Department of Bioorganic Chemistry, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany.
J Chem Ecol. 2012 Jul;38(7):865-72. doi: 10.1007/s10886-012-0143-5. Epub 2012 Jun 1.
Oral secretions of herbivorous lepidopteran larvae contain a mixture of saliva and regurgitant from the insect gut. Different compounds from the oral secretions can be recognized by the host plants and, thus, represent elicitors that induce plant defenses against feeding herbivores. Exogenously applied oral secretions can initiate the biosynthesis of jasmonates, phytohormones involved in the regulation of plant defense. However, it is not known (a) whether or not non-manipulated insects indeed release oral secretions including gut-derived compounds into a leaf wound during the natural feeding process, or (b) whether they adjust the release of gut components to the state of plant defense. We addressed these questions by using Arabidopsis thaliana as host plant and larvae of the generalist herbivorous insect Spodoptera littoralis. We investigated the conversion of the plant-derived jasmonate precursor, cis-12-oxophytodienoic acid (cis-OPDA), to iso-OPDA by the larvae. This enzymatic reaction is mediated by a specific glutathione-S-transferase in the insect gut, but not in the plant. Any presence of iso-OPDA in plant tissue, thus, indicated that gut content had been regurgitated into the plant wound. Our study demonstrates that the plant is the only source for the substrate cis-OPDA by using aos (allene oxide synthase) mutants that are unable to synthesize OPDA. The fact that iso-OPDA accumulated over time on feeding-damaged leaves shows that the feeding larvae are constantly regurgitating on leaves. Although the larvae provided the signaling compounds that were recognized by the plant and elicited defense reactions, the larval regurgitation behavior did not depend on whether they fed on a defensive wild type plant or on a non defensive coi1-16 plant. This suggests that S. littoralis larvae do not adjust regurgitation to the state of plant defense.
草食性鳞翅目幼虫的口腔分泌物包含昆虫肠道中的唾液和反刍物的混合物。口腔分泌物中的不同化合物可被宿主植物识别,因此代表诱导植物防御取食性昆虫的激发子。外源性施加的口腔分泌物可以引发茉莉酸的生物合成,茉莉酸是参与植物防御调节的植物激素。然而,目前尚不清楚(a)在自然取食过程中,未经处理的昆虫是否确实会将包括肠道来源的化合物在内的口腔分泌物释放到叶片伤口中,或者(b)它们是否会调整肠道成分的释放以适应植物防御状态。我们使用拟南芥作为宿主植物和多食性昆虫斜纹夜蛾的幼虫来解决这些问题。我们研究了幼虫将植物来源的茉莉酸前体顺式-12-氧代-植二烯酸(cis-OPDA)转化为异-OPDA 的情况。这种酶促反应由昆虫肠道中的特定谷胱甘肽 S-转移酶介导,但在植物中不存在。因此,植物组织中任何异-OPDA 的存在都表明肠道内容物已反刍到植物伤口中。我们的研究通过使用无法合成 OPDA 的 aos(丙二烯氧化物合酶)突变体证明了植物是 cis-OPDA 底物的唯一来源。随着时间的推移,异-OPDA 在取食损伤叶片上积累的事实表明,取食幼虫不断地在叶片上反刍。尽管幼虫提供了被植物识别并引发防御反应的信号化合物,但幼虫的反刍行为并不取决于它们是否以防御性野生型植物或非防御性 coi1-16 植物为食。这表明斜纹夜蛾幼虫不会根据植物防御状态来调整反刍行为。