Plant Secondary Metabolites Modulate Insect Behavior-Steps Toward Addiction?

被引:130
作者
Wink, Michael [1 ]
机构
[1] Heidelberg Univ, Inst Pharm & Mol Biotechnol, Heidelberg, Germany
来源
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY | 2018年 / 9卷
关键词
plant secondary metabolites; pharmacology; toxicology; plant-insect interactions; neurotoxicity; psychoactive natural products; PYRROLIZIDINE ALKALOIDS; ARCTIID MOTH; DANAUS-PLEXIPPUS; CHEMICAL DEFENSE; NEURORECEPTORS; INSENSITIVITY; BIOSYNTHESIS; LEPIDOPTERA; PHEROMONES; EVOLUTION;
D O I
10.3389/fphys.2018.00364
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
Plants produce a diversity of secondary metabolites (PSMs) that serve as defense compounds against herbivores and microorganisms. In addition, some PSMs attract animals for pollination and seed dispersal. In case of pollinating insects. PSMs with colors or terpenoids with fragrant odors attract pollinators in the first place, but when they arrive at a flower, they are rewarded with nectar, so that the pollinators do not feed on flowers. In order to be effective as defense chemicals, PSMs evolved as bioactive substances, that can interfere with a large number of molecular targets in cells, tissues and organs of animals or of microbes. The known functions of PSMs are summarized in this review. A number of PSMs evolved as agonists or antagonists of neuronal signal transduction. Many of these PSMs are alkaloids. Several of them share structural similarities to neurotransmitters. Evidence for neuroactive and psychoactive PSMs in animals will be reviewed. Some of the neuroactive PSMs can cause addiction in humans and other vertrebrates. Why should a defense compound be addictive and thus attract more herbivores? Some insects are food specialists that can feed on plants that are normally toxic to other herbivores. These specialists can tolerate the toxins and many are stored in the insect body as acquired defense chemicals against predators. A special case are pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) that are neurotoxic and mutagenic in vertebrates. PAs are actively sequestered by moths of the family Arctiidae and a few other groups of arthropods. In arctiids, PAs are not only used for defense, but also serve as morphogens for the induction of male coremata and as precursors for male pheromones. Caterpillars even feed on filter paper impregnated with pure PAs (that modulate serotonin receptors in vertebrates and maybe even in insects) and thus show of behavior with has similarities to addiction in vertebrates. Not only PA specialists, but also many monophagous herbivores select their host plants according to chemical cues i.e., PSMs) and crave for plants with a particular PSMs. again a similarity to addiction in vertebrates.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 60 条
  • [1] Phylogenetic incongruence and the evolutionary origins of cardenolide-resistant forms of Na+, K+-ATPase in Danaus butterflies
    Aardema, Matthew L.
    Andolfatto, Peter
    [J]. EVOLUTION, 2016, 70 (08) : 1913 - 1921
  • [2] Specialist versus generalist insect herbivores and plant defense
    Ali, Jared G.
    Agrawal, Anurag A.
    [J]. TRENDS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2012, 17 (05) : 293 - 302
  • [3] Nicotine in floral nectar pharmacologically influences bumblebee learning of floral features
    Baracchi, D.
    Marples, A.
    Jenkins, A. J.
    Leitch, A. R.
    Chittka, L.
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [4] Effects of cocaine on honey bee dance behaviour
    Barron, Andrew B.
    Maleszka, Ryszard
    Helliwell, Paul G.
    Robinson, Gene E.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2009, 212 (02) : 163 - 168
  • [5] Taste receptors for pyrrolizidine alkaloids in a monophagous caterpillar
    Bernays, EA
    Chapman, RF
    Lamunyon, CW
    Hartmann, T
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY, 2003, 29 (07) : 1709 - 1722
  • [6] A taste receptor neurone dedicated to the perception of pyrrolizidine alkaloids in the medial galeal sensillum of two polyphagous arctiid caterpillars
    Bernays, EA
    Chapman, RF
    Hartmann, T
    [J]. PHYSIOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 2002, 27 (04) : 312 - 321
  • [7] Apportionment of nuptial alkaloidal gifts by a multiply-mated female moth (Utetheisa ornatrix):: eggs individually receive alkaloid from more than one male source
    Bezzerides, A
    Eisner, T
    [J]. CHEMOECOLOGY, 2002, 12 (04) : 213 - 218
  • [8] BOGNER F, 1989, ENTOMOL EXP APPL, V50, P171, DOI 10.1007/BF00365401
  • [9] BOPPRE M, 1984, J CHEM ECOL, V10, P1151, DOI 10.1007/BF00987520