| Literature DB >> 29416082 |
Eduardo A Silva-Junior1, Antonio C Ruzzini2,3, Camila R Paludo1, Fabio S Nascimento4, Cameron R Currie5, Jon Clardy2, Mônica T Pupo6.
Abstract
Ants use pheromones to coordinate their communal activity. Volatile pyrazines, for instance, mediate food resource gathering and alarm behaviors in different ant species. Here we report that leaf-cutter ant-associated bacteria produce a family of pyrazines that includes members previously identified as ant trail and alarm pheromones. We found that L-threonine induces the bacterial production of the trail pheromone pyrazines, which are common for the host leaf-cutter ants. Isotope feeding experiments revealed that L-threonine along with sodium acetate were the biosynthetic precursors of these natural products and a biosynthetic pathway was proposed.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29416082 PMCID: PMC5803209 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20953-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Pyrazines produced by Serratia marcescens 3B2.
Figure 2Structure, 13C (red) and 1H (blue) NMR data of compound 6 in (A). Key HMBC and COSY correlations (B).
Figure 3GC-MS chromatograms showing the production of the trail pheromone pyrazines 1 and 2 by S. marcescens 3B2 cultivated on M9 agar medium supplemented with 0.2% of glucose and 2% of L-threonine in (A) and their presence in gasters of Atta sexdens rubropilosa in (B).
Figure 4Labelling patterns of pyrazines 1 and 2 obtained after feeding the biosynthetic precursors L-[U-13C,15N]-threonine and U-13C-sodium acetate in S. marcescens 3B2 culture.
Figure 5Proposed biosynthesis of pyrazines 1 and 2, involving oxidations (ox.), reductions (red.), spontaneous tautomerization (taut.) and dehydration (−H2O).