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Symbiotic bacteria in hornet pupal silk
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Jacob?S?IshayEmail author  Ksenia?Riabinin  Vitaly?Pertsis
Institution:(1) Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Yel-Aviv University, Ramat-Aviv 69978, Israel
Abstract:The silk weave spun by hornet larvae before undergoing pupal metamorphosis is composed of fibers and sheets, both containing symbiotic bacteria. The bacteria are secreted from the silk gland and are glued to the secreted silk, which is made up of amino-acid polymers. In the dark, it possesses at first an electric current amounting to several hundred nanoamperes (nA) (i.e., a thermoelectric property), and a high electric capacitance of up to several milliFarads (mF). This electrical charge is used gradually by the developing pupa. The symbiotic bacteria penetrate through slits in the coat of the silk fibers to the core or into pockets in the sheets, where they gradually digest parts of the silk weave, thereby nullifying its mechanical properties and facilitating in due time the egress of the imago from the puparium.
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