| Literature DB >> 31053976 |
Christian Schiebe1,2, C Rikard Unelius3, Suresh Ganji2, Muhammad Binyameen4,5, Göran Birgersson1, Fredrik Schlyter1,5.
Abstract
Bark beetles kill apparently vigorous conifers during epidemics by means of pheromone-mediated aggregation. During non-endemic conditions the beetles are limited to use trees with poor defense, like wind-thrown. To find olfactory cues that help beetles to distinguish between trees with strong or weak defense, we collected volatiles from the bark surface of healthy felled or standing Picea abies trees. Furthermore, living trees were treated with methyl jasmonate in order to induce defense responses. Volatiles were analyzed by combined gas chromatography and electroantennographic detection (GC-EAD) on Ips typographus antennae. Compounds eliciting antennal responses were characterized by single sensillum recording for identification of specific olfactory sensory neurons (OSN). Release of monoterpene hydrocarbons decreased, while oxygenated compounds increased, from spring to early summer in felled trees. In both beetle sexes particular strong EAD activity was elicited by trace amounts of terpene alcohols and ketones. 4-Thujanol gave a very strong response and the absolute configuration of the tested natural product was assigned to be (+)-trans-(1R,4S,5S)-thujanol by stereoselective synthesis and enantioselective gas chromatography. One type of OSN responded to all ketones and five other OSN were characterized by the type of compounds that elicited responses. Three new OSN classes were found. Of the eight EAD-active compounds found in methyl jasmonate-treated bark, the known anti-attractant 1,8-cineole was the one most strongly induced. Our data support the hypothesis that highly active oxygenated host volatiles could serve as positive or negative cues for host selection in I. typographus and in other bark beetles.Entities:
Keywords: 4-thujanol; GC-EAD; Host chemistry; Oxygenated monoterpenes; Plant defense; SSR; Single-sensillum recordings; Styrene
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31053976 PMCID: PMC6570694 DOI: 10.1007/s10886-019-01070-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chem Ecol ISSN: 0098-0331 Impact factor: 2.626
Test panel of compounds for single sensillum recordings from I. typographus OSNs
| Compound | Chemical source | Substance origin | Responses in OSN classes1 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pcn | tMTol | pC# | cV# | My# | Sty | |||
| Hydrocarbons | ||||||||
| Styrene * | Sigma; >99 | Host |
| |||||
| (+)-α-Pinene | Janssens Chim; 98 | Host |
| (••) | ||||
| (–)-β-Pinene * | Fluka; 92 | Host |
| |||||
| Myrcene | Fluka; 95 | Host | (••••) | •••• | ||||
| (+)-3-Carene | Aldrich; 93 | Host |
| |||||
| Acros; >99 | Host |
| ||||||
| (±)-Limonene | Fluka; 98 | Host |
| |||||
| γ-Terpinene | Fluka; 99 | Host |
| |||||
| Terpinolene | Fluka; 97 | Host | (•) | (•••) | ||||
| Alcohols | ||||||||
| (+)-Borneol | Sigma 98 | Host | (•) | (•••) | (•) | |||
| 1-Hexanol | Fluka; >99 | NHV | ||||||
| 2-Methyl-3-buten-2-ol | Aldrich; >97 | Ph | ||||||
| SciTech Ltd,; 95 | Ph | |||||||
| (±)-Ipsenol | Bedoukian; 95 | Ph | (•) | |||||
| (±)-Ipsdienol | Bedoukian; 95 | Ph | ||||||
| (±)-3-Octanol | Acros; >99 | NHV/Fungi |
| |||||
| 2-Phenylethanol | VWR Int.;>99 | Ph | (•) | (•) | (•) | (•) | •• | |
| (±)-4-Terpineol | Fluka; >99 | Host | (•) |
| (•) | (•••) | ||
| (±)-α-Terpineol | Aldrich; 98 | Host |
| |||||
| (+)- | Aldrich; >98 | Host | (•) | (•••••) | ||||
| (–)- | Borregaard; 95 | Ph |
| |||||
| Ketones | ||||||||
| (±)-Camphor | Fluka; >95 | Host |
| (•••) | ||||
| (±)-Carvone | Acros; >98 | Host |
| (•) | ||||
| Pinocarvone * | Synergy C.; 51a | Host | ( | |||||
| (–)-Verbenone | Fluka; >99 | Host | ••• | |||||
| (±)-α-Thujone | Sigma; >97 | Conifer | (•) | (•) | ||||
| Other oxygenated | ||||||||
| (+)- | W.F.b; 99 | Ph | ||||||
| (±)-Chalcogran | Celamerck; 93 | Ph | (•) | |||||
| (±)- | W.F.; 95 | NHV/Fungi | (••••) | (•) | ||||
| 1,8-Cineole | Aldrich; >99 | Host | (•) | (•) | ||||
| 4-Allylanisole | Acros; 98 | Host | (•••) |
| ||||
| Nonanal | Fluka; >95 | Host | ||||||
| No. of cells found | ||||||||
| Male | 5 | 5 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 2 | ||
| Female | 9 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Total | 14 | 7 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 2 | ||
1)Olfactory sensory neuron (OSN) classes are defined according their primary responses. Pcn: Pinocarvone, tMTol: tert. monoterpenols, pC: p-Cymene, cV: cis-Verbenol, My: Myrcene, Sty: Styrene
2)responses: • = 30 – 50 Hz, •• = 51 – 75 Hz, ••• = 76 – 100 Hz, •••• = 101 – 150 Hz, ••••• >150 Hz. Responses in parentheses were found only occasionally or tested few times. #) OSN – class according to Andersson et al. (2009)
aConcentrated extract kindly provided by Synergy Semiochemicals Corp., Burnaby, Canada
bWittko Francke, University of Hamburg, Germany *) compounds that were added to the panel late in the study
Correlations (rS, Spearman’s rho correlation coefficient) of proportions of total release of all analyzed compounds with the factors sampling date, temperature at sampling, and attack density of Ips typographus (* and ** indicate correlation is significant (two-tailed) at the 0.05 level, or at the 0.01 level, respectively; positive rS: proportion of compound is rising with factor; negative rS: proportion of compound is declining with factor; − indicates compound was not detected in standing trees)
| Compound classes | Sampling date (Julian date) | Temperature (°C) | Attack density | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Felled | Standing | Felled | Standing | Felled | |
| Monoterpene hydrocarbons | −0.54** | −0.04 | −0.44** | 0.32 | 0.37** |
| Oxygenated terpenes | 0.51** | −0.33 | 0.41** | 0.10 | −0.38** |
| Aromatic hydrocarbons | |||||
| Styrene | 0.71** | 0.52 | 0.39** | −0.64 | 0.57** |
| | 0.16 | −0.33 | 0.17 | 0.54 | −0.05 |
| Monoterpene hydrocarbons | |||||
| (±)-α-Pinene | 0.31* | −0.18 | 0.17 | −0.66 | 0.17 |
| (±)-Camphene | 0.16 | 0.34 | −0.09 | −0.03 | −0.08 |
| Sabinene & β-Pinenea | 0.27* | 0.37 | 0.22 | 0.13 | 0.20 |
| Myrcene | −0.32* | −0.11 | −0.18 | −0.54 | −0.15 |
| 3-Carene | −0.34** | −0.07 | −0.14 | −0.02 | −0.33 |
| (±)-Limonene & (±)-β-Phellandrene a | −0.55** | −0.56* | −0.36** | 0.17 | −0.39** |
| Terpinolene | −0.54** | −0.15 | −0.31 | −0.22 | −0.45** |
| γ-Terpinene | −0.61** | −0.33 | −0.32 | 0.02 | −0.52** |
| Oxygenated compounds | |||||
| 4 | 0.21 | – | 0.12 | – | 0.22 |
| 1,8-Cineole | 0.63** | −0.04 | 0.63** | 0.09 | 0.44** |
| (±)-Camphor | 0.50** | 0.00 | 0.33* | 0.43 | 0.30 |
| Pinocamphone | 0.57** | 0.23 | 0.40** | 0.09 | 0.46** |
| Pinocarvone | 0.56** | 0.41 | 0.28* | −0.43 | 0.41** |
| (±)-Terpinen-4-ol | 0.08 | −0.35 | 0.14 | 0.30 | 0.12 |
| α-Terpineol | 0.05 | −0.33 | 0.03 | 0.30 | 0.09 |
| Estragole | 0.36** | 0.00 | 0.32* | 0.65 | 0.31* |
| Verbenone | 0.64** | – | 0.31* | – | 0.55** |
aThese compound pairs co-eluted
Fig. 1Representative examples of GC-EAD recordings (total 170 runs) from male and female I. typographus tested on natural volatiles collected from intact bark from standing or felled trees. a Example for the entire chromatogram from a sun exposed standing tree. Upper signal trace is FID signal and the two lower traces are corresponding recordings of antennal electric potentials of one male and one female beetle. b Volatiles from a felled tree sampled at the day of first attack (25 April) and c late in June. The graphs in b and c show only the part of the chromatogram where oxygenated compounds elute on a HP-5MS column. 1) styrene 2) α-pinene 3) sabinene 4) β-pinene 5) myrcene 6) 3-carene 7) p-cymene 8) limonene 9) 1,8-cineole (1,3,3-trimethyl-2-oxabicyclo[2.2.2]octane) 10) γ-terpinene 11) 4-thujanol; (synonym sabinene hydrate, 5-isopropyl-2-methylbicyclo[3.1.0]hexan-2-ol) 12) terpinolene 13) camphor (1,7,7-trimethylbicyclo[2.2.1]heptan-2-one) 14) pinocamphone (2,6,6-trimethylbicyclo[3.1.1]heptan-3-one) 15) pinocarvone (6,6-dimethyl-2-methylenebicyclo[3.1.1]heptan-3-one) 16) isopinocamphone (2,6,6-trimethylbicyclo [3.1.1]heptan-3-one) 17) 4-terpineol (1-isopropyl-4-methyl-3-cyclohexen-1-ol) 18) 4-allylanisole (estragole). IS) Internal quantification standard, heptyl acetate.?) Unidentified compound; Responses at the elution time of the internal standard are due to an unidentified co-eluting compound. Most recordings showed no responses to the internal standard. One strong response in some samples correlates well to nonanal, but response to synthetic nonanal could neither be observed in EAD- nor in SSR-recordings
Fig. 2Induction of four of six physiologically active metabolites in trees locally treated with the phytohormone methyl jasmonate (MeJ). Two metabolites showed no change (data not shown). Proportions of oxygenated monoterpenes in bark of untreated (control) compared to MeJ-treated (MeJ) bark in seven healthy standing trees. Trees were treated with a local MeJ application and bark sampled nearby (Schiebe et al. 2012). In each graph centre p-values from ANOVA are given for the difference of sample means of treated/untreated trees
Fig. 3Structures of electrophysiologically active compounds identified for the various OSN classes found. The stereochemistry assignments of the camphone stereoisomers are tentative, based on structural resemblance with (+)-camphor and (-)-pinocarvone in the Pcn OSN class
Fig. 4Volatility corrected dose-response of OSN-classes a Pinocarvone and other ketones (Pcn). b tertiary monoterpene alcohols (tMTol), cp-cymene derivatives (pC), and d phenyl ethane derivatives (Sty). Odorant doses (x-axis) correspond to the theoretical flux of molecules (in pmol) from the stimulus cartridge during a stimulus puff, compensating for the differential volatility and affinity to paraffin oil solvent between chemicals (Andersson et al. 2012). Error bars indicate SEM (n = 5, n= 2 for styrene)
Fig. 5Regioselective synthesis of all four stereoisomers of 4-thujanol (sabinene hydrate) from sabinene