Metabolism, excretion and avoidance of cyanogenic glucosides in insects with different feeding specialisations

Stefan Pentzold, Mika Zagrobelny, Nanna Bjarnholt, Juergen Kroymann, Heiko Vogel, Carl Erik Olsen, Birger Lindberg Møller, Søren Bak

20 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

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.

Original languageEnglish
JournalInsect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Volume66
Pages (from-to)119-128
Number of pages10
ISSN0965-1748
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2015

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Metabolism, excretion and avoidance of cyanogenic glucosides in insects with different feeding specialisations'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this