Costa Rica
| artículo científico
Relative Selectivity of Plant Cardenolides for Na+/K+ -ATPases From the Monarch Butterfly and Non-resistant Insects
Fecha
2018Registro en:
1664-462X
10.3389/fpls.2018.01424
Autor
Petschenka, Georg
Fei, Colleen S.
Araya Barrantes, Juan José
Schröder, Susanne
Timmermann, Barbara N.
Agrawal, Anurag A.
Institución
Resumen
A major prediction of coevolutionary theory is that plants may target particular herbivores
with secondary compounds that are selectively defensive. The highly specialized
monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) copes well with cardiac glycosides (inhibitors
of animal NaC/KC-ATPases) from its milkweed host plants, but selective inhibition
of its NaC/KC-ATPase by different compounds has not been previously tested.
We applied 17 cardiac glycosides to the D. plexippus-NaC/KC-ATPase and to the
more susceptible NaC/KC-ATPases of two non-adapted insects (Euploea core and
Schistocerca gregaria). Structural features (e.g., sugar residues) predicted in vitro
inhibitory activity and comparison of insect NaC/KC-ATPases revealed that the monarch
has evolved a highly resistant enzyme overall. Nonetheless, we found evidence for
relative selectivity of individual cardiac glycosides reaching from 4- to 94-fold differences
of inhibition between non-adapted NaC/KC-ATPase and D. plexippus-NaC/KC-ATPase.
This toxin receptor specificity suggests a mechanism how plants could target herbivores
selectively and thus provides a strong basis for pairwise coevolutionary interactions
between plants and herbivorous insects.