Literature DB >> 34813747

Convergent evolution of cardiac-glycoside resistance in predators and parasites of milkweed herbivores.

Simon C Groen1, Noah K Whiteman2.   

Abstract

The community of plant-feeding insects (herbivores) that specialize on milkweeds (Apocynaceae) form a remarkable example of convergent evolution across levels of biological organization1. In response to toxic cardiac glycosides produced by these plants, the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) and other specialist herbivores have evolved parallel substitutions in the alpha subunit (ATPA) of the Na+/K+-ATPase. These substitutions render the pump insensitive to cardiac glycosides2,3, allowing the monarch and other specialists, from aphids to beetles, to sequester cardiac glycosides, which in turn provide defense against attacks by enemies from the third trophic level4. The evolution of 'target-site-insensitivity' substitutions in these herbivores poses a fundamental biological question: have predators and parasitoids that feed on cardiac-glycoside-sequestering insects also evolved Na+/K+-ATPases that are similarly insensitive to cardiac glycosides (as predicted by Whiteman and Mooney)5? In other words, can plant toxins cause evolutionary cascades that reach the third trophic level? Here we show that at least four enemies of the monarch and other milkweed herbivores have indeed evolved amino-acid substitutions associated with target-site insensitivity to cardiac glycosides. These attackers represent four major animal clades, implicating cardiac glycosides as keystone molecules6 and establishing ATPalpha, which encodes ATPA, as a keystone gene with effects that reverberate within ecological communities7.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34813747      PMCID: PMC8892682          DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.10.025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  7 in total

Review 1.  Keystone Genes.

Authors:  Lotte H Skovmand; Charles C Y Xu; Maria R Servedio; Patrik Nosil; Rowan D H Barrett; Andrew P Hendry
Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-08-08       Impact factor: 17.712

2.  Community ecology and the evolution of molecules of keystone significance.

Authors:  Ryan P Ferrer; Richard K Zimmer
Journal:  Biol Bull       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 1.818

3.  Evolutionary biology: Insects converge on resistance.

Authors:  Noah K Whiteman; Kailen A Mooney
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2012-09-20       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Widespread convergence in toxin resistance by predictable molecular evolution.

Authors:  Beata Ujvari; Nicholas R Casewell; Kartik Sunagar; Kevin Arbuckle; Wolfgang Wüster; Nathan Lo; Denis O'Meally; Christa Beckmann; Glenn F King; Evelyne Deplazes; Thomas Madsen
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-09-08       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Milkweed butterfly resistance to plant toxins is linked to sequestration, not coping with a toxic diet.

Authors:  Georg Petschenka; Anurag A Agrawal
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2015-11-07       Impact factor: 5.349

6.  Genome editing retraces the evolution of toxin resistance in the monarch butterfly.

Authors:  Marianthi Karageorgi; Simon C Groen; Fidan Sumbul; Julianne N Pelaez; Kirsten I Verster; Jessica M Aguilar; Amy P Hastings; Susan L Bernstein; Teruyuki Matsunaga; Michael Astourian; Geno Guerra; Felix Rico; Susanne Dobler; Anurag A Agrawal; Noah K Whiteman
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2019-10-02       Impact factor: 69.504

7.  Adaptive substitutions underlying cardiac glycoside insensitivity in insects exhibit epistasis in vivo.

Authors:  Andrew M Taverner; Lu Yang; Zachary J Barile; Becky Lin; Julie Peng; Ana P Pinharanda; Arya S Rao; Bartholomew P Roland; Aaron D Talsma; Daniel Wei; Georg Petschenka; Michael J Palladino; Peter Andolfatto
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2019-08-27       Impact factor: 8.140

  7 in total
  4 in total

1.  How Phylogenetics Can Elucidate the Chemical Ecology of Poison Frogs and Their Arthropod Prey.

Authors:  Jeffrey L Coleman; David C Cannatella
Journal:  J Chem Ecol       Date:  2022-03-14       Impact factor: 2.626

Review 2.  Evolution in small steps and giant leaps.

Authors:  Noah K Whiteman
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2022-01-29       Impact factor: 4.171

Review 3.  Defence mitigation by predators of chemically defended prey integrated over the predation sequence and across biological levels with a focus on cardiotonic steroids.

Authors:  Shabnam Mohammadi; Lu Yang; Matthew Bulbert; Hannah M Rowland
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2022-09-07       Impact factor: 3.653

4.  Constraints on the evolution of toxin-resistant Na,K-ATPases have limited dependence on sequence divergence.

Authors:  Shabnam Mohammadi; Santiago Herrera-Álvarez; Lu Yang; María Del Pilar Rodríguez-Ordoñez; Karen Zhang; Jay F Storz; Susanne Dobler; Andrew J Crawford; Peter Andolfatto
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2022-08-16       Impact factor: 6.020

  4 in total

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