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1.
Zagrobelny M  Møller BL 《Phytochemistry》2011,72(13):1585-1592
Cyanogenic glucosides are important components of plant defense against generalist herbivores due to their bitter taste and the release of toxic hydrogen cyanide upon tissue disruption. Some specialized herbivores, especially insects, preferentially feed on cyanogenic plants. Such herbivores have acquired the ability to metabolize cyanogenic glucosides or to sequester them for use in their own predator defense. Burnet moths (Zygaena) sequester the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin from their food plants (Fabaceae) and, in parallel, are able to carry out de novo synthesis of the very same compounds. The ratio and content of cyanogenic glucosides is tightly regulated in the different stages of the Zygaena filipendulae lifecycle and the compounds play several important roles in addition to defense. The transfer of a nuptial gift of cyanogenic glucosides during mating of Zygaena has been demonstrated as well as the possible involvement of hydrogen cyanide in male assessment and nitrogen metabolism. As the capacity to de novo synthesize cyanogenic glucosides was developed independently in plants and insects, the great similarities of the pathways between the two kingdoms indicate that cyanogenic glucosides are produced according to a universal route providing recruitment of the enzymes required. Pyrosequencing of Z. filipendulae larvae de novo synthesizing cyanogenic glucosides served to provide a set of good candidate genes, and demonstrated that the genes encoding the pathway in plants and Z. filipendulae are not closely related phylogenetically. Identification of insect genes involved in the biosynthesis and turn-over of cyanogenic glucosides will provide new insights into biological warfare as a determinant of co-evolution between plants and insects.  相似文献   

2.
Zygaena larvae sequester the cyanogenic glucosides (CNglcs) linamarin and lotaustralin from their food plants (Fabaceae) and also de novo biosynthesize these compounds. In Zygaenidae, CNglcs serve as defence compounds during the entire life cycle, and their content and ratio are tightly regulated. We demonstrate that Z. filipendulae males transfer a nuptial gift of CNglcs to females during mating, and that females prefer males with a higher content of CNglcs for mating. Average HCN emission from female imagines is 19 times higher than from males, suggesting that plumes of HCN emitted from the perching female may serve to attract flying males. Analysis of the linamarin and lotaustralin content and ratio within different tissues in Z. filipendulae larvae shows that integument and haemolymph constitute the main sites of CNglc deposition. The data suggest that CNglcs may serve an additional role as storage compounds of reduced nitrogen that is mobilized during the transition of the last instar larva to imago, most likely to provide nitrogen for chitin synthesis. At least one of the enzymes responsible for de novo biosynthesis of CNglcs in Z. filipendulae is located in the integument. In conclusion, CNglcs play many important and different roles during the entire life cycle of Z. filipendulae in addition to defence.  相似文献   

3.
Zygaena filipendulae accumulates the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin by larval sequestration from the food plant or de novo biosynthesis. We have previously demonstrated that the Z. filipendulae male transfers linamarin and lotaustralin to the female in the course of mating. In this study we report the additional transfer of 5-hydroxytryptophan glucoside (5-(β-d-glucopyranosyloxy)-l-Tryptophan) from the Z. filipendulae male internal genitalia to the female spermatophore around 5 h into the mating process. 5-Hydroxytryptophan glucoside is present in the virgin male internal genitalia, and production continues during the early phase of mating. Following initiation of 5-hydroxytryptophan glucoside transfer to the female, the amount in male internal genitalia is drastically reduced until after mating where it is slowly replenished. For unambiguous structural identification, 5-hydroxytryptophan glucoside was chemically synthesized and used as an authentic standard. The biological function of 5-hydroxytryptophan glucoside remains to be established, although we have indications that it may be involved in inducing the female to stay in copula and delay egg-laying to prevent re-mating of the female. To our knowledge 5-hydroxytryptophan glucoside has not previously been reported present in animal tissues.  相似文献   

4.
《Phytochemistry》1986,25(10):2299-2302
Experiments in which unlabelled and [aglycone 14C-labelled cyanogenic glycosides, linamarin and lotaustralin, were fed to larvae of the moth Zygaena trifolii on leaves of an acyanogenic strain of their food plant, Lotus corniculatus, showed that the larvae retained about 20–45% of the glucosides consumed. The larvae in nature usually feed on plants of L. corniculatus which themselves contain linamarin and lotaustralin. Earlier experiments had shown that the larvae of Zygaena spp. are able to synthesize these glucosides from valine and isoleucine and so both sequestration and biosynthesis of the same compounds can occur. This is the only such occurrence yet known in the relationships between plants and insects.  相似文献   

5.
The burnet moth Zygaena filipendulae L. contains the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin, which can be degraded to the volatiles hydrogen cyanide (HCN), acetone and 2‐butanone. Linamarin and lotaustralin are transferred from the male to female during mating and thus are considered to be involved in mating communication. Because volatile semiochemical cues play a major role in mating communication in many insect species, the emissions of HCN, acetone and 2‐butanone from Z. filipendulae are characterized in the present study, aiming to determine the interplay between the degradation products of cyanogenic glucosides and pheromones. The volatile emissions from Z. filipendulae and flowers inducing mating are measured using headspace solid‐phase micro‐extraction and gas chromatography‐mass spectrometry analysis. All Z. filipendulae life stages emit HCN, acetone and 2‐butanone. Virgin females show higher emissions than mated females, whereas mated males have higher emissions than virgin males. Hydrogen cyanide is only rarely detected in the course of male–female copulation. These observations indicate a role for the cyanogenic glucoside derived volatiles in female calling and male courtship behaviours, although not as a defence during copulation. Males rejected for mating by a female are accepted after injection of linamarin or lotaustralin, demonstrating that cyanogenic glucosides are also important for female assessment of the fitness of the male. Volatiles from flowers occupied during mate calling are also analyzed, and emissions from males and females result in the identification of novel putative pheromones for Z. filipendulae.  相似文献   

6.
Zygaena larvae sequester the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin from their food plants (Fabaceae) as well as carry out de novo biosynthesis of these compounds. In this study, Zygaena filipendulae were reared on wild-type Lotus corniculatus and wild-type and transgenic L. japonicus plants with differing content and ratios of the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin and of the cyanoalkenyl glucosides rhodiocyanoside A and D. LC-MS analyses, free choice feeding experiments and developmental studies were used to examine the effect of varying content and ratios of these secondary metabolites on the feeding preferences, growth and development of Z. filipendulae. Larvae reared on cyanogenic L. corniculatus developed faster compared to larvae reared on L. japonicus although free choice feeding trials demonstrated that the latter plant source was the preferred food plant. Larvae reared on acyanogenic L. corniculatus showed decelerated development. Analysis of different life stages and tissues demonstrate that Z. filipendulae strive to maintain certain threshold content and ratios of cyanogenic glucosides regardless of the composition of the food plants. Despite this, the ratios of cyanogenic glucosides in Z. filipendulae remain partly affected by the ratio of the food plant due to the high proportion of sequestering that takes place.  相似文献   

7.
The colorful heliconiine butterflies are distasteful to predators due to their content of defense compounds called cyanogenic glucosides (CNglcs), which they biosynthesize from aliphatic amino acids. Heliconiine larvae feed exclusively on Passiflora plants where ~30 kinds of CNglcs have been reported. Among them, some CNglcs derived from cyclopentenyl glycine can be sequestered by some Heliconius species. In order to understand the evolution of biosynthesis and sequestration of CNglcs in these butterflies and its consequences for their arms race with Passiflora plants, we analyzed the CNglc distribution in selected heliconiine and Passiflora species. Sequestration of cyclopentenyl CNglcs is not an exclusive trait of Heliconius, since these compounds were present in other heliconiines such as Philaethria, Dryas and Agraulis, and in more distantly related genera Cethosia and Euptoieta. Thus, it is likely that the ability to sequester cyclopentenyl CNglcs arose in an ancestor of the Heliconiinae subfamily. Biosynthesis of aliphatic CNglcs is widespread in these butterflies, although some species from the sara‐sapho group seem to have lost this ability. The CNglc distribution within Passiflora suggests that they might have diversified their cyanogenic profile to escape heliconiine herbivory. This systematic analysis improves our understanding on the evolution of cyanogenesis in the heliconiine–Passiflora system.  相似文献   

8.
Lotus japonicus, like several other legumes, biosynthesizes the cyanogenic α–hydroxynitrile glucosides lotaustralin and linamarin. Upon tissue disruption these compounds are hydrolysed by a specific β–glucosidase, resulting in the release of hydrogen cyanide. Lotus japonicus also produces the non‐cyanogenic γ‐ and β–hydroxynitrile glucosides rhodiocyanoside A and D using a biosynthetic pathway that branches off from lotaustralin biosynthesis. We previously established that BGD2 is the only β–glucosidase responsible for cyanogenesis in leaves. Here we show that the paralogous BGD4 has the dominant physiological role in rhodiocyanoside degradation. Structural modelling, site‐directed mutagenesis and activity assays establish that a glycine residue (G211) in the aglycone binding site of BGD2 is essential for its ability to hydrolyse the endogenous cyanogenic glucosides. The corresponding valine (V211) in BGD4 narrows the active site pocket, resulting in the exclusion of non‐flat substrates such as lotaustralin and linamarin, but not of the more planar rhodiocyanosides. Rhodiocyanosides and the BGD4 gene only occur in L. japonicus and a few closely related species associated with the Lotus corniculatus clade within the Lotus genus. This suggests the evolutionary scenario that substrate specialization for rhodiocyanosides evolved from a promiscuous activity of a progenitor cyanogenic β–glucosidase, resembling BGD2, and required no more than a single amino acid substitution.  相似文献   

9.
《Insect Biochemistry》1987,17(5):689-693
14C-labelled 2-methylpropanenitrile and 2-methylbutanenitrile were administered to larvae and imagines of Heliconius melpomone and to larvae of Zygaena trifolii and the incorporation into the cyanogenic glucosides, linamarin and lotaustralin, was measured. Both species incorporated the precursors at all stages tested, at a high level of 15–72%, thereby indicating that the nitriles are probale intermediates in the lepidopteran biosynthesis of linamarin and lotaustralin from valine and isoleucine respectively.  相似文献   

10.
Cyanogenesis, the release of hydrogen cyanide from damaged plant tissues, involves the enzymatic degradation of amino acid–derived cyanogenic glucosides (α-hydroxynitrile glucosides) by specific β-glucosidases. Release of cyanide functions as a defense mechanism against generalist herbivores. We developed a high-throughput screening method and used it to identify cyanogenesis deficient (cyd) mutants in the model legume Lotus japonicus. Mutants in both biosynthesis and catabolism of cyanogenic glucosides were isolated and classified following metabolic profiling of cyanogenic glucoside content. L. japonicus produces two cyanogenic glucosides: linamarin (derived from Val) and lotaustralin (derived from Ile). Their biosynthesis may involve the same set of enzymes for both amino acid precursors. However, in one class of mutants, accumulation of lotaustralin and linamarin was uncoupled. Catabolic mutants could be placed in two complementation groups, one of which, cyd2, encoded the β-glucosidase BGD2. Despite the identification of nine independent cyd2 alleles, no mutants involving the gene encoding a closely related β-glucosidase, BGD4, were identified. This indicated that BGD4 plays no role in cyanogenesis in L. japonicus in vivo. Biochemical analysis confirmed that BGD4 cannot hydrolyze linamarin or lotaustralin and in L. japonicus is specific for breakdown of related hydroxynitrile glucosides, such as rhodiocyanoside A. By contrast, BGD2 can hydrolyze both cyanogenic glucosides and rhodiocyanosides. Our genetic analysis demonstrated specificity in the catabolic pathways for hydroxynitrile glucosides and implied specificity in their biosynthetic pathways as well. In addition, it has provided important tools for elucidating and potentially modifying cyanogenesis pathways in plants.  相似文献   

11.
The valine/isoleucine-derived cyanogenic glycosides linamarin and lotaustralin have been isolated together with the cyclopentenoid cyanogen passibiflorin from Passiflora lutea. This is only the second report of the production of cyanogenic glycosides from more than one biosynthetic pathway in individuals of a single species.  相似文献   

12.
Host plant specialization is a major force driving ecological niche partitioning and diversification in insect herbivores. The cyanogenic defences of Passiflora plants keep most herbivores at bay, but not the larvae of Heliconius butterflies, which can both sequester and biosynthesize cyanogenic compounds. Here, we demonstrate that both Heliconius cydno chioneus and H. melpomene rosina have remarkable plasticity in their chemical defences. When feeding on Passiflora species with cyanogenic compounds that they can readily sequester, both species downregulate the biosynthesis of these compounds. By contrast, when fed on Passiflora plants that do not contain cyanogenic glucosides that can be sequestered, both species increase biosynthesis. This biochemical plasticity comes at a fitness cost for the more specialist H. m. rosina, as adult size and weight for this species negatively correlate with biosynthesis levels, but not for the more generalist H. c. chioneus. By contrast, H. m rosina has increased performance when sequestration is possible on its specialized host plant. In summary, phenotypic plasticity in biochemical responses to different host plants offers these butterflies the ability to widen their range of potential hosts within the Passiflora genus, while maintaining their chemical defences.  相似文献   

13.
《Phytochemistry》1986,25(7):1573-1578
The mean HCN-potential (HCN-p) of freshly collected seeds of Hevea brasiliensis is 104.8 μmol HCN per g dry weight. More than 90% of the cyanogenic compound is stored in the endosperm. During seedling development under aseptic conditions HCN-p of the entire seedling decreases to 15% within 19 days. The cyanogenic compounds are metabolized during germination to form noncyanogenic substances. Leaves of H. pauciflora, H. benthanaana, H. pauciflora x H. guianensis and H. spruceana contain both linamarin and (R)-lotaustralin, whereas lotaustralin was not detectable in leaves and seeds of H. brasiliensis.  相似文献   

14.
Lotus japonicus was shown to contain the two nitrile glucosides rhodiocyanoside A and rhodiocyanoside D as well as the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin. The content of cyanogenic and nitrile glucosides in L. japonicus depends on plant developmental stage and tissue. The cyanide potential is highest in young seedlings and in apical leaves of mature plants. Roots and seeds are acyanogenic. Biosynthetic studies using radioisotopes demonstrated that lotaustralin, rhodiocyanoside A, and rhodiocyanoside D are derived from the amino acid l-Ile, whereas linamarin is derived from Val. In silico homology searches identified two cytochromes P450 designated CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 in L. japonicus. The two cytochromes P450 are 94% identical at the amino acid level and both catalyze the conversion of Val and Ile to the corresponding aldoximes in biosynthesis of cyanogenic glucosides and nitrile glucosides in L. japonicus. CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 are differentially expressed. CYP79D3 is exclusively expressed in aerial parts and CYP79D4 in roots. Recombinantly expressed CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 in yeast cells showed higher catalytic efficiency with l-Ile as substrate than with l-Val, in agreement with lotaustralin and rhodiocyanoside A and D being the major cyanogenic and nitrile glucosides in L. japonicus. Ectopic expression of CYP79D2 from cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz.) in L. japonicus resulted in a 5- to 20-fold increase of linamarin content, whereas the relative amounts of lotaustralin and rhodiocyanoside A/D were unaltered.  相似文献   

15.
Cyanogenic glucosides (CNglcs) are widespread plant defence compounds releasing toxic hydrogen cyanide when hydrolysed by specific β-glucosidases after plant tissue damage. In contrast to specialist herbivores that have mechanisms to avoid toxicity from CNglcs, it is generally assumed that non-adapted herbivores are negatively affected by CNglcs. Recent evidence, however, implies that the defence potential of CNglcs towards herbivores may not be as effective as previously anticipated. Here, performance, metabolism and excretion products of insects not adapted to CNglcs were analysed, including species with different degrees of dietary specialisation (generalists, specialists) and different feeding modes (leaf-snipping lepidopterans, piercing-sucking aphids). Insects were reared either on cyanogenic or acyanogenic plants or on an artificial cyanogenic diet. Lepidopteran generalists (Spodoptera littoralis, Spodoptera exigua, Mamestra brassicae) were compared to lepidopteran glucosinolate-specialists (Pieris rapae, Pieris brassicae, Plutella xylostella), and a generalist aphid (Myzus persicae) was compared to an aphid glucosinolate-specialist (Lipaphis erysimi). All insects were tolerant to cyanogenic plants; in lepidopterans tolerance was mainly due to excretion of intact CNglcs. The two Pieris species furthermore metabolized aromatic CNglcs to amino acid conjugates (Cys, Gly, Ser) and derivatives of these, which is similar to the metabolism of benzylglucosinolates in these species. Aphid species avoided uptake of CNglcs during feeding. Our results imply that non-adapted insects tolerate plant CNglcs either by keeping them intact for excretion, metabolizing them, or avoiding uptake.  相似文献   

16.
In response to herbivores, plants produce a variety of natural compounds. Many beetle species have developed ingenious strategies to cope with these substances, including colonizing habitats not attractive for other organisms. Leaf beetle larvae of the subtribe Chrysomelina, for example, sequester plant-derived compounds and use them for their own defense against predators. Using systematically modified structural mimics of plant-derived glucosides, we demonstrated that all tested Chrysomelina larvae channel compounds from the gut lumen into the defensive glands, where they serve as intermediates in the synthesis of deterrents. Detailed studies of the sequestration process revealed a functional network of transport processes guiding phytochemicals through the larval body. The initial uptake by the larvae’s intestine seems to be fairly unspecific, which contrasts sharply with the specific import of precursors into the defensive glands. The Malpighian tubules and hind-gut organs facilitate the rapid clearing of body fluid from excess or unusable compounds. The network exists in both sequestering species and species producing deterrents de novo. Transport proteins are also required for de novo synthesis to channel intermediates from the fat body to the defensive glands for further conversion. Thus, all the tools needed to exploit host plants’ chemistry by more derived Chrysomelina species are already developed by iridoid–de novo producers. Early intermediates from the iridoid–de novo synthesis which also can be sequestered are able to regulate the enzyme activity in the iridoid metabolism.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The effect of the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin and their hydrolyzing enzyme linamarase was studied in a B2 generation segregating for the genes Ac and Li. Plants containing the glucosides are protected against grazing by snails both in the seedling stage and as adult plants. In seedlings, however, there is a direct effect on survival, whereas in adult plants the leaf area of plants containing linamarin/lotaustralin is less reduced under intense grazing. Linamarase has no effect on grazing by snails, possibly as a result of the presence of -glucosidase activity in the gut of these animals. The genes Ac and Li, or genes tightly linked to them, have other effects as well: plants possessing one dominant Ac allele produce fewer flowers than homozygous ac plants. I compared this difference in flower production to the metabolic cost of producing the cyanogenic glucosides. The energy content of the difference in flower head production far exceeded the metabolic cost of cyanoglucoside production in Acac plants. It is possible that the cost of maintaining a certain level of cyanoglucosides is much more important for the plant than the initial cost of biosynthesis. The importance of the effects of Ac and Li in the maintenance of cyanogenic polymorphism in white clover is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The cyanogenic glucosides of four Latin American species of Acacia (Fabceae: Mimosoideae) have been isolated and characterized. Acacia atramentaria (Argentina) contains proacacipetalin, A.aroma (Argentina) linamarin and lotaustralin, A. tortuosa (Venezuela) proacacipetalin and a second presently uncharacterized glycoside, and A. globulifera (Guatemala) epiproacacipetalin which has not previously been reported as naturally occurring.  相似文献   

19.
Microsomal preparations from flax seedlings have recently been shown to convert L-valine to acetone cyanohydrin, the precursor of the cyanogenic glucoside linamarin [A. J. Cutler and E. E. Conn (1981) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 212, 468-474]. Further details of this four-step biosynthetic sequence and also details of the analogous reactions in lotaustralin biosynthesis have been obtained. The lotaustralin precursor, 2-methylbutyraldoxime, is the best substrate for cyanide production (Vmax = 413 nmol h-1 g fresh wt-1) and inhibits the conversion of valine and isoleucine into products. Similarly, the linamarin precursor isobutyraldoxime is an excellent substrate (Vmax = 400 nmol h-1 g fresh wt-1) and also inhibits oxidation of the amino acids. The substrate specificity of the oxime-metabolizing step is low and a variety of aliphatic oximes are converted to cyanide. On the other hand, the activity of the microsomal extract is highly selective with regard to the amino acid substrate since, of the aliphatic amino acids tested, only valine and isoleucine are metabolized. We were unable to demonstrate product formation from isobutyronitrile (a linamarin precursor) but did observe detectable cyanide formation from 2-methylcyanobutane, the corresponding precursor of lotaustralin. Competition experiments showed that the biosynthesis of linamarin and lotaustralin is not likely to be catalyzed by separate enzyme systems.  相似文献   

20.
Microsomal preparations from dark-grown Linum usitatissimum (linen flax) seedlings synthesize acetone cyanohydrin, the precursor of the cyanogenic glucoside linamarin, from valine in the presence of NADPH. N-Hydroxyvaline and isobutyraldoxime, which are predicted intermediates in the pathway, are also converted into products. These microsomal preparations also convert isoleucine into 2-butanone cyanohydrin the precursor of lotaustralin. The biosynthetic activity is located exclusively in the developing cotyledons.  相似文献   

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