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Bombyx mori

The domestic silk moth (Bombyx mori) is an insect from the moth family Bombycidae. It is the closest relative of Bombyx mandarina, the wild silk moth. The silkworm is the larva (or caterpillar) of a silk moth. The silkworm is of particular economic value, being a primary producer of silk. A silkworm's preferred food is white mulberry leaves, though they may eat other species of mulberry, and even leaves of other plants like the osage orange. Domestic silk moths are entirely dependent on humans for reproduction, as a result of millennia of selective breeding. Wild silk moths (other species of Bombyx) are not as commercially viable in the production of silk.

Bombyx mori
Paired male (above), female (below)
Fifth instar
Domesticated
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Bombycidae
Genus: Bombyx
Species:
B. mori
Binomial name
Bombyx mori
Synonyms
  • Phalaena mori Linnaeus, 1758
  • Bombyx arracanensis Moore & Hutton, 1862
  • Bombyx brunnea Grünberg, 1911
  • Bombyx croesi Moore & Hutton, 1862
  • Bombyx fortunatus Moore & Hutton, 1862
  • Bombyx meridionalis Wood-Mason, 1886
  • Bombyx sinensis Moore & Hutton, 1862
  • Bombyx textor Moore & Hutton, 1862

Sericulture, the practice of breeding silkworms for the production of raw silk, existed for at least 5,000 years in China,[1] whence it spread to India, Korea, Nepal, Japan, and then the West. The domestic silk moth was domesticated from the wild silk moth Bombyx mandarina, which has a range from northern India to northern China, Korea, Japan, and the far eastern regions of Russia. The domestic silk moth derives from Chinese rather than Japanese or Korean stock.[2][3]

Silk moths were unlikely to have been domestically bred before the Neolithic period. Before then, the tools to manufacture quantities of silk thread had not been developed. The domesticated B. mori and the wild B. mandarina can still breed and sometimes produce hybrids.[4]: 342  It is unknown if B. mori can hybridize with other Bombyx species. Compared to most members in the genus Bombyx, domestic silk moths have lost their color pigments as well as their ability to fly.[5]

Types edit

Mulberry silkworms can be divided into three major categories based on seasonal brood frequency. Univoltine silkworms produce only one brood a season, and they are generally found in and around Europe. Univoltine eggs must hibernate through the winter, ultimately cross-fertilizing in spring. Bivoltine varieties are normally found in East Asia, and their accelerated breeding process is made possible by slightly warmer climates. In addition, there are polyvoltine silkworms found only in the tropics. Their eggs typically hatch within 9 to 12 days, meaning there can be up to eight generations of larvae throughout the year.[6]

Description and life cycle edit

Larvae edit

Eggs take about 14 days to hatch into larvae, which eat continuously. They have a preference for white mulberry, having an attraction to the mulberry odorant cis-jasmone. They are not monophagous, since they can eat other species of Morus, as well as some other Moraceae, mostly Osage orange. They are covered with tiny black hairs. When the color of their heads turns darker, it indicates they are about to molt. After molting, the larval phase of the silkworms emerge white, naked, and with little horns on their backs.

Pupae (cocoon) edit

After they have molted four times, their bodies become slightly yellow, and the skin becomes tighter. The larvae then prepare to enter the pupal phase of their life cycle, and enclose themselves in a cocoon made up of raw silk produced by the salivary glands. The final molt from larva to pupa takes place within the cocoon, which provides a layer of protection during the vulnerable, almost motionless pupal state. Many other Lepidoptera produce cocoons, but only a few — the Bombycidae, in particular the genus Bombyx, and the Saturniidae, in particular the genus Antheraea — have been exploited for fabric production.

The cocoon is made of a thread of raw silk from 300 to about 900 m (1,000 to 3,000 ft) long. The fibers are fine and lustrous, about 10 μm (0.0004 in) in diameter. About 2,000 to 3,000 cocoons are required to make one pound of silk (0.4 kg). At least 70 million pounds (32 million kg) of raw silk are produced each year, requiring nearly 10 billion cocoons.[7][better source needed]

If the animal survives through the pupal phase of its life cycle, it releases proteolytic enzymes to make a hole in the cocoon so it can emerge as an adult moth. These enzymes are destructive to the silk and can cause the silk fibers to break down from over a mile in length to segments of random length, which reduces the value of the silk threads, although these damaged silk cocoons are still used as "stuffing" available in China and elsewhere in the production of duvets, jackets, and other purposes. To prevent this, silkworm cocoons are boiled in water. The heat kills the silkworms, and the water makes the cocoons easier to unravel. Often, the silkworm is eaten.

As the process of harvesting the silk from the cocoon kills the larva, sericulture has been criticized by animal welfare and rights activists. Mahatma Gandhi was critical of silk production based on the ahimsa philosophy "not to hurt any living thing". This led to Gandhi's promotion of cotton spinning machines, an example of which can be seen at the Gandhi Institute,[8] and an extension of this principle has led to the modern production practice known as Ahimsa silk, which is wild silk (from wild and semiwild silk moths) made from the cocoons of moths that are allowed to emerge before the silk is harvested.

Moth edit

The moth is the adult phase of the silk worm's life cycle. Silk moths have a wingspan of 3–5 cm (1.2–2.0 in) and a white, hairy body. Females are about two to three times bulkier than males (due to carrying many eggs). All adult Bombycidae moths have reduced mouthparts and do not feed.

The wings of the silk moth develop from larval imaginal disks.[9] The moth is not capable of functional flight, in contrast to the wild B. mandarina and other Bombyx species, whose males fly to meet females. Some may emerge with the ability to lift off and stay airborne, but sustained flight cannot be achieved as their bodies are too big and heavy for their small wings.

 
2- thoracic legs.
 
Adult silk moth

The legs of the silk moth develop from the silkworm's larval (thoracic) legs. Developmental genes like Distalless and extradenticle have been used to mark leg development. In addition, removing specific segments of the thoracic legs at different ages of the larva resulted in the adult silk moth not developing the corresponding adult leg segments.[9]

 
Cocoon of B. mori

Research edit

 
A study of an egg of a silkworm from Hooke's Micrographia, 1665
 
1679 study of the silkworm metamorphosis by Maria Sibylla Merian, it depicts the fruit and leaves of a mulberry tree and the eggs and larvae of the silkworm moth.

Due to its small size and ease of culture, the silkworm has become a model organism in the study of lepidopteran and general arthropod biology. Fundamental findings on pheromones, hormones, brain structures, and physiology have been made with the silkworm.[citation needed] One example of this was the molecular identification of the first known pheromone, bombykol, which required extracts from 500,000 individuals, due to the small quantities of pheromone produced by any individual silkworm.[citation needed]

Many research works have focused on the genetics of silkworms and the possibility of genetic engineering. Many hundreds of strains are maintained, and over 400 Mendelian mutations have been described.[10] Another source suggests 1,000 inbred domesticated strains are kept worldwide.[11] One useful development for the silk industry is silkworms that can feed on food other than mulberry leaves, including an artificial diet.[10] Research on the genome also raises the possibility of genetically engineering silkworms to produce proteins, including pharmacological drugs, in the place of silk proteins. Bombyx mori females are also one of the few organisms with homologous chromosomes held together only by the synaptonemal complex (and not crossovers) during meiosis.[12]

Kraig Biocraft Laboratories[13] has used research from the Universities of Wyoming and Notre Dame in a collaborative effort to create a silkworm that is genetically altered to produce spider silk. In September 2010, the effort was announced as successful.[14]

Researchers at Tufts developed scaffolds made of spongy silk that feel and look similar to human tissue. They are implanted during reconstructive surgery to support or restructure damaged ligaments, tendons, and other tissue. They also created implants made of silk and drug compounds which can be implanted under the skin for steady and gradual time release of medications.[15]

Researchers at the MIT Media Lab experimented with silkworms to see what they would weave when left on surfaces with different curvatures. They found that on particularly straight webs of lines, the silkworms would connect neighboring lines with silk, weaving directly onto the given shape. Using this knowledge they built a silk pavilion with 6,500 silkworms over a number of days.

Silkworms have been used in antibiotics discovery, as they have several advantageous traits compared to other invertebrate models.[16] Antibiotics such as lysocin E,[17] a non-ribosomal peptide synthesized by Lysobacter sp. RH2180-5[18] and GPI0363[19] are among the notable antibiotics discovered using silkworms. In addition, antibiotics with appropriate pharmacokinetic parameters were selected that correlated with therapeutic activity in the silkworm infection model.[20]

Silkworms have also been used for the identification of novel virulence factors of pathogenic microorganisms. A first large-scale screening using transposon mutant library of Staphylococcus aureus USA300 strain was performed which identified 8 new genes with roles in full virulence of S. aureus.[21] Another study by the same team of researchers revealed, for the first time, the role of YjbH in virulence and oxidative stress tolerance in vivo.[22]

Domestication edit

 
Gold silkworm, Han dynasty

The domestic species B. mori, compared to the wild species (e.g., B. mandarina), has increased cocoon size, body size, growth rate, and efficiency of its digestion. It has gained tolerance to human presence and handling, and also to living in crowded conditions. The domestic silk moths cannot fly, so the males need human assistance in finding a mate, and it lacks fear of potential predators. The native color pigments have also been lost, so the domestic silk moths are leucistic, since camouflage is not useful when they only live in captivity. These changes have made B. mori entirely dependent upon humans for survival, and it does not exist in the wild.[23] The eggs are kept in incubators to aid in their hatching.

Breeding edit

 
Silkworms and mulberry leaves placed on trays (Liang Kai's Sericulture c. 13th century)

Silkworms were first domesticated in China more than 5,000 years ago.[24][25]

 
Pupae
 
Silkworm cocoons weighed and sorted (Liang Kai's Sericulture)

Silkworm breeding is aimed at the overall improvement of silkworms from a commercial point of view. The major objectives are improving fecundity, the health of larvae, quantity of cocoon and silk production, and disease resistance. Healthy larvae lead to a healthy cocoon crop. Health is dependent on factors such as better pupation rate, fewer dead larvae in the mountage,[26] shorter larval duration (this lessens the chance of infection) and bluish-tinged fifth-instar larvae (which are healthier than the reddish-brown ones). Quantity of cocoon and silk produced are directly related to the pupation rate and larval weight. Healthier larvae have greater pupation rates and cocoon weights. Quality of cocoon and silk depends on a number of factors, including genetics.

Hobby raising and school projects edit

In the U.S., teachers may sometimes introduce the insect life cycle to their students by raising domestic silk moths in the classroom as a science project. Students have a chance to observe complete life cycles of insects from eggs to larvae to pupae to moths.

The domestic silk moth has been raised as a hobby in countries such as China, South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Iran. Children often pass on the eggs to the next generation, creating a non-commercial population. The experience provides children with the opportunity to witness the life cycle of silk moths.

Genome edit

The full genome of the domestic silk moth was published in 2008 by the International Silkworm Genome Consortium.[11] Draft sequences were published in 2004.[27][28]

The genome of the domestic silk moth is mid-range with a genome size around 432 million base pairs. A notable feature is that 43.6% of the genome are repetitive sequences, most of which are transposable elements. At least 3,000 silkworm genes are unique, and have no homologous equivalents in other genomes. The silkworm's ability to produce large amounts of silk correlates with the presence of specific tRNA clusters, as well as some clustered sericin genes. Additionally, the silkworm's ability to consume toxic mulberry leaves is linked to specialized sucrase genes, which appear to have been acquired from bacterial genes.[11]

High genetic variability has been found in domestic lines of silk moths, though this is less than that among wild silk moths (about 83 percent of wild genetic variation). This suggests a single event of domestication, and that it happened over a short period of time, with a large number of wild silkworms having been collected for domestication.[29] Major questions, however, remain unanswered, according to Jun Wang, co-author of a related study published in 2008,[30] who stated: "Whether this event was in a single location or in a short period of time in several locations cannot be deciphered from the data",[31] and research also has yet to identify the area in China where domestication arose.

As food edit

 
Silkworm pupae dishes

Silk moth pupae are edible insects and are eaten in some cultures:

  • In Assam, India, they are boiled for extracting silk and the boiled pupae are eaten directly with salt or fried with chili pepper or herbs as a snack or dish.[32]
  • In Korea, they are boiled and seasoned to make a popular snack food known as beondegi (번데기).[33]
  • In China, street vendors sell roasted silk moth pupae.
  • In Japan, silkworms are usually served as a tsukudani (佃煮), i.e., boiled in a sweet-sour sauce made with soy sauce and sugar.
  • In Vietnam, this is known as nhộng tằm, usually boiled, seasoned with fish sauce, then stir-fried and eaten as main dish with rice.
  • In Thailand, roasted silkworm is often sold at open markets. They are also sold as packaged snacks.

Silkworms have also been proposed for cultivation by astronauts as space food on long-term missions.[34]

In culture edit

China edit

In China, a legend indicates the discovery of the silkworm's silk was by an ancient empress named Leizu, the wife of the Yellow Emperor, also known as Xi Lingshi. She was drinking tea under a tree when a silk cocoon fell into her tea. As she picked it out and started to wrap the silk thread around her finger, she slowly felt a warm sensation. When the silk ran out, she saw a small larva. In an instant, she realized this caterpillar larva was the source of the silk. She taught this to the people and it became widespread. Many more legends about the silkworm are told.

The Chinese guarded their knowledge of silk, but, according to one story, a Chinese princess given in marriage to a Khotan prince brought to the oasis the secret of silk manufacture, "hiding silkworms in her hair as part of her dowry", probably in the first half of the first century AD.[35] About AD 550, Christian monks are said to have smuggled silkworms hidden in a hollow stick out of China, selling the secret to the eastern Romans.

Vietnam edit

According to a Vietnamese folk tale, silkworms were originally a beautiful housemaid running away from her gruesome masters and living in the mountain, where she was protected by the mountain god. One day, a lecherous god from the heaven came down to Earth to seduce women. When he saw her, he tried to rape her but she was able to escape and was hidden by the mountain god. The lecherous god then tried to find and capture her by setting a net trap around the mountain. With the blessing of Guanyin, the girl was able to safely swallow that net into her stomach. Finally, the evil god summons his fellow thunder and rain gods to attack and burn away her clothes, forcing her to hide in a cave. Naked and cold, she spit out the net and used it as a blanket to sleep. The girl died in her sleep, and as she wished to continue to help other people, her soul turned into silkworms.[citation needed]

Feeding edit

Bombyx mori is essentially monophagous, exclusively eating mulberry leaves (Morus spp.). By developing techniques for using artificial diets, the amino acids needed for development are known.[36] The various amino acids can be classified into five categories:

  • Those which, when removed, cause larval development to stop entirely: lysine, leucine, isoleucine, histidine, arginine, valine, tryptophan, threonine, phenylalanine, methionine
  • Those which, when removed, impede later stages of larval development: glutamate and aspartate
  • Semi-essential amino acids, with negative effects that can be eliminated by supplementing with other amino acids: proline (ornithine can be substituted)
  • Non-essential amino acids that can by replaced through biosynthesis by the larvae: alanine, glycine, serine
  • Non-essential amino acids that can be removed with no effect at all: tyrosine

Diseases edit

  • Beauveria bassiana, a fungus, destroys the entire silkworm body. This fungus usually appears when silkworms are raised under cold conditions with high humidity. This disease is not passed on to the eggs from moths, as the infected silkworms cannot survive to the moth stage. This fungus, however, can spread to other insects.
  • Grasserie, also known as nuclear polyhedrosis, milky disease, or hanging disease, is caused by infection with the Bombyx mori nucleopolyhedrovirus (aka Bombyx mori nuclear polyhedrosis virus, genus Alphabaculovirus). If grasserie is observed in the chawkie stage, then the chawkie larvae must have been infected while hatching or during chawkie rearing. Infected eggs can be disinfected by cleaning their surfaces prior to hatching. Infections can occur as a result of improper hygiene in the chawkie rearing house. This disease develops faster in early instar rearing.
  • Pébrine is a disease caused by a parasitic microsporidian, Nosema bombycis. Diseased larvae show slow growth, undersized, pale and flaccid bodies, and poor appetite. Tiny black spots appear on larval integument. Additionally, dead larvae remain rubbery and do not undergo putrefaction after death. N. bombycis kills 100% of silkworms hatched from infected eggs. This disease can be carried over from worms to moths, then to eggs and worms again. This microsporidium comes from the food that the silkworms eat. Female moths pass the disease to the eggs, and 100% of silkworms hatching from the diseased eggs die in their worm stage. To prevent this disease, eggs from infected moths are ruled out by checking the moth's body fluid under a microscope.
  • Flacherie infected silkworms look weak and are colored dark brown before they die. The disease destroys the larva's gut and is caused by viruses or poisonous food.
  • Several diseases caused by a variety of funguses are collectively named Muscardine.

See also edit

References edit

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  30. ^ The International Silkworm Genome Consortium (2008) The genome of a lepidopteran model insect, the silkworm Bombyx mori. Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 38(12): 1036–1045. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ibmb.2008.11.004
  31. ^ Dennis Normile (2009). "Sequencing 40 silkworm genomes unravels history of cultivation". Science. 325 (5944): 1058–1059. Bibcode:2009Sci...325.1058N. doi:10.1126/science.325_1058a. PMID 19713499.
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Student page on silkworm
  • Information about silkworms for classroom teachers with many photos
  • Silk worm Life cycle photos
  • Life Cycle Of A Silkworm 1943 article with first photographic study of subject

bombyx, mori, silkworm, redirects, here, other, uses, silkworm, disambiguation, domestic, silk, moth, insect, from, moth, family, bombycidae, closest, relative, bombyx, mandarina, wild, silk, moth, silkworm, larva, caterpillar, silk, moth, silkworm, particular. Silkworm redirects here For other uses see Silkworm disambiguation The domestic silk moth Bombyx mori is an insect from the moth family Bombycidae It is the closest relative of Bombyx mandarina the wild silk moth The silkworm is the larva or caterpillar of a silk moth The silkworm is of particular economic value being a primary producer of silk A silkworm s preferred food is white mulberry leaves though they may eat other species of mulberry and even leaves of other plants like the osage orange Domestic silk moths are entirely dependent on humans for reproduction as a result of millennia of selective breeding Wild silk moths other species of Bombyx are not as commercially viable in the production of silk Bombyx moriPaired male above female below Fifth instarConservation statusDomesticatedScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass InsectaOrder LepidopteraFamily BombycidaeGenus BombyxSpecies B moriBinomial nameBombyx mori Linnaeus 1758 SynonymsPhalaena mori Linnaeus 1758 Bombyx arracanensis Moore amp Hutton 1862 Bombyx brunnea Grunberg 1911 Bombyx croesi Moore amp Hutton 1862 Bombyx fortunatus Moore amp Hutton 1862 Bombyx meridionalis Wood Mason 1886 Bombyx sinensis Moore amp Hutton 1862 Bombyx textor Moore amp Hutton 1862Sericulture the practice of breeding silkworms for the production of raw silk existed for at least 5 000 years in China 1 whence it spread to India Korea Nepal Japan and then the West The domestic silk moth was domesticated from the wild silk moth Bombyx mandarina which has a range from northern India to northern China Korea Japan and the far eastern regions of Russia The domestic silk moth derives from Chinese rather than Japanese or Korean stock 2 3 Silk moths were unlikely to have been domestically bred before the Neolithic period Before then the tools to manufacture quantities of silk thread had not been developed The domesticated B mori and the wild B mandarina can still breed and sometimes produce hybrids 4 342 It is unknown if B mori can hybridize with other Bombyx species Compared to most members in the genus Bombyx domestic silk moths have lost their color pigments as well as their ability to fly 5 Contents 1 Types 2 Description and life cycle 2 1 Larvae 2 2 Pupae cocoon 2 3 Moth 3 Research 4 Domestication 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Hobby raising and school projects 5 Genome 6 As food 7 In culture 7 1 China 7 2 Vietnam 8 Feeding 9 Diseases 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksTypes editMulberry silkworms can be divided into three major categories based on seasonal brood frequency Univoltine silkworms produce only one brood a season and they are generally found in and around Europe Univoltine eggs must hibernate through the winter ultimately cross fertilizing in spring Bivoltine varieties are normally found in East Asia and their accelerated breeding process is made possible by slightly warmer climates In addition there are polyvoltine silkworms found only in the tropics Their eggs typically hatch within 9 to 12 days meaning there can be up to eight generations of larvae throughout the year 6 Description and life cycle editLarvae edit Eggs take about 14 days to hatch into larvae which eat continuously They have a preference for white mulberry having an attraction to the mulberry odorant cis jasmone They are not monophagous since they can eat other species of Morus as well as some other Moraceae mostly Osage orange They are covered with tiny black hairs When the color of their heads turns darker it indicates they are about to molt After molting the larval phase of the silkworms emerge white naked and with little horns on their backs Pupae cocoon edit After they have molted four times their bodies become slightly yellow and the skin becomes tighter The larvae then prepare to enter the pupal phase of their life cycle and enclose themselves in a cocoon made up of raw silk produced by the salivary glands The final molt from larva to pupa takes place within the cocoon which provides a layer of protection during the vulnerable almost motionless pupal state Many other Lepidoptera produce cocoons but only a few the Bombycidae in particular the genus Bombyx and the Saturniidae in particular the genus Antheraea have been exploited for fabric production The cocoon is made of a thread of raw silk from 300 to about 900 m 1 000 to 3 000 ft long The fibers are fine and lustrous about 10 mm 0 0004 in in diameter About 2 000 to 3 000 cocoons are required to make one pound of silk 0 4 kg At least 70 million pounds 32 million kg of raw silk are produced each year requiring nearly 10 billion cocoons 7 better source needed If the animal survives through the pupal phase of its life cycle it releases proteolytic enzymes to make a hole in the cocoon so it can emerge as an adult moth These enzymes are destructive to the silk and can cause the silk fibers to break down from over a mile in length to segments of random length which reduces the value of the silk threads although these damaged silk cocoons are still used as stuffing available in China and elsewhere in the production of duvets jackets and other purposes To prevent this silkworm cocoons are boiled in water The heat kills the silkworms and the water makes the cocoons easier to unravel Often the silkworm is eaten As the process of harvesting the silk from the cocoon kills the larva sericulture has been criticized by animal welfare and rights activists Mahatma Gandhi was critical of silk production based on the ahimsa philosophy not to hurt any living thing This led to Gandhi s promotion of cotton spinning machines an example of which can be seen at the Gandhi Institute 8 and an extension of this principle has led to the modern production practice known as Ahimsa silk which is wild silk from wild and semiwild silk moths made from the cocoons of moths that are allowed to emerge before the silk is harvested Moth edit The moth is the adult phase of the silk worm s life cycle Silk moths have a wingspan of 3 5 cm 1 2 2 0 in and a white hairy body Females are about two to three times bulkier than males due to carrying many eggs All adult Bombycidae moths have reduced mouthparts and do not feed The wings of the silk moth develop from larval imaginal disks 9 The moth is not capable of functional flight in contrast to the wild B mandarina and other Bombyx species whose males fly to meet females Some may emerge with the ability to lift off and stay airborne but sustained flight cannot be achieved as their bodies are too big and heavy for their small wings nbsp 2 thoracic legs nbsp Adult silk mothThe legs of the silk moth develop from the silkworm s larval thoracic legs Developmental genes like Distalless and extradenticle have been used to mark leg development In addition removing specific segments of the thoracic legs at different ages of the larva resulted in the adult silk moth not developing the corresponding adult leg segments 9 nbsp Cocoon of B moriResearch edit nbsp A study of an egg of a silkworm from Hooke s Micrographia 1665 nbsp 1679 study of the silkworm metamorphosis by Maria Sibylla Merian it depicts the fruit and leaves of a mulberry tree and the eggs and larvae of the silkworm moth Due to its small size and ease of culture the silkworm has become a model organism in the study of lepidopteran and general arthropod biology Fundamental findings on pheromones hormones brain structures and physiology have been made with the silkworm citation needed One example of this was the molecular identification of the first known pheromone bombykol which required extracts from 500 000 individuals due to the small quantities of pheromone produced by any individual silkworm citation needed Many research works have focused on the genetics of silkworms and the possibility of genetic engineering Many hundreds of strains are maintained and over 400 Mendelian mutations have been described 10 Another source suggests 1 000 inbred domesticated strains are kept worldwide 11 One useful development for the silk industry is silkworms that can feed on food other than mulberry leaves including an artificial diet 10 Research on the genome also raises the possibility of genetically engineering silkworms to produce proteins including pharmacological drugs in the place of silk proteins Bombyx mori females are also one of the few organisms with homologous chromosomes held together only by the synaptonemal complex and not crossovers during meiosis 12 Kraig Biocraft Laboratories 13 has used research from the Universities of Wyoming and Notre Dame in a collaborative effort to create a silkworm that is genetically altered to produce spider silk In September 2010 the effort was announced as successful 14 Researchers at Tufts developed scaffolds made of spongy silk that feel and look similar to human tissue They are implanted during reconstructive surgery to support or restructure damaged ligaments tendons and other tissue They also created implants made of silk and drug compounds which can be implanted under the skin for steady and gradual time release of medications 15 Researchers at the MIT Media Lab experimented with silkworms to see what they would weave when left on surfaces with different curvatures They found that on particularly straight webs of lines the silkworms would connect neighboring lines with silk weaving directly onto the given shape Using this knowledge they built a silk pavilion with 6 500 silkworms over a number of days Silkworms have been used in antibiotics discovery as they have several advantageous traits compared to other invertebrate models 16 Antibiotics such as lysocin E 17 a non ribosomal peptide synthesized by Lysobacter sp RH2180 5 18 and GPI0363 19 are among the notable antibiotics discovered using silkworms In addition antibiotics with appropriate pharmacokinetic parameters were selected that correlated with therapeutic activity in the silkworm infection model 20 Silkworms have also been used for the identification of novel virulence factors of pathogenic microorganisms A first large scale screening using transposon mutant library of Staphylococcus aureus USA300 strain was performed which identified 8 new genes with roles in full virulence of S aureus 21 Another study by the same team of researchers revealed for the first time the role of YjbH in virulence and oxidative stress tolerance in vivo 22 Domestication edit nbsp Gold silkworm Han dynastyThe domestic species B mori compared to the wild species e g B mandarina has increased cocoon size body size growth rate and efficiency of its digestion It has gained tolerance to human presence and handling and also to living in crowded conditions The domestic silk moths cannot fly so the males need human assistance in finding a mate and it lacks fear of potential predators The native color pigments have also been lost so the domestic silk moths are leucistic since camouflage is not useful when they only live in captivity These changes have made B mori entirely dependent upon humans for survival and it does not exist in the wild 23 The eggs are kept in incubators to aid in their hatching Breeding edit nbsp Silkworms and mulberry leaves placed on trays Liang Kai s Sericulture c 13th century Silkworms were first domesticated in China more than 5 000 years ago 24 25 nbsp Pupae nbsp Silkworm cocoons weighed and sorted Liang Kai s Sericulture Silkworm breeding is aimed at the overall improvement of silkworms from a commercial point of view The major objectives are improving fecundity the health of larvae quantity of cocoon and silk production and disease resistance Healthy larvae lead to a healthy cocoon crop Health is dependent on factors such as better pupation rate fewer dead larvae in the mountage 26 shorter larval duration this lessens the chance of infection and bluish tinged fifth instar larvae which are healthier than the reddish brown ones Quantity of cocoon and silk produced are directly related to the pupation rate and larval weight Healthier larvae have greater pupation rates and cocoon weights Quality of cocoon and silk depends on a number of factors including genetics Hobby raising and school projects edit In the U S teachers may sometimes introduce the insect life cycle to their students by raising domestic silk moths in the classroom as a science project Students have a chance to observe complete life cycles of insects from eggs to larvae to pupae to moths The domestic silk moth has been raised as a hobby in countries such as China South Africa Zimbabwe and Iran Children often pass on the eggs to the next generation creating a non commercial population The experience provides children with the opportunity to witness the life cycle of silk moths Genome editThe full genome of the domestic silk moth was published in 2008 by the International Silkworm Genome Consortium 11 Draft sequences were published in 2004 27 28 The genome of the domestic silk moth is mid range with a genome size around 432 million base pairs A notable feature is that 43 6 of the genome are repetitive sequences most of which are transposable elements At least 3 000 silkworm genes are unique and have no homologous equivalents in other genomes The silkworm s ability to produce large amounts of silk correlates with the presence of specific tRNA clusters as well as some clustered sericin genes Additionally the silkworm s ability to consume toxic mulberry leaves is linked to specialized sucrase genes which appear to have been acquired from bacterial genes 11 High genetic variability has been found in domestic lines of silk moths though this is less than that among wild silk moths about 83 percent of wild genetic variation This suggests a single event of domestication and that it happened over a short period of time with a large number of wild silkworms having been collected for domestication 29 Major questions however remain unanswered according to Jun Wang co author of a related study published in 2008 30 who stated Whether this event was in a single location or in a short period of time in several locations cannot be deciphered from the data 31 and research also has yet to identify the area in China where domestication arose As food edit nbsp Silkworm pupae dishesSilk moth pupae are edible insects and are eaten in some cultures In Assam India they are boiled for extracting silk and the boiled pupae are eaten directly with salt or fried with chili pepper or herbs as a snack or dish 32 In Korea they are boiled and seasoned to make a popular snack food known as beondegi 번데기 33 In China street vendors sell roasted silk moth pupae In Japan silkworms are usually served as a tsukudani 佃煮 i e boiled in a sweet sour sauce made with soy sauce and sugar In Vietnam this is known as nhộng tằm usually boiled seasoned with fish sauce then stir fried and eaten as main dish with rice In Thailand roasted silkworm is often sold at open markets They are also sold as packaged snacks Silkworms have also been proposed for cultivation by astronauts as space food on long term missions 34 In culture editChina edit See also Horse in Chinese mythology Origins of sericulture In China a legend indicates the discovery of the silkworm s silk was by an ancient empress named Leizu the wife of the Yellow Emperor also known as Xi Lingshi She was drinking tea under a tree when a silk cocoon fell into her tea As she picked it out and started to wrap the silk thread around her finger she slowly felt a warm sensation When the silk ran out she saw a small larva In an instant she realized this caterpillar larva was the source of the silk She taught this to the people and it became widespread Many more legends about the silkworm are told The Chinese guarded their knowledge of silk but according to one story a Chinese princess given in marriage to a Khotan prince brought to the oasis the secret of silk manufacture hiding silkworms in her hair as part of her dowry probably in the first half of the first century AD 35 About AD 550 Christian monks are said to have smuggled silkworms hidden in a hollow stick out of China selling the secret to the eastern Romans Vietnam edit According to a Vietnamese folk tale silkworms were originally a beautiful housemaid running away from her gruesome masters and living in the mountain where she was protected by the mountain god One day a lecherous god from the heaven came down to Earth to seduce women When he saw her he tried to rape her but she was able to escape and was hidden by the mountain god The lecherous god then tried to find and capture her by setting a net trap around the mountain With the blessing of Guanyin the girl was able to safely swallow that net into her stomach Finally the evil god summons his fellow thunder and rain gods to attack and burn away her clothes forcing her to hide in a cave Naked and cold she spit out the net and used it as a blanket to sleep The girl died in her sleep and as she wished to continue to help other people her soul turned into silkworms citation needed Feeding editBombyx mori is essentially monophagous exclusively eating mulberry leaves Morus spp By developing techniques for using artificial diets the amino acids needed for development are known 36 The various amino acids can be classified into five categories Those which when removed cause larval development to stop entirely lysine leucine isoleucine histidine arginine valine tryptophan threonine phenylalanine methionine Those which when removed impede later stages of larval development glutamate and aspartate Semi essential amino acids with negative effects that can be eliminated by supplementing with other amino acids proline ornithine can be substituted Non essential amino acids that can by replaced through biosynthesis by the larvae alanine glycine serine Non essential amino acids that can be removed with no effect at all tyrosineDiseases editBeauveria bassiana a fungus destroys the entire silkworm body This fungus usually appears when silkworms are raised under cold conditions with high humidity This disease is not passed on to the eggs from moths as the infected silkworms cannot survive to the moth stage This fungus however can spread to other insects Grasserie also known as nuclear polyhedrosis milky disease or hanging disease is caused by infection with the Bombyx mori nucleopolyhedrovirus aka Bombyx mori nuclear polyhedrosis virus genus Alphabaculovirus If grasserie is observed in the chawkie stage then the chawkie larvae must have been infected while hatching or during chawkie rearing Infected eggs can be disinfected by cleaning their surfaces prior to hatching Infections can occur as a result of improper hygiene in the chawkie rearing house This disease develops faster in early instar rearing Pebrine is a disease caused by a parasitic microsporidian Nosema bombycis Diseased larvae show slow growth undersized pale and flaccid bodies and poor appetite Tiny black spots appear on larval integument Additionally dead larvae remain rubbery and do not undergo putrefaction after death N bombycis kills 100 of silkworms hatched from infected eggs This disease can be carried over from worms to moths then to eggs and worms again This microsporidium comes from the food that the silkworms eat Female moths pass the disease to the eggs and 100 of silkworms hatching from the diseased eggs die in their worm stage To prevent this disease eggs from infected moths are ruled out by checking the moth s body fluid under a microscope Flacherie infected silkworms look weak and are colored dark brown before they die The disease destroys the larva s gut and is caused by viruses or poisonous food Several diseases caused by a variety of funguses are collectively named Muscardine See also editCocoonase History of silk Silk Road List of animals that produce silk Samia cynthia Thai silk Lao silk Japanese silk List of domesticated animalsReferences edit E J W Barber 1992 Prehistoric Textiles the Development of Cloth in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages with Special Reference to the Aegean Princeton University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 691 00224 8 K P Arunkumar Muralidhar Metta J Nagaraju 2006 Molecular phylogeny of silkmoths reveals the origin of domesticated silkmoth Bombyx mori from Chinese Bombyx mandarina and paternal inheritance of Antheraea proylei mitochondrial DNA PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 40 2 419 427 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2006 02 023 PMID 16644243 Hideaki Maekawa Naoko Takada Kenichi Mikitani et al 1988 Nucleolus organizers in the wild silkworm Bombyx mandarina and the domesticated silkworm B mori Chromosoma 96 4 263 269 doi 10 1007 BF00286912 S2CID 12870165 Brian K Hall 2010 Evolution Principles and Processes Topics in Biology Jones amp Bartlett Learning p 400 ISBN 978 0 7637 6039 7 Captive breeding for thousands of years has impaired olfactory functions in silkmoths Trevisan Adrian Cocoon Silk A Natural Silk Architecture Sense of Nature Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 faostat fao org Mahatma Gandhi 100 years 1968 p 349 a b Singh Amit Kango Singh Madhuri Parthasarathy R Gopinathan K P April 2007 Larval legs of mulberry silkworm Bombyx mori are prototypes for the adult legs Genesis 45 4 169 176 doi 10 1002 dvg 20280 ISSN 1526 954X PMID 17417803 S2CID 7171141 a b Goldsmith Marian R Shimada Toru Abe Hiroaki 2005 The genetics and genomics of the silkworm Bombyx mori Annual Review of Entomology 50 1 71 100 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 50 071803 130456 PMID 15355234 S2CID 44514698 a b c The International Silkworm Genome Consortium 2008 The genome of a lepidopteran model insect the silkworm Bombyx mori Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 38 12 1036 1045 doi 10 1016 j ibmb 2008 11 004 PMID 19121390 Gerton and Hawley 2005 Homologous Chromosome Interactions in Meiosis Diversity Amidst Conservation Nature Reviews Genetics 6 6 477 487 doi 10 1038 nrg1614 PMID 15931171 S2CID 31929047 Kraig Biocraft Laboratories 13 October 2014 University of Notre Dame Wolchover Natalie The Silk Renaissance Seed Magazine Archived from the original on 26 March 2017 Retrieved 1 May 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Panthee S Paudel A Hamamoto H Sekimizu K 2017 Advantages of the silkworm as an animal model for developing novel antimicrobial agents Front Microbiol 8 373 doi 10 3389 fmicb 2017 00373 PMC 5339274 PMID 28326075 Hamamoto H Urai M Ishii K et al 2015 Lysocin E is a new antibiotic that targets menaquinone in the bacterial membrane Nat Chem Biol 11 2 127 133 doi 10 1038 nchembio 1710 PMID 25485686 Panthee S Hamamoto H Suzuki Y Sekimizu K 2017 In silico identification of lysocin biosynthetic gene cluster from Lysobacter sp RH2180 5 J Antibiot 70 2 204 207 doi 10 1038 ja 2016 102 PMID 27553855 S2CID 40912719 Paudel A Hamamoto H Panthee S et al 2017 A novel spiro heterocyclic compound identified by the silkworm infection model inhibits transcription in Staphylococcus aureus Front Microbiol 8 712 doi 10 3389 fmicb 2017 00712 PMC 5403886 PMID 28487682 Paudel A Panthee S Makoto U et al 2018 Pharmacokinetic parameters explain the therapeutic activity of antimicrobial agents in a silkworm infection model Sci Rep 8 1 1578 Bibcode 2018NatSR 8 1578P doi 10 1038 s41598 018 19867 0 PMC 5785531 PMID 29371643 S2CID 3328235 Paudel A Hamamoto H Panthee S et al 2020 Large Scale Screening and Identification of Novel Pathogenic Staphylococcus aureus Genes Using a Silkworm Infection Model J Infect Dis 221 11 1795 1804 doi 10 1093 infdis jiaa004 PMID 31912866 Paudel A Panthee S Hamamoto H Grunert T Sekimizu K 2021 YjbH regulates virulence genes expression and oxidative stress resistance in Staphylococcus aureus Virulence 12 1 470 480 doi 10 1080 21505594 2021 1875683 ISSN 2150 5594 PMC 7849776 PMID 33487122 Marian R Goldsmith Toru Shimada Hiroaki Abe 2005 The genetics and genomics of the silkworm Bombyx mori Annual Review of Entomology 50 71 100 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 50 071803 130456 PMID 15355234 S2CID 44514698 Hong Song Yu1 Yi Hong Shen Gang Xiang Yuan et al 2011 Evidence of selection at melanin synthesis pathway loci during silkworm domestication Molecular Biology and Evolution 28 6 1785 99 doi 10 1093 molbev msr002 PMID 21212153 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Dennis Normile 2009 Sequencing 40 Silkworm Genomes Unravels History of Cultivation Science 325 5944 1058 1059 Bibcode 2009Sci 325 1058N doi 10 1126 science 325 1058a PMID 19713499 Mountage Meaning and Types Sericulture Zoology Notes 21 July 2016 Kazuei Mita Masahiro Kasahara Shin Sasaki et al 2004 The genome sequence of silkworm Bombyx mori DNA Research 11 1 27 35 doi 10 1093 dnares 11 1 27 PMID 15141943 Xia Q Zhou Z Lu C et al 2004 A draft sequence for the genome of the domesticated silkworm Bombyx mori Science 306 5703 1937 40 Bibcode 2004Sci 306 1937X doi 10 1126 science 1102210 PMID 15591204 S2CID 7227719 Qingyou Xia Yiran Guo Ze Zhang et al 2009 Complete resequencing of 40 genomes reveals domestication events and genes in silkworm Bombyx PDF Science 326 5951 433 436 Bibcode 2009Sci 326 433X doi 10 1126 science 1176620 PMC 3951477 PMID 19713493 The International Silkworm Genome Consortium 2008 The genome of a lepidopteran model insect the silkworm Bombyx mori Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 38 12 1036 1045 https doi org 10 1016 j ibmb 2008 11 004 Dennis Normile 2009 Sequencing 40 silkworm genomes unravels history of cultivation Science 325 5944 1058 1059 Bibcode 2009Sci 325 1058N doi 10 1126 science 325 1058a PMID 19713499 10 Weird Foods in India Eri polu February 2013 Have You Tried Steamed Silkworm Pupae Atlas Obscura Retrieved 6 August 2022 Choi Charles Q 13 January 2009 Care for a Silkworm With Your Tang ScienceNOW Daily News Archived from the original on 25 February 2011 Retrieved 14 January 2009 Sarah Underhill Wisseman Wendell S Williams Ancient Technologies and Archaeological Materials Routledge 1994 ISBN 2 88124 632 X Page 131 Hamed Kioumarsi Nazanin Amani Silkworm Bombyx mori An Overview of What You Need to Know AREEO 2021 ISBN 978 600 91994 0 2 Page 27 Further reading editKelly Henrietta Aiken 1903 The culture of the mulberry silkworm Washington DC U S Department of Agriculture Government Printing Office Retrieved 17 January 2012 Grimaldi David A Engel Michael S 2005 Evolution of the Insects Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82149 0 Johnson Sylvia 1989 Silkworms Lerner Publications ISBN 978 0 8225 9557 1 Scoble M J 1995 The Lepidoptera Form Function and Diversity Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 19 854952 9 Yoshitake N 1968 Phylogenetic aspects on the origin of Japanese race of the silkworm Bombyx mori L Journal of Sericological Sciences of Japan 37 83 87 Trevisan Adrian Cocoon Silk A Natural Silk Architecture Sense of Nature Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bombyx mori Student page on silkworm WormSpit a site about silkworms silk moths and silk Information about silkworms for classroom teachers with many photos SilkBase Silkworm full length cDNA Database Silk worm Life cycle photos Silkworm School Science Project Instruction Life Cycle Of A Silkworm 1943 article with first photographic study of subject Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bombyx mori amp oldid 1196033669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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