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An unusual case of photoreactivation observed in an insect egg (Smittia Spec., chironomidae, diptera).
Authors:K Kalthoff
Abstract:Abstract— An action spectrum for inactivation by ultraviolet (UV) radiation of Smittia eggs during intravitelline cleavage was established, taking into account wavelength-dependent shielding of the effective targets. Under the assumption of a random distribution of the effective targets in the egg, the action spectrum displayed only one very distinct peak at 295 nm. The eggs were photoreactivable with an action spectrum similar but not identical to that found for direct photoreactivation (PR) in E. coli Indirect PR seems not involved because light was effective only after but not before UV. Temperature dependence and dose rate saturation could not be observed. The photoreactivable sector (PRS) was 0.75 after UV inactivation at 295 nm but only 0.32 after UV inactivation at 265 nm. Initial PR rates were highest after 295 nm and lowest after 265 nm. During migration of cleavage nuclei into the periplasm, when the shielding of nuclei by yolk material decreases by an order of magnitude, no corresponding increase in the sensitivity of the eggs to UV was observed. After inactivation at the blastoderm stage, when the nuclei are no longer shielded by yolk material, the PRS was also high (0.79) after UV of 295 nm but again lower (0.59) after 265 nm. These data are difficult to understand within the conceptual framework of light-dependent enzymatic splitting of UV-induced pyrimidine dimers in nucleic acids. Yet this type of PR seems to play a vital role in the survival of Smittia eggs under sunlight without need for pigmentation or shading.
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