63 research outputs found

    Does egg deposition by herbivorous pine sawflies affect transcription of sesquiterpene synthases in pine?

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    Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris; Pinaceae, Pinales) is known to defend against egg deposition by herbivorous sawflies by changing its terpenoid volatile blend. The oviposition-induced pine odor attracts egg parasitoids that kill the sawfly eggs. Here, we investigated whether sawfly egg deposition activates genes encoding pine terpene synthases by extracting mRNA from oviposition-induced P. sylvestris. Three new sesquiterpene synthases, PsTPS 1, PsTPS 2, and PsTPS 3, were isolated that were shown on heterologous expression in Escherichia coli to produce (E)-ÎČ-caryophyllene and α-humulene (PsTPS 1), 1(10),5-germacradiene-4-ol (PsTPS 2), and longifolene and α-longipinene (PsTPS 3) as their principal products. Quantitative RT-PCR analyses revealed that transcript levels of PsTPS 1 and PsTPS 2 were significantly higher in oviposition-induced twigs that were attractive to the parasitoids than in non-attractive, artificially damaged twigs. Thus, our results demonstrate a specific transcription response to egg deposition, distinct from that caused by artificial wounding. Transcripts of PsTPS 3 did not change in response to egg deposition. The transcript levels of PsTPS 1, PsTPS 2, and PsTPS 3 were also determined in relation to time after egg deposition, since pine odor is attractive to the parasitoid only 72 h after egg deposition. Transcription rates of PsTPS 1 and PsTPS 2 were significantly enhanced only 72 h after egg deposition, thus matching the timing of odor attractiveness, while for PsTPS 3, enhanced transcription was not detected at any time period studied after egg deposition. The ecological significance of the oviposition-induced increase of sesquiterpene synthase transcripts is discussed

    Molecular cytogenetics (FISH, GISH) of Coccinia grandis: A ca. 3 myr-old species of Cucurbitaceae with the largest Y/autosome divergence in flowering plants

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    The independent evolution of heteromorphic sex chromosomes in 19 species from 4 families of flowering plants permits studying X/Y divergence after the initial recombination suppression. Here, we document autosome/Y divergence in the tropical Cucurbitaceae Coccinia grandis, which is ca. 3 myr old. Karyotyping and C-value measurements show that the C. grandis Y chromosome has twice the size of any of the other chromosomes, with a male/female C-value difference of 0.094 pg or 10% of the total genome. FISH staining revealed 5S and 45S rDNA sites on autosomes but not on the Y chromosome, making it unlikely that rDNA contributed to the elongation of the Y chromosome; recent end-to-end fusion also seems unlikely given the lack of interstitial telomeric signals. GISH with different concentrations of female blocking DNA detected a possible pseudo-autosomal region on the Y chromosome, and C-banding suggests that the entire Y chromosome in C. grandis is heterochromatic. During meiosis, there is an end-to-end connection between the X and the Y chromosome, but the X does not otherwise differ from the remaining chromosomes. These findings and a review of plants with heteromorphic sex chromosomes reveal no relationship between species age and degree of sex chromosome dimorphism. Its relatively small genome size (0.943 pg/2C in males), large Y chromosome, and phylogenetic proximity to the fully sequenced Cucumis sativus make C. grandis a promising model to study sex chromosome evolution. Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Base

    Einige Erfahrungen in der Zucht von Schwebfliegen (Diptera, Syrphidae)

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    Die alljĂ€hrliche Tagung der Entmological Society of Amerika fand vom 2.–5. Dezember 1963 in St. Louis

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    Oviposition deterring components in larval frass of Spodoptera littoralis (Boisd) (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae): a behavioral and electrophysiological evaluation

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    Oviposition in Spodoptera littoralis was strongly deterred by a mixture of six compounds, benzaldehyde and the five terpenes carvacrol, eugenol, nerolidol, phytol and thymol, identified from conspecific larval frass. If one of the compounds was excluded from the mixture the deterrent effect was lost. An electroantennogram-screening was performed on 15 compounds identified from the larval frass. Of the behaviourally active compounds, dose-response relationships were obtained for benzaldehyde, eugenol and nerolidol. Seven types of receptor cells specifically tuned to compounds from the larval frass were identified by single-sensillum recordings from olfactory sensilla on the female antenna. The most abundant of these was a receptor cell type responding equally well to the three aromatic terpenes carvacrol, eugenol and thymol. Receptor cells responding to only a single terpene were found for carvacrol, eugenol, nerolidol and phytol. Receptor cells responding to other frass compounds, green leaf odours and sex pheromone components were also found. No receptor cell responding to benzaldehyde was identified
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