Chameleons and Chitin

CHITIN:

Today, I want to introduce you to a molecule called chitin. Chitin is a highly complex chain of N-acetylglucosamine, which is somewhat similar to glucose. If you look up a picture of chitin, you will see what appears to be two shapes that kind of resemble an hourglass. These are cyclohexanes (hexane means six carbon atoms and cyclo means cyclic). They have a few groups I’m not going to get into, but what I do want to address is that n on the right side of the brackets. What that means is that the unit within the brackets is going to repeat, and that’s how you get super long chains of chitin.

Chitin is produced in the epidermal (skin cells) of many arthropods (insects and other bugs) and gives the insects a great level of protection from animals that want to eat them. It makes them very difficult to chew, but even more difficult to digest [1].

CHITINASE:

See, chitin is a carbohydrate. All animals can digest simple carbohydrates, and your chameleon is no exception. Given glycogen (the sugar in his bugs), his digestive system is going to spit out various enzymes such as amylase [2] which take the glycogen and break it into small glucose molecules which are absorbed by the bloodstream and taken to the chameleon’s cells.

The problem is that chitin can’t be broken by conventional enzymes. Chitin has hydrogen bonds (very strong bonds), it is insoluble in water (so it doesn’t dissolve) and is so tightly packed, that we call it crystalline. The reason insects have chitin is not because it’s hard to penetrate with a bite, but rather that, it’s harder to degrade. Thus, all of the nutrients inside an insect’s exoskeleton aren’t leaving without a chitin-degrading enzyme [3].

Most animals don’t eat insects because of this reason. The more insects an animal eats, the more energy it is spending to capture prey which it can’t extract nutrients from.

That was until chitinase became a thing. Chitinase is the enzyme that is capable of breaking apart chitinase. Chitinase takes the bonds between the cyclohexanes (we call these β-1,4-linkages) and breaks them, making much simpler sugars. Then, these sugars will go through a long list of other digestion attempts, until the chitin is turned into sugar and transported to the bloodstream.

DO CHAMELEONS RELY ON CHITINASE?

So, the question is, who has chitinase? Well, insects certainly have chitinase. They require chitinase to break their exoskeletons during the molting process [4]. Crustacean-eating fish (such as Atlantic Salmon) also have chitinases, so they can actually eat crustaceans [5]. Amphibians (such as the American Bullfrog) also do the same thing, they need chitinase to decompose all of the flies and other insects they eat [6].

Now, here’s where things get confusing. Your chameleon may or may not have chitinase. Previously, it had been assumed that reptiles just didn’t use chitinase for their insectivorous diets. It was assumed that they relied on bacteria that did have chitinase. We wouldn’t assume that an animal had chitinase, because it is a lot easier to hold onto chitinase-containing bacteria than it is to develop your own chitinase. We know that many Bacteria such as Streptomyces are big producers of chitinase, and they use chitinase to metabolize chitin. So, is it possible that chameleons use these bacteria to digest chitin? Yes, it’s definitely possible.

However, there was a study done on the Eastern Fence Lizard (Sceloporus undulatus) which is closely related to Chameleons (the Iguania diverged in the Cretaceous). What they found is that Sceloporus had chitinase in the stomach, pancreas and small intestine [7]. We can assume that chameleons probably also have chitinase.

I’m going to say that it is probably the case that chameleons have as much chitinase as insectivorous fish and amphibians, or a limited amount of chitinase. However, the question is, to what degree do chameleons depend on their own chitinase, and to what degree do they depend on the chitinase of bacteria? Because, if they depend on bacteria, we will see that antibiotics would significantly damage their digestive system for lengths of time, specifically, a chameleon’s ability to break down the chitin in their food.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chitin

[2] https://www.vetexotic.theclinics.com/article/S1094-9194(02)00054-3/pdf?utm

[3] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10919822/

[4] https://academic.oup.com/jinsectscience/article/23/6/10/7453458?utm_source=chatgpt.com&login=true

[5] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37581908/

[6] https://einstein.elsevierpure.com/en/publications/cellular-expression-of-the-gut-chitinase-in-the-stomach-of-frogs--2/?utm

[7] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11290449/
 
You make me work…reading all these studies…but it’s interesting stuff! Thanks for posting!

So…now I have a question for you…do chameleons have cellulose in their digestive system? Do they get any from their insect diet that they can use to digest cellulose in their digestive system?
 
You said…If the chameleons “depend on bacteria, we will see that antibiotics would significantly damage their digestive system for lengths of time, specifically, a chameleon’s ability to break down the chitin in their food”…this is very interesting!

In your second link…it says…”Alpha and beta cells are equally proportioned in snakes, turtles, and crocodilians, but alpha cells are more abundant in lizards [5]. The high alpha cell predominance in lizards is not understood. A similar observation has been found in ducks, which also have high levels of alpha cells in the pancreas. In ducks and other avian species the alpha cells and elevated levels of glucagon are thought to play a very significant role in the maintenance of blood sugar”… this is very interesting too…I have to study it!

Regarding blood sugar levels…in this site…unless I missed it https://www.vetexotic.theclinics.com/article/S1094-9194(02)00054-3/pdf?utm
It didn’t mention Gila monsters….the Gila monster’s saliva, there’s a version of a hormone called exendin-4. It’s remarkably stable and sticks around much longer in the bloodstream. This allows the pancreas to continue releasing insulin over extended periods—hours rather than minutes. This is especially helpful after a large meal, helping the lizard avoid sugar spikes and steadily draw energy from its food over time.

You might like to read this…
https://asknature.org/strategy/saliva-regulates-digestion/

I’ve still got more of your links to read…so that’s it for now.
 
You make me work…reading all these studies…but it’s interesting stuff! Thanks for posting!

So…now I have a question for you…do chameleons have cellulose in their digestive system? Do they get any from their insect diet that they can use to digest cellulose in their digestive system?
Well, I'll lean towards no. The reason I say this is that just because an insect has something doesn't mean that that thing is transmitted to the chameleon. For instance, if you eat a salad, those cells have chloroplasts, and yet when you eat the salad, even though you fully absorb those cells nutrients, you do not develop the ability to photosynthesize. I would assume that chameleons break apart any cellulase (which is an enzyme) into its constituent amino acids for itself, not keeping the actual enzyme.

Now, some (in fact most) insects don't produce their own cellulase, but rely on cellulase producing bacteria. Can those bacteria be transmitted to a chameleon? Well, probably not. See, there was a study done on human bile (we diverged from chameleons in the Carboniferous) which showed that our bile was so acidic that lactic acid bacteria showed reduced viability once placed in our gut. Another study (I'll put both below) showed that most bacteria struggled to survive in bile.

Survival of lactic acid bacteria in a dynamic model of the stomach and small intestine: validation and the effects of bile

The interaction between bacteria and bile

So, I'd assume that given this information, no cellulase would be transmitted to chameleons in a way where they can use it. This makes sense, given most chameleons don't eat plants. Even Veiled Chameleons tend to do it to push caterpillars down their digestive system instead of actually digesting the plant matter (I'm going off of Bill Strand's hypothesis here).

I'm not completely sure, but my best guess is that they can't use cellulase even if they are eating animals that can.
 
You said…If the chameleons “depend on bacteria, we will see that antibiotics would significantly damage their digestive system for lengths of time, specifically, a chameleon’s ability to break down the chitin in their food”…this is very interesting!

In your second link…it says…”Alpha and beta cells are equally proportioned in snakes, turtles, and crocodilians, but alpha cells are more abundant in lizards [5]. The high alpha cell predominance in lizards is not understood. A similar observation has been found in ducks, which also have high levels of alpha cells in the pancreas. In ducks and other avian species the alpha cells and elevated levels of glucagon are thought to play a very significant role in the maintenance of blood sugar”… this is very interesting too…I have to study it!

Regarding blood sugar levels…in this site…unless I missed it https://www.vetexotic.theclinics.com/article/S1094-9194(02)00054-3/pdf?utm
It didn’t mention Gila monsters….the Gila monster’s saliva, there’s a version of a hormone called exendin-4. It’s remarkably stable and sticks around much longer in the bloodstream. This allows the pancreas to continue releasing insulin over extended periods—hours rather than minutes. This is especially helpful after a large meal, helping the lizard avoid sugar spikes and steadily draw energy from its food over time.

You might like to read this…
https://asknature.org/strategy/saliva-regulates-digestion/

I’ve still got more of your links to read…so that’s it for now.
Thank you so much for the support and yes, the chemistry and cellular biology of chameleons is all very interesting. Crazy world we live in, but a beautiful one.
 
You said…”Even Veiled Chameleons tend to do it to push caterpillars down their digestive system instead of actually digesting the plant matter”…I don’t think this has ever been proven but is just a theory. Do you know of any studies that have proven it?

I’m looking for an explanation as to why female veileds seem to go crazy stripping pathos plants absolutely bare of leaves when they are gravid. Do you have an explanation for this? It’s certainly not because they are eating caterpillars because I never feed them caterpillars.
 
You said…”Even Veiled Chameleons tend to do it to push caterpillars down their digestive system instead of actually digesting the plant matter”…I don’t think this has ever been proven but is just a theory. Do you know of any studies that have proven it?

I’m looking for an explanation as to why female veileds seem to go crazy stripping pathos plants absolutely bare of leaves when they are gravid. Do you have an explanation for this? It’s certainly not because they are eating caterpillars because I never feed them caterpillars.
No studies that I know of. Unfortunately, studies on chameleons are pretty sparse because results are hard to monetize. Cancer research, human research, even mammalian research, all of that is valuable to the government, but the government is pretty unlikely to fund a chameleon study, which is why they are so rare.
Sometimes you'll find a study on a homologue (closely related species) but something that specific is unlikely to have a study on it.

So, no me saying they use it to push things through their digestive system is indeed just a hypothesis put forth by Bill Strand who supposedly had a friend in Yemen and observed Veiled eating caterpillars and proposed that theory.

Let's go with the theory. Let say that in the wild, they developed a hormone (we'll arbitrarily call it the leaf hormone) that encouraged them to eat leaves after eating their food (typically caterpillars). Well, its not that they see a caterpillar and decide to get a leaf, it's probably that they eat a lot, and the leaf hormone is just excreted either constantly, or after they eat a meal of any sort. So, when your chameleon eats, that hormone would probably encourage them to grab a leaf regardless of what they ate.

However, this theory has a problem, in that this leaf situation tends to occur more when the female is gravid. I think it has something to do with hydration and nutrient requirements for laying eggs. Plants do have nutrients, its just that most of those nutrients are stored in the cellulose. A veiled chameleon could probably take SOME nutrients from a plant. It's just that they wouldn't get the large amount of energy in the cellulose, they would have to get smaller amounts of energy from the plant such as hydration, and minerals.

I don't know. I don't have a pHd, so don't take my word for it. This just seems like the most plausible explanation to me based on the research I've done.
 
I know who put this theory forward originally…it was Petr Necas.

It wouldn’t surprise me that it would help to push soft caterpillars through the chameleon’s digestive system…but IMHO it wouldn’t explain why the females devour it like crazy when they are gravid. A “search” for nutrients needed by the female for egg production could be a reason…but then, would they need cellulase to use the nutrients in the leaves ..or are the nutrients there in some way they can be removed without the need for cellulase to break the cellulose down to free the nutrients?

Also…if the leaves are not broken down and come out the other end of the chameleon whole, why would that be?

Are the caterpillars only available to eat coincidentally when the females are gravid…or what?

Veiled chameleons seem to have a caecum…
https://veterinaryscience.com.ua/we...of Veterinary Sciences_15(2)_2024-138-156.pdf

I think that cecums (plural?) always have a population of bacteria that can produce cellulase, from what I’ve read.

Also would hindgut fermentation for digesting cellulose take place in the cecum?
 
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