| Literature DB >> 24744735 |
Naoko Yoshinaga1, Hiroaki Abe1, Sayo Morita1, Tetsuya Yoshida1, Takako Aboshi1, Masao Fukui2, James H Tumlinson3, Naoki Mori1.
Abstract
Fatty acid amino acid conjugates (FACs), first identified in lepidopteran caterpillar spit as elicitors of plant volatile emission, also have been reported as major components in gut tracts of Drosophila melanogaster and cricket Teleogryllus taiwanemma. The profile of FAC analogs in these two insects was similar to that of tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta, showing glutamic acid conjugates predominantly over glutamine conjugates. The physiological function of FACs is presumably to enhance nitrogen assimilation in Spodoptera litura larvae, but in other insects it is totally unknown. Whether these insects share a common synthetic mechanism of FACs is also unclear. In this study, the biosynthesis of FACs was examined in vitro in five lepidopteran species (M. sexta, Cephonodes hylas, silkworm, S. litura, and Mythimna separata), fruit fly larvae and T. taiwanemma. The fresh midgut tissues of all of the tested insects showed the ability to synthesize glutamine conjugates in vitro when incubated with glutamine and sodium linolenate. Such direct conjugation was also observed for glutamic acid conjugates in all the insects but the product amount was very small and did not reflect the in vivo FAC patterns in each species. In fruit fly larvae, the predominance of glutamic acid conjugates could be explained by a shortage of substrate glutamine in midgut tissues, and in M. sexta, a rapid hydrolysis of glutamine conjugates has been reported. In crickets, we found an additional unique biosynthetic pathway for glutamic acid conjugates. T. taiwanemma converted glutamine conjugates to glutamic acid conjugates by deaminating the side chain of the glutamine moiety. Considering these findings together with previous results, a possibility that FACs in these insects are results of convergent evolution cannot be ruled out, but it is more likely that the ancestral insects had the glutamine conjugates and crickets and other insects developed glutamic acid conjugates in a different way.Entities:
Keywords: Amino acids; Deamination; Drosophila melanogaster; FACs; Lepidoptera; Teleogryllus
Year: 2014 PMID: 24744735 PMCID: PMC3978339 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2014.00121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Overview of FAC analog patterns in insects. 1, glutamine conjugates; 2, glutamic acid conjugates; 3, hydroxylated FACs. All FAC-containing species had glutamine conjugates (1) in common, and the evolutionarily earliest species in Lepidoptera had only this type of FACs, suggesting this might be the evolutionarily older FACs. ++: major components, +: components constantly detected, −: not detected. *: insect species used in this study.
Figure 2The amounts of FACs synthesized . The amounts of conjugates synthesized by fresh midgut tissues of Lepidoptera species and Teleogryllus crickets, or whole Drosophila larval body homogenized and incubated with sodium linoleate and glutamine (left) or glutamic acid (right). Solid bars: product N-linoleoyl-L-glutamine, open bars: product N-linoleoyl-L-glutamic acid (*converted from N-linoleoyl-L-glutamine).
Figure 3Structures and MS. N-Linolenoyl-L-[α−15N] glutamine was converted to15N-labeled N-linolenoyl-L-[α−15N] glutamic acid (A) and N-linolenoyl-L-[γ−15N] glutamine yielded unlabeled N-linolenoyl-L-glutamic acid (B). 15N-labeling at the α-position of the glutamine moiety was passed to corresponding glutamic acid conjugate, whereas 15N-labeling at the γ-position (side chain of glutamine) was cleaved off during its conversion.
Figure 4Amino acid compositions in larval midgut tissues of .
Figure 5Two biosynthetic pathways of glutamic acid conjugates. (A), direct conjugation observed in lepidopteran insects, D. melanogaster and Teleogryllus crickets; (B), deamination in Teleogryllus crickets.