%0 Journal Article %T Fatty Acid Desaturase Bmdesat5, Suppressed in the Salivary Glands by Domestication, is Involved in Regulation of Food Intake in Silkworms. %A Bai B %A Wen Y %A Wang J %A Wen F %A Yan H %A Yuan X %A Xie J %A Zhang R %A Xia Q %A Wang G %J J Agric Food Chem %V 72 %N 25 %D 2024 Jun 26 %M 38875711 %F 5.895 %R 10.1021/acs.jafc.4c02511 %X Understanding the evolutionary genetics of food intake regulation in domesticated animals has relevance to evolutionary biology, animal improvement, and obesity treatment. Here, we observed that the fatty acid desaturase gene (Bmdesat5), which regulates food intake, is suppressed in domesticated silkworms, but expressed in the salivary glands of the wild silkworm Bombyx mandarina. The content of its catalytic product, cis-vaccenic acid, was related to the expression levels of Bmdesat5 in the salivary glands of domesticated and wild silkworm strains. These two strains also showed significant differences in food intake. Using orally administering cis-vaccenic acid and transgenic-mediated overexpression, we verified that cis-vaccenic acid functions as a satiation signal, regulating food intake and growth in silkworms. Selection analysis showed that Bmdesat5 experienced selection, especially in the potential promoter, 5'-untranslated, and intron regions. This study highlights the importance of the decrement of satiety in silkworm domestication and provides new insights into the potential involvement of salivary glands in the regulation of satiety in animals, by acting as a supplement to gut-brain nutrient signaling.