Biochemical basis of endogenous bioluminescent springtail Lobella sauteri (Collembola)
Manabu Bessho-Uehara, Takumi Kato, Atsuko Ohira, Taizo Nakamori, Yuichi Oba

TL;DR
A new bioluminescent system in a soil-dwelling insect, Lobella sauteri, is revealed, offering insights into underground light-based communication.
Contribution
Discovery of a novel ATP-dependent bioluminescent mechanism in a researcable soil-dwelling species.
Findings
L. sauteri exhibits bioluminescence in all developmental stages, with light intensity peaking before molting.
The bioluminescent reaction requires luciferin, luciferase, ATP, and Mg2+.
Transcriptomic and biochemical analyses suggest a unique endogenous bioluminescent system.
Abstract
Bioluminescence plays important roles among animals in both intra- and inter-species communication. A variety of bioluminescent organisms inhabit soil environments, even in areas where light penetration is minimal. However, due to the lack of a model system to study underground bioluminescence, the biology and molecular mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain largely unknown. Springtails (Collembola) are representative soil animals, and we recently identified Lobella sauteri (Neanuridae) as a bioluminescent species. L. sauteri can be maintained over multiple generations under laboratory conditions on a single food source, the plasmodium Fuligo septica, with a generation time of approximately 3 months. Bioluminescence was observed in all developmental stages of L. sauteri in laboratory-raised populations. The light emission exhibited periodic changes and increased before ecdysis,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsect and Pesticide Research · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior · bioluminescence and chemiluminescence research
