Brazilian Bioluminescent Beetles: Reflections on Catching Glimpses of Light in the Atlantic Forest and Cerrado
Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências (2018) 90(1 Suppl. 1): 663-679
(Annals of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences)
Printed version ISSN 0001-3765 / Online version ISSN 1678-2690
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0001-3765201820170504
www.scielo.br/aabc | www.fb.com/aabcjournal
Brazilian Bioluminescent Beetles: Reflections on Catching
Glimpses of Light in the Atlantic Forest and Cerrado
ETELVINO J.H. BECHARA and CASSIUS V. STEVANI
Departamento de Química Fundamental, Instituto de Química, Universidade de São
Paulo, Av. Prof. Lineu Prestes, 748, 05508-000 São Paulo, SP, Brazil
Manuscript received on July 4, 2017; accepted for publication on August 11, 2017
ABSTRACT
Bioluminescence - visible and cold light emission by living organisms - is a worldwide phenomenon,
reported in terrestrial and marine environments since ancient times. Light emission from microorganisms,
fungi, plants and animals may have arisen as an evolutionary response against oxygen toxicity and was
appropriated for sexual attraction, predation, aposematism, and camouflage. Light emission results from the
oxidation of a substrate, luciferin, by molecular oxygen, catalyzed by a luciferase, producing oxyluciferin
in the excited singlet state, which decays to the ground state by fluorescence emission. Brazilian Atlantic
forests and Cerrados are rich in luminescent beetles, which produce the same luciferin but slightly mutated
luciferases, which result in distinct color emissions from green to red depending on the species. This review
focuses on chemical and biological aspects of Brazilian luminescent beetles (Coleoptera) belonging to the
Lampyridae (fireflies), Elateridae (click-beetles), and Phengodidae (railroad-worms) families. The ATPdependent mechanism of bioluminescence, the role of luciferase tuning the color of light emission, the
“luminous termite mounds” in Central Brazil, the cooperative roles of luciferase and superoxide dismutase
against oxygen toxicity, and the hypothesis on the evolutionary origin of luciferases are highlighted.
Finally, we point out analytical uses of beetle bioluminescence for biological, clinical, environmental, and
industrial samples.
Key words: Coleoptera, bioluminescence, luciferase, luciferin, luminous termitary, oxidative stress.
INTRODUCTION
Bioluminescence is defined as visible and cold
light emission by living organisms. It results from
the oxidation of a substrate called luciferin by
molecular oxygen catalyzed by an enzyme named
luciferase, leading to a singlet excited-state product
Correspondence to: Etelvino José Henriques Bechara
E-mail:
* Contribution to the centenary of the Brazilian Academy of
Sciences.
(oxyluciferin*), which decays to the ground state
emitting fluorescence (Shimomura 2012, Wilson
and Hastings 2013). Thus, bioluminescence results
from conversion of chemical energy into photons:
Luciferin + O2 (luciferase) → Oxyluciferin* →
Oxyluciferin + Light
This review concerns about 30 years of
investigation on several species of Brazilian
bioluminescent beetles (Coleoptera), mainly
An Acad Bras Cienc (2018) 90 (1 Suppl. 1)
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ETELVINO J.H. BECHARA and CASSIUS V. STEVANI
click-beetles (Elateridae) and railroad-worms
(Phengodidae) found in the Brazilian Atlantic
Forest and the Cerrado biome. During the rainy
season, after sunset, bright and multicolored light
flashes emitted by flying beetles (Coleoptera) offer
a magnificent visual spectacle (Bechara 1988,
Bechara and Viviani 2015). Not surprisingly,
how and why these worldwide distributed insects
emanate intense and cold light are questions that
have awakened the curiosity of ordinary people,
writers, philosophers and scientists since ancient
times (Harvey 1957). Impressed by the intense
flashes of light sparked by the firefly at night,
Machado de Assis, a renowned Brazilian writer
wrote the sonnet Círculo Vicioso (Vicious Circle)
where a whispering chain of firefly, star, moon, and
the sun envy the brighter one, and finally the sun,
feeling itself too radiant and hot, wishes to be a
simple firefly. The sonnet ‘jealous’ insect aspires
to be able to chemically produce as much energy
as the nuclear forces of the stars, being orders of
magnitude higher.
Dancing in the air, moaned a restless firefly:
“Oh, would that I could be that star so yellow
Shining in the everlasting blue, as a candle
mellow!”
But the star gazed at the moon with envy high:
“If only I could copy thy wondrous silver light,
That from column Greek to Gothic window-case
Hath gazed with longing on my beloved’s face!”
Yet the moon turned to the sun, full of spite:
“Wretch! I would have thy clarity overwhelming
Shining immortal, all light joined in one!”
Replied the Sun, his shining crown bending:
“Weary am I of this halo of luminous sky
This light and boundless canopy weighs heavy.
Oh, that I were born a humble firefly!”
Vicious Circle, Machado de Assis
(Courtesy free translation by Clara Allain)
In fact, an attentive onlooker would soon realize
that the beetles, swirling in their glimmering cloud,
are caught up in their nuptial flight. Afterwards,
the insects pose on leaves and grass for copulation.
In Brazil, the occurrence of fireflies and other
luminous insects was first registered by Gabriel de
Souza in 1587 in a document to Felipe I, King of
Portugal and Spain, describing “mamoás” (fireflies)
and “buijejas” (probably, railroad-worms) so called
by the Amerindians of the State of Bahia (Moraes
1940). Fireflies (Lampyridae), click-beetles
(Elateridae) and railroad-worms (Phengodidae)
constitute the three most abundant families of
luminescent coleopterans in Brazil (Fig. 1).
Until present days, elucidation of the
biochemical mechanism of a given luminescent
organism, be it a fly (Viviani et al. 2002) or a
mushroom (Oliveira and Stevani 2009), frequently
employs the preparation of a “hot” extract by heatinduced enzyme denaturation: the initial step of the
basic protocol long established by Raphael Dubois
Figure 1 - Photographs of a firefly (Macrolampis omissa) (a), a click-beetle (Pyrophorus sp.) (b), and a railroad-worm (Phrixothrix
hirtus) (c).
An Acad Bras Cienc (2018) 90 (1 Suppl. 1)
CHEMISTRY AND BIOLOGY OF BEETLE BIOLUMINESCENCE
(1886) when studying the basic ingredients for
light emission by a click-beetle, formerly named
Pyrophorus noctilucus. Dubois mixed “cold” and
“hot” aqueous extracts of the insect lanterns and
discovered that a thermostable substrate (luciferin)
and a thermolabile component (luciferase) elicit a
flash of green light. Much later, McElroy (1947)
discovered that addition of ATP and Mg2+ ions is
also necessary to enhance the in vitro and in vivo
firefly bioluminescence. Success of the Dubois
experiment with any bioluminescent organism
also depends on molecular oxygen, a requirement
discovered by Robert Boyle (1668a, b) when
comparing the luminescence of decomposing
fish (actually bacteria) and rotten wood (from
saprophytic fungi) under ‘vaccum’ (sic) and air. He
also differed the nature of the flame of bu (...truncated)