| Literature DB >> 26462534 |
Stephan Kühbandner1, Jan E Bello2, Kenji Mori3, Jocelyn G Millar4,5, Joachim Ruther6.
Abstract
The exoskeletons of insects are covered by complex mixtures of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) which are involved in social and sexual communication. However, little is known about the relationship between the structures of CHCs and their behavioral activity. The key component of the contact sex pheromone of the parasitoid Lariophagus distinguendus is 3-methylheptacosane (3-MeC27), which is present in CHC profiles of both females and newly emerged males. The CHCs of females and young males elicit wing-fanning behavior in older males. However, as young males age, 3-MeC27 disappears from their CHC profiles and they no longer elicit wing-fanning responses from other males. We applied enantiopure 3-MeC27 and structurally related CHCs (with respect to chain length or methyl-branch position) to the cuticle of aged male dummies and recorded the wing-fanning behavior of responding males. Only the two enantiomers of 3-MeC27 restored the dummies' attractiveness. The addition of structurally related CHCs or various n-alkanes to bioactive dummies of young males and females significantly decreased wing-fanning by test males. Hence, L. distinguendus males respond specifically but not enantioselectively to 3-MeC27, and perceive the CHC profiles as a whole. Both removal (as is the case with 3-MeC27 in aging males) and addition of individual compounds may disrupt the behavioral response.Entities:
Keywords: 3-methylheptacosane; Lariophagus distinguendus; Pteromalidae; chemoreception; contact sex pheromone; cuticular hydrocarbons; parasitic wasp
Year: 2013 PMID: 26462534 PMCID: PMC4553514 DOI: 10.3390/insects4040743
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 3Restoration of pheromone activity in 4-d-old male dummies (Experiment 1). Wing-fanning duration during a 5-min observation period performed by L. distinguendus responder males towards 4-d-old male dummies treated with dichloromethane (DCM, control = white) and with 150 ng of different methyl-branched alkanes in dichloromethane, respectively (blue). Box-and-whisker plots show median (horizontal line), 25–75 percent quartiles (box), maximum/minimum range (whiskers) and outliers (>1.5× above box height). Asterisks indicate significant differences between a methylalkane treatment and the corresponding DCM control (p > 0.05 = non-significant (n.s.), p < 0.01 = **, Wilcoxon signed rank test; N = 20).
Figure 4Interruption of pheromone bioactivity in 0-d-old male and female dummies (Experiment 2). Wing-fanning duration during a 5-min observation period performed by L. distinguendus responder males towards 0-d-old (a) male and (b) female dummies treated either with dichloromethane (DCM, control = white) or 150 ng of methyl-branched and straight-chain alkanes, respectively (blue). Box-and-whisker plots show median (horizontal line), 25–75 percent quartiles (box), maximum/minimum range (whiskers) and outliers (>1.5× above or below box height). Asterisks indicate significant differences (p > 0.05 = non-significant (n.s.), p < 0.05 = *, p < 0.01 = **, p < 0.001 = ***) between alkane treatment and the corresponding DCM control (Wilcoxon signed rank test; N = 20).