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Kent State Stark Researchers Publish New Findings in Top Science Journal

Could the way flies and butterflies drink nectar and other fluids be imitated for use in medicine, potentially to deliver life-saving drugs to the human body? What if that method could save the insects own lives in times of drought?

These are the kind of questions being asked in the critical research being conducted by faculty and students at 5X社区 at Stark. 

A study by Matthew Lehnert, assistant professor of biological sciences at Kent State Stark, shows that the method by which flies and butterflies ingest liquids into their own bodies for nourishment may be used as a model for delivering disease-fighting drugs to the human body.

Drug delivery systems are engineered technologies for the targeted delivery and/or controlled release of therapeutic agents. They control the rate at which a drug is released and the location in the body where it is released. 

In addition to creating enhanced drug delivery methods, scientists and engineers could copy the feeding system of certain insects and manufacture small probes that can sample fluid inside of cells for use by doctors or other clinicians to make diagnoses.

Butterflies and flies have mouthparts that contain a channel for fluids to travel from the liquid source to the head for ingestion, Lehnert says. This study also found that there is a limiting pore size from which each individual can feed 鈥 butterflies and flies with smaller mouthpart channels will be able to feed on liquids from smaller pores, which might have an advantage for the insects and more broadly for the ecosystem in case of a drought.  

Lehnert, three of his Kent State Stark undergraduate student assistants and four other researchers found that flies, butterflies and moths (20 percent of all animals) use capillary action, or the movement of liquids seamlessly from one place to another, as the guiding principle when feeding on liquid films 鈥 their primary source of food. An insect鈥檚 proboscis, a body part that allows them to drink liquids, acts like a highly sophisticated sponge and straw that uses capillary action to send nectar or other liquids to the insect鈥檚 digestive system. 

Their findings were published recently in , one of the world鈥檚 top science journals.

Natural selection has favored the evolution of specialized mouthparts in fluid-feeding insects in order for them to feed on nectar and other liquid films. In butterflies and flies, the mouthparts consist of a proboscis adapted for using capillary action to pull thin films of fluid from surfaces for subsequent feeding. Usually, the proboscis of flies and butterflies is held close to the underside of the head when not in use and when the insect is searching for food.

The team鈥檚 findings show that capillary action is an essential and ideal method for removing small amounts of fluids from surfaces, Lehnert says. By copying this natural method, scientists say the mouthparts of flies and butterflies can serve as models for developing new devices for improved drug delivery systems.

鈥淚t was previously known that flies and butterflies independently evolved mouthparts adapted for feeding on fluids, but what was unknown before our study was that they both use the same principles for ingesting fluids 鈥 capillary action,鈥 Lehnert says. 鈥淥ur findings have applications to the production of novel microfluidic devices that can be developed to mimic the functionality of insect mouthparts, which have the advantage of being impacted by natural selection over millions of years.鈥 

Joining Lehnert on the research team were Kent State Stark undergraduates Andrew Bennett, Kristen E. Reiter and Miranda Byler; Qi-Huo Wei and Huan Yan of 5X社区鈥檚 Liquid Crystal Institute; Patrick D. Gerard of Clemson University鈥檚 Department of Mathematical Sciences; and Wah-Keat Lee of the Brookhaven National Laboratory.  

Funding support came from a three-year, $626,000 National Science Foundation grant.

POSTED: Tuesday, April 11, 2017 10:42 AM
Updated: Thursday, December 8, 2022 09:33 PM
WRITTEN BY:
Laura M. Massie

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