| Literature DB >> 35917360 |
Léna Jeannerod1, Archibald Carlier1, Bertrand Schatz2, Clothilde Daise1, Aurore Richel3, Yannick Agnan1, Mathilde Baude4,5, Anne-Laure Jacquemart1.
Abstract
For pollinators such as bees, nectar mainly provides carbohydrates and pollen provides proteins, amino acids, and lipids to cover their nutritional needs. Here, to examine differences in pollinator resources, we compared the amino acid profiles and total amino acid contents of pollen from 32 common entomophilous plants in seven families. Our results showed that the amino acid profiles and contents in pollen samples differed according to the plant family and the chromatography method used, i.e., high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) versus ion exchange chromatography (IEX). Pollen from Boraginaceae species had the highest total amino acid contents (361.2-504 μg/mg) whereas pollen from the Malvaceae family had the lowest total amino acid contents (136-243.1 μg/mg). Calculating an amino acid score (AAS) that reflects pollen nutritional quality showed that slightly less than half of the species (19 out of 32) had the maximum nutritional score (AAS = 1) and offered high nutritional quality pollen amino acids for bee pollinators. Though they had high total amino acid contents, the amino acid composition of the studied Boraginaceae species and several members of the Fabaceae was not optimal, as their pollen was deficient in some essential amino acids, resulting in suboptimal amino acid scores (AAS < 0.7). Except for cysteine, the measured amino acid contents were higher using IEX chromatography than using HPLC. IEX chromatography is more robust and is to be preferred over HPLC in future amino acid analyses. Moreover, our observations show that some bee-pollinated species fail to provide complete amino acid resources for their pollinators. Although the implications for pollinator behavior remain to be studied, these deficiencies may force pollinators to forage from different species to obtain all nutritionial requirements.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35917360 PMCID: PMC9345472 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Fig 1Boxplot of total amino acids per plant family.
Fig 2nMDS ordination plot based on Bray-Curtis distances calculated on amino acids contents (i.e., amounts in μg/mg of amino acids) from pure floral pollen for each plant species (stress = 0.09).
Method 1: IEX chromatography method; Method 2: HPLC method. The two ellipses gather species according to the analytical method used with solid lines for the IEX chromatography method and dashed lines for the HPLC method. Families are indicated in different colours. Amino acids: Ala, alanine; arg, arginine; asp, aspartic acid; cys, cysteine; glu, glutamine; gly, glycine; his, histidine; ile, isoleucine; leu, leucine; lys, lysine; met, methionine; phe, phenylalanine; pro, proline; ser, serine; thr, threonine; tyr, tyrosine; val, valine. Species: A.pla, Acer platanoides; A.pse, Acer pseudoplatanus; A.car, Aesculus carnea; A.hip, Aesculus hippocastanum; B.off, Borago officinalis; C.jac, Centaurea jacea; C.lae, Crataegus laevigata; C.seg, Cyanus segetum; C.sco, Cytisus scoparius; E.vul, Echium vulgare; F.ulm, Filipendula ulmaria; F.ves, Fragaria vesca; L.alb, Lamium album; L.gal, Lamium galeobdolon; L.cor, Lotus corniculatus; M.mos, Malva moschata; M.dom, Malus domestica; P.avi, Prunus avium; P.cer, Prunus cerasus; P.com, Pyrus communis; R.pse, Robinia pseudoacacia; R.agg, Rubus aggr.; S.auc, Sorbus aucuparia; S.off, Symphytum officinale; T.cor, Tilia cordata; T.pla, Tilia platyphyllos; T.tom, Tilia tomentosa; T.xeu, Tilia x euchlora; T.xvu, Tilia x vulgaris; T.pra, Trifolium pratense; T.rep, Trifolium repens.
Fig 3Boxplots of the contents of each amino acid (μg/mg) according to the IEX chromatography method (Method 1) and the HPLC method (Method 2).