Department of Entomology, 319 Agriculture Building, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, USA.
Bioessays. 2010 Sep;32(9):777-90. doi: 10.1002/bies.200900187.
Analysis of a diverse cross-sample of plant-insect interactions suggests that the abundance of vitamin C (L-ascorbic acid, ascorbate or AsA) in plants influences their susceptibility to insect feeding. These effects may be mediated by AsAs roles as an essential dietary nutrient, as an antioxidant in the insect midgut, or as a substrate for plant-derived ascorbate oxidase, which can lead to generation of toxic reactive oxygen species. Ascorbate can also influence the efficacy of plant defenses such as myrosinases and tannins, and alter insects' susceptibility to natural enemies. Conversely, herbivores appear to influence both de novo synthesis and redox cycling of AsA in their host plants, thereby potentially altering the nutritional value of crops and their susceptibility to pests. The recent development of genetically modified crops with enhanced AsA content provides both an impetus and a tool set for further studies on the role of AsA in plant-insect interactions.
对不同植物-昆虫相互作用样本的分析表明,植物中维生素 C(L-抗坏血酸、抗坏血酸盐或 AsA)的丰度影响其对昆虫取食的易感性。这些影响可能是通过 AsA 作为必需膳食营养素、昆虫中肠内的抗氧化剂或植物衍生的抗坏血酸氧化酶的底物的作用来介导的,抗坏血酸氧化酶可导致有毒的活性氧的产生。抗坏血酸还可以影响植物防御如芥子酶和单宁的功效,并改变昆虫对天敌的敏感性。相反,草食动物似乎影响其宿主植物中 AsA 的从头合成和氧化还原循环,从而可能改变作物的营养价值及其对害虫的敏感性。具有增强的 AsA 含量的转基因作物的最近发展为进一步研究 AsA 在植物-昆虫相互作用中的作用提供了动力和工具集。