contact with the epithelium (Fig. 8a). Each cell is characterised by an apical side extending in long microvilli bordering the gland lumen (Fig. 8a, c) and a basal membrane forming numerous long infoldings representing an extensive basal labyrinth (Fig. 8a, b). The cells have a big nucleus (Fig. 8a), numerous mitochondria (Fig. 8a–c) and well developed smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum (Fig. 8b, d). An electron-dense flocculent material is clearly visible in the lumen of the gland in contact to the microvilli apical border (Fig. 8a, c). The cells are rich in vesicles, which accumulate especially beneath and between the microvilli (Fig. 8a, c, d). Most of the vesicles are electron translucent, but some of them are electron dense (Fig. 8c, d). Cells are strictly adhering one to the other and show desmosomes and septate junctions (Fig. 8e, f). Occasionally glycogen granules are visible in the cells (Fig. 8g). The gland in its proximal portion envelopes the unguitractor tendon, which is strictly in contact with the gland cells (Fig. 8h). Ultra-thin sections observed in TEM reveal the presence of three mononematic (= subintegumental scolopidia without any direct relationship to the cuticle) scolopidia, longitudinally oriented inside the tarsus. They are located in the haemolymph space strictly adhering to the gland cells (Fig. 9a–g). One of them is heterodynal (= innervated by two neurons), while the others are monodynal (= innervated by one neuron) (Fig. 9g). The dendritic outer segments show the typical modified cilium with a 9 × 2 + 0 arrangement of microtubules in the axoneme (Fig. 9e and inset). A scolopale cell surrounds the cilium and produces a dense cylindrical sleeve of scolopale rods around the cilia (Fig. 9e, g). The distal end of the cilium inserts into an extracellular cap, which is firmly connected to an attachment cell containing numerous longitudinally oriented microtubules (Fig. 9f). Cross sections at the level of the proximal portion of the claws reveal the presence of cells surrounding an electron-dense matrix (Fig. 9h). The cells are vacuolated (Fig. 9h), but they show morphological features very different from those present in the tarsal gland.
Discussion
The present study describes in detail the morphology of the attachment devices and of the tarsal gland in the bug Coreus marginatus, thus allowing us to trace hypothesis about the mechanism of insect attachment devices functioning, adhesive fluid production, the control of its transport and its release to the outside.
The pulvilli of Coreus marginatus
Smooth pulvilli and basitarsal hairs, together with claws, represent the tarsal attachment devices of the coreid bug C. marginatus. Traction force experiments on the pentatomid bug N. viridula (whose attachment devices are similar to C. marginatus) with ablated pulvilli, shaved hairs and cut-off claws (Salerno et al. 2018) revealed a great involvement of pulvilli in insect attachment on horizontal smooth and rough surfaces; while, the hairy pad, with its resilin-bearing flexible tips as previously shown for N. viridula (Rebora et al. 2018), seems to be important in attachment to horizontal hydrophobic substrates under water (Salerno et al. 2018) and on vertical smooth roads as well (Voigt et al. 2019).
The pulvilli of the bug C. marginatus are typical smooth attachment pads, whose ventral side shows a complex cuticle structure with a thin outermost cuticular layer (epicuticle) bordering an inner cuticular rod layer (sustained by a cuticular plate) consisting of rods oriented distally at an angle of 40° to the surface plane. Such a specialised type of cuticle has evolved several times independently in arthropods (Beutel and Gorb 2001) and has been described in different insects species both with smooth attachment pads (pulvilli, euplantulae, arolium) such as the bug N. viridula (Hemiptera) (Rebora et al. 2018), cockroaches (Blattodea) (Roth and Willis 1952; Clemente and Federle 2008; Schmitt and Betz 2017), the stick insect Carausius morosus Sinéty (Phasmatodea) (Scholz et al. 2008), the grasshopper Tettigonia viridissima (L.) (Slifer 1950; Henning 1974; Gorb et al. 2000), the locusts Schistocerca gregaria (Forskål) (Kendall 1970) and Locusta migratoria (L.) (Orthoptera) (Perez Goodwyn et al. 2006), Karoophasma biedouwense Klass (Mantophasmatodea) (Eberhard et al. 2009) and the honeybee (Hymenoptera) (Federle et al. 2001) and with hairy attachment pads, such as the fly Ceratitis capitata (Diptera) (Salerno et al. 2020) and the beetles Philonthus marginatus (Müller) (Betz and Mumm 2001) and Gastrophysa viridula (De Geer) (Coleoptera) (Eimüller et al. 2008). The specialised cuticle on the ventral side of adhesive pads could have different functions. (1) The fibrils help the pads to adapt to surface roughness at different length scales (Gorb et al. 2000). (2) The sponge-like cuticle is the reservoir able to store the adhesion-mediating secretion, especially in insects with secreting epithelia located inside the adhesive pads (Dirks and Federle 2011b; Schmitt and Betz 2017). (3) The fibrils oriented at an angle to the surface could be related with the need to increase the contact area during pulling, decreasing the fibril angle and thereby helping the contact area to expand laterally and longitudinally (Gorb and Scherge 2000; Dirks et al. 2012).
The grooved dorsal surface of C. marginatus pulvilli with alternating caps having thick cuticle and grooves having thinner cuticle could be coherent with a folding mechanism leading to a strong enhancement of the contact area (Fig. 10). The volume inside the pulvillus remains the same, but the shape of the pulvillus becomes more flattened concomitantly with the unfolding of the dorsal folds. This is a hypothetical functional model that needs to be experimentally verified in further investigations. The sclerotised portions of the cuticle in the dorsal sides of pulvilli could also function as a kind of lightweight microskeleton (Vincent and Wegst 2004) protecting the vulnerable inner structures.
Pores on the cuticle of the ventral surface of heteropteran pulvilli have never been clearly observed. For this reason, a pore canal system along the ventral side of the pulvillus specialised for the transport of epidermal secretions to the cuticle surface was hypothesised (Bauchhenss 1979; Schwarz and Gorb 2003; Dirks and Federle 2011b). In C. marginatus, numerous pore channels are clearly visible penetrating the outer cuticular layer of the ventral side of pulvilli, thus, allowing the fluid to be transported from the pad lumen to the outside. In this regard, the transport system suggested in Heteroptera by Ghazy-Bayat and Hasenfuss (1980) for Heteroptera, seems less plausible. Specifically, they postulated that dorsal pulvillus grooves transported an adhesive fluid to the ventral pulvillus surface from the more proximal part of the leg. No clear pores have been shown on any other part of the tarsus/pretarsus and the dorsal corrugations likely serve as part of folding mechanism, as we suggested.
The tarsal gland, the production of adhesive fluid and the fluid storage control
The present ultrastructural investigation identified in C. marginatus a well developed gland located inside the last tarsomere. Such a gland lacking a duct can be considered a class 1 epidermal gland according to Noirot and Quennedey (1974) classification. It is composed of a monolayer of big cells bordered by very long microvilli facing the gland lumen, which is located in the ventral portion of the tarsus. All the morphological features of the cells (long infoldings of the basal region of the plasma membrane facilitating the transport of precursors of the secretion from the adjoining hemolymph toward the cytoplasm, high number of mitochondria, developed rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum, large nucleus, glycogen) are coherent with a role of cells in active secretion and transport of fluids and ions and are similar to those present in the adhesive fluid secreting cells of other insects (see review in Betz 2010; Schmitt and Betz 2017). The cytoplasm of the tarsal gland cells in C. marginatus is filled with vesicles of different size and contrast: some of them are brighter, some are darker. Two types of vesicles, electron lucent and electron dense, have been described also in the epidermal cells with secretory activity in the attachment pads of other insects, such as flies, aphids, Mantophasmatodea, cockroaches and beetles (Bauchhenss and Renner 1977; Bauchhenss 1979; Lees and Hardie 1988; Betz and Mumm 2001; Betz 2003; Eberhard et al. 2009; Schmitt and Betz 2017), thus suggesting a biphasic chemical nature of the adhesive fluid. Such a biphasic chemistry is in agreement with the emulsion described by Vötsch et al. (2002) and Dirks et al. (2010) and is composed of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic compounds (Vötsch et al. 2002; Peisker and Gorb 2012; Peisker et al. 2014; Reitz et al. 2015; Gerhardt et al. 2016; Betz et al. 2016).
Owing to the above-reported reasons, we consider the tarsal gland of C. marginatus as the best candidate to the adhesive fluid production. This, also in consideration that in C. marginatus, such as in other Hemiptera as N. viridula (Rebora et al. 2018) the pulvillus cuticle has no epidermis or secretory epithelium underneath. A secreting epithelium in the adhesive pad is present in cockroaches (Betz et al. 2017), grasshoppers (Slifer 1950) and Mantophasmatodea (Eberhard et al. 2009) or at the base of the adhesive seta in beetles (Betz 2003), but the situation is different in the pulvilli of Hemiptera (Rebora et al. 2018, present investigation) and also in Hymenoptera where arolia lack an epidermis and other structures (Federle et al. 2001; Jarau et al. 2005).
The cells located in the proximal portion of the claws of C. marginatus, notwithstanding the presence of white vesicles, have morphological features different from those typically reported for the adhesive fluid secreting cells of other insects (see above-reported references). The claw cells could have another function, not necessarily associated with the adhesive fluid production. Further ultrastructural investigations on Hemiptera claws could help in clarifying the role of these cells.
The vesicles from the cells of the tarsal gland reach the gland lumen (the gland reservoir), which represents a close compartment separated from the hemolymph and is in contact with the pulvillus lumen, as clearly evident in C. marginatus. The presence of a gland reservoir connected to the pulvillus lumen is coherent with a storage volume of adhesive fluid. In the two experimental studies measuring the pad secretion flow rate in smooth pads of cockroaches and stick insects (Dirks and Federle 2011b) and in hairy pads of beetles (Iazzolino et al. 2020), the deposited volume of fluid increased with increasing pad–surface contact time and the footprint volume decreased to zero after reaching a threshold cumulative volume, thus suggesting a limited reservoir with low liquid influx. In these two cases, the secreting epithelium is close to the adhesive pad (in the arolium of cockroaches and stick insects or at the base of the adhesive seta in beetles). It would be interesting to measure the pad secretion flow rate in other insects, such as the bug C. marginatus, whose pulvilli do not have any secretory cell inside their lumen, but show a tarsal gland with a big reservoir.
Interestingly, the tarsal gland of C. marginatus is proximally in close contact with the unguitractor tendon, in such a way that any movement of the tendon results in a deformation of the gland shape and gland lumen. The contraction of the musculus retractor unguis leads to the unguitractor tendon pulling, which could produce a decreased volume and increased pressure within the tarsal gland (Fig. 11). Such a change in the internal pressure could induce the fluid emission to the ventral side of the pulvillus, whose lumen is in contact with the gland reservoir, through the pore channels. Indeed, Dirks and Federle (2011b) hypothesising a role of pore canals in allowing the fluid to be released in the case of the cockroach pads, demonstrated that the mechanism of fluid release is based on compression of the pad and capillary suction, but did not exclude a contribution of the internal pad pressure to secretion transport. Such a positive pressure in the adhesive pad of C. marginatus could be realised by the unguitractor movements. In this regard, it is worth to highlight that observations of the tarsal gland filled with fluorescein disodium salt revealed the connection between the gland lumen and pulvilli (Fig. 11c). In particular, movements of the unguitractor tendon (performed by the observer with forceps) allowed the fluid to spread from the gland lumen into the pulvilli.
The tarsal gland of C. marginatus is morphologically similar to the tarsal gland of Diptera (Bauchhenss 1979) and to the arolium gland of Hymenoptera (Federle et al. 2001; Jarau et al. 2005; Nijs and Billen 2015; Billen et al. 2017). Also in these cases, there is an outer and inner compartments, and the unguitractor tendon is in contact with the gland. Bauchhenss (1979) hypothesised an involvement of this gland in the adhesive fluid production, together with the gland present inside the pulvilli, and suggested the involvement of pore channels in the pulvilli adhesive setae for the fluid release. However, in Hymenoptera, the lack of any pores leading the fluid to the outside induced researchers to hypothesise that the secretion of this gland in Hymenoptera have an hydraulic function and is used only for increasing the pressure inside the arolium, thus allowing its unfolding (Federle et al. 2001; Jarau et al. 2005). A more detailed analysis of the ultrastructure of the ventral side of the arolium in Hymenoptera could clarify the possible occurrence of pore channels for the fluid emission, thus reconsidering the role of the arolium gland in producing the adhesive fluid. A role of the arolium gland in producing the adhesive fluid could be hypothesised also considering that (1) the arolium does not show any internal secretory epithelium; (2) a pressure-driven mechanism of arolium unfolding is mainly true for small representatives of Hymenoptera, while large hornets can do it mainly mechanically (Frantsevich and Gorb 2002, 2004).
The present study on the tarsus of C. marginatus also identified the presence of mononematic scolopidia running longitudinally in the dorsal side of the tarsus, strictly adhering to the gland. From the same area, strictly connected to the gland, two ligaments run to the ventral distal tarsus, towards the two pretarsal apodemes, each sustaining the complex claw–pulvillus. Scolopidia are mechanoreceptors sensing the internal stretching of the body parts and their presence and position in the last tarsomere of C. marginatus is coherent with the ability to sense the internal stretching of the tarsus during the unguitractor tendon pulling and the consequent rotation of the complex claw–pulvillus, as suggested in other insects (e.g. Wiese and Schmidt 1974; Seifert and Heinzeller 1989). In consideration of the close association of scolopidia with the gland cells, a possible role of scolopidia could be hypothesised also in sensing the stretching of the gland during the unguitractor tendon pulling to keep under control the storage volume of the gland reservoir during insect walking or pulling. This neuronal control could be useful also for limiting the further influx of fluid in the gland reservoir when the storage volume is full.
Conclusions
As reported by Schmitt and Betz (2017) “To date, only a few studies have been conducted that have comprehensively elucidated the morphology of insect tarsal adhesive organs by combining studies on (1) the secretory active tissues, (2) the cuticular structures that function in the storage, distribution, and release of the adhesion-mediating secretion, and (3) the external morphology of the adhesive organs”. In this context, the present investigation on the ultrastructure of the attachment devices and the tarsal gland of the bug C. marginatus could help to better understand the mechanisms of insect adhesive fluid production, the fluid emission and control of its transport toward the exterior, especially in Hemiptera, but also in other insect groups with similar morphological features. These mechanisms indeed could be similar among different insect groups in relation with the evolutionary convergences evolved to enhance the attachment ability to the substrate (e.g. the presence of cuticular rods at the ventral surface of both hairy and smooth attachment pads), but also different (such as the adhesive fluid secretory epithelium occupying different areas of the tarsus in different insect orders). Finally, this paper detected mononematic scolopidia that can be good candidates for the sensory control of insect attachment, which to the large extent remains unknown.
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Acknowledgments
The research was performed based on the knowledge acquired during an Erasmus+ grant (Staff mobility for training 2019–20 (MR, GS) at the Zoological Institute, Functional Morphology and Biomechanics, Kiel University, Kiel, Germany. This research was funded by the German Science Foundation, DFG grant GO 995/34-1. We thank the Central Microscopy Facility at the Department of Biology, Kiel University for technical support during TEM observations.
Funding
Open Access funding provided by Università degli Studi di Perugia. The research was performed based on the knowledge acquired during an Erasmus + grant (Staff mobility for training 2019–2020 (M.R., G.S.) at the Zoological Institute, Functional Morphology and Biomechanics, Kiel University, Kiel, Germany. This research was funded by the German Science Foundation, DFG grant GO 995/34-1 (S.N.G.).
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The study was designed by all the authors. Cryo-scanning electron microscopy investigations were performed by SNG. Transmission electron microscopy investigations were performed by MR and SNG. EVG and SNG performed the light and fluorescence microscopy analyses. EVG performed the scanning electron microscopy of semi-thin sections treated with Maxwell’s fluid. MR, SP and SNG realised the semi-thin sections. GS performed the reflection contrast microscopy observations. GS and SP performed the fluorescein injection observations. SNG realised the schematic reconstructions. MR and GS wrote the manuscript. All authors discussed the results and participated in the final editing of the manuscript.
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Rebora, M., Salerno, G., Piersanti, S. et al. Attachment devices and the tarsal gland of the bug Coreus marginatus (Hemiptera: Coreidae). Zoomorphology 140, 85–102 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00435-020-00515-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00435-020-00515-z